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Under His Very Windows: The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy

por Susan Zuccotti

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Zuccotti examines the actions of Pope Pius XII and his assistants at the Vatican to help Italian Jews escape the Holocaust.
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Papa Pio XII è stato spesso criticato per il suo silenzio/assenso allo sterminio degli ebrei europei nel corso della Seconda guerra mondiale. A sua difesa si affermò che forte fu il suo interessamento, ma che per ovvi motivi il suo impegno fu necessariamente sotterraneo. Questo volume esamina ciò che il Papa e i suoi assistenti fecero per evitare lo sterminio ebraico in Italia. Ne risulta che ben poco fu fatto. L'opera rivela quanto incredibilmente diffusi fossero sentimenti antiebraici nelle pubblicazioni vaticane e gesuite, il tutto testimoniato da un'ampia serie di materiali d'archivio che portano alla luce i segreti negoziati di Pio XI, Pio XII e molti altri, appartenenti alle alte schiere vaticane. Il libro mostra inoltre con chiarezza quanto poco il Papa si sia esposto di persona, ove incoraggiò altri a prendere posizione, e le grandi mancanze del Vaticano nell’assistere gli ebrei italiani. (fonte: Mondadori)
  MemorialeSardoShoah | Jun 3, 2020 |
Papa Pio XII è stato spesso criticato per il suo silenzio/assenso allo sterminio degli ebrei europei nel corso della Seconda guerra mondiale. A sua difesa si affermò che forte fu il suo interessamento, ma che per ovvi motivi il suo impegno fu necessariamente sotterraneo. (fonte: Google Books)
  MemorialeSardoShoah | May 11, 2020 |
This is an extremely well researched and scrupulously fairly argued account of the attitude shown by Pope Pius XII immediately before and during the war towards the Holocaust in Italy and to some extent more widely. Reading this, the reader is left in little general doubt that Pius XII could have said and done very much more to express the Vatican's disapproval and to set a tone of opposition to persecution of Jews and creation of an atmosphere whereby they might be more easily helped to evade that persecution.

The cause of his reluctance to do so stems from a number of factors. The Catholic Church hierarchy of the time still largely held the view that Jews were hostile to Christianity because of the death of Christ and that they were therefore as a group damaging the Christian religion. So they were opposed to Jews on religious grounds, albeit that Pius XII and his predecessor Pius XI (who died in early 1939) rejected the notion that Jews or anyone else should be regarded as inferior races. Condemnation by members of the Church hierarchy of anti-Jewish laws focussed on the marriage laws as they affected Jews married to Christians and those Jews who converted to Catholicism, rather than the broad mass of Jewish people. Throughout the war statements made were few and far between and couched in very general and rather coldly bureaucratic language. The author identifies a number of factors for this as well as the historical attitude towards Judaism as a religion. There was an ethos of self-deception and an unwillingness to believe that the repressions could be as bad as some were reporting (this attitude was, of course, by no means restricted to the Catholic Church). There was a to some extent genuine fear that reprisals might take place against Catholics or Jews baptised into the Catholic faith if the Church spoke out in strong terms against the Holocaust. There were even fears the Germans might invade the Vatican City itself. But I think the main reason she identifies was a restricted moral vision by many members of the hierarchy, an exclusivist attitude towards the concerns of Catholics that in such a desperate situation was a wholly inadequate moral response to genocide of another racial/religious group, coupled by Pius XII's own sheltered life and lack of direct experience of human suffering.

His attitude can be contrasted with that of many local Catholic bishops and priests, monks and nuns who did selflessly protect Jews by hiding them in religious institutions or helping them to escape (some were even sheltered in the Vatican by lower members of the hierarchy). These Catholics did have experience of suffering and reached out to help the Jews and are a credit to their faith and to human dignity in general. But there is no evidence that their efforts were as a result of a direction from the Pope or any other Vatican official, even though after the war Pius XII was praised by many Jews and others for saving them, largely because he was of course seen as the embodiment of the Church and it was assumed he must have directed it. But he did not. And his silence, while some of the individual reasons for it have some validity, was in the end, I think, an overall failure of moral courage for which he must be criticised - even more so as he continued his silence even after Rome was liberated and the German threat to the Vatican was lifted. He was not "Hitler's Pope" as some have called him - he was not a Nazi sympathiser or believer in racialist policies, but his stance was a stain on his office and a stark contrast to the moral courage of many ordinary Catholics and others. ( )
1 vota john257hopper | Jun 22, 2010 |
Jews > Persecutions > Italy/Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) > Italy/World War, 1939-1945 > Religious aspects >/Catholic Church/Catholic Church > Relations > Judaism/Judaism > Relations > Catholic Church/Pius XII, Pope, 1876-1958 > Relations with/Jews/Antisemitism > Italy/Italy > History > 1914-1945
  Budzul | May 31, 2008 |
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Zuccotti examines the actions of Pope Pius XII and his assistants at the Vatican to help Italian Jews escape the Holocaust.

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