mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
1709 lines
90 KiB
XML
1709 lines
90 KiB
XML
<xml><p> 27 page printout
|
|
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> This file, its printout, or copies of either
|
|
are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
**** ****</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Edited by E. Haldeman-Julius</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>THE BLACK INTERNATIONAL No. 3</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA
|
|
FOR EIGHT YEARS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> by Joseph McCabe</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> HALDEMAN-JULIUS PUBLICATION
|
|
GIRARD -- : -- KANSAS
|
|
**** ****</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Chapter I</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> SOCIALISM EMPTIES THE CHURCHES</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The aim of the Black International is to protect and augment
|
|
the power and wealth of the Church. Since however, the clergy do
|
|
not share their power, much less their wealth, with the laity, we
|
|
may define this aim more sharply. It is to protect and augment
|
|
their own wealth and power, especially that of the higher clergy
|
|
and the Pope and his Court. History compels us to add that in
|
|
pursuing this aim the Black International is not restrained by any
|
|
considerations or sentiments which are not strictly ecclesiastical.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> That statement, a Catholic may object, may be formally correct
|
|
but it is malicious. The Church, he holds -- because in this
|
|
respect the priests have taken him into their confidence wants
|
|
wealth and power only in order that it may more effectively promote
|
|
the spiritual interests and eternal welfare of men. So we
|
|
understood; and we understood also that that is why the priest
|
|
must, whenever it is necessary, ignore all ordinary human emotions
|
|
and interests. What are the things of time compared with those of
|
|
eternity? It is a nice formula. The sufferings of 100000000
|
|
Chinese under the red hooves of the Japanese are doubtless sad to
|
|
contemplate but the spiritual welfare of all Asia requires that the
|
|
Pope shall not say so to his friend the Mikado. The first of
|
|
Pacelli-Pius's famous Five Peace Principles, which won the
|
|
admiration of the world, is "the right to life and freedom of all
|
|
nations, big and small, powerful and weak. But the spiritual
|
|
welfare of the Abyssinians (and the Spaniards, Albanians, Greeks,
|
|
Serbs, etc.) is much more important than life or freedom so he had
|
|
no harsh words for his friend Mussolini.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> We might, indeed, if we had leisure to go into these matters,
|
|
inquire whether the enormous accession of wealth and power to the
|
|
Church after the conversion of Constantine in the fourth century
|
|
and again during the Renaissance was really followed by a great
|
|
spiritual uplift or by a remarkable corruption of both people and
|
|
Church. But we have not time for these digressions. Here we have to
|
|
consider contemporary events.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
1
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Now we saw in the first booklet of this series that the need
|
|
of the Black International to protect its wealth and power was
|
|
never greater than it is today. In my Decay of the Church of Rome
|
|
(1909) I proved to the satisfaction of everybody except Catholic's,
|
|
who have a short way of differing from me without reading me, that
|
|
in the course of the nineteenth century the Church lost, in actual
|
|
seceders and descendants of seceders, about 100000000 followers.
|
|
It lost almost if not quite as many during the next 35 years, or
|
|
between 1900 and 1935. The leakage steadily continued, even
|
|
increased in all countries except those, such as Ireland and Poland
|
|
in which the priests could keep then people in blinkers. The
|
|
progress of Socialism, against which the Church had declared war to
|
|
the death, made the leakage worse, and after the Russian Revolution
|
|
it became a flood. In Spain, Italy, Austria, and Latin America we
|
|
have the decisive evidence of electoral statistics, which show a
|
|
world-loss of at least 60000000 since the last war. Even for a
|
|
small country like Czecho-Slovakia Catholics, we shall see, admit
|
|
a loss of about 2000000 in fifteen years, and the drift continued
|
|
in America and Britain. Nor was it only a question of the
|
|
humiliation of losing so many members. The Church in Germany was
|
|
estimated to have a wealth of $20000000000, and it was melting
|
|
away.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> These spectacular losses are the key to the policy which
|
|
Pacelli followed, first as Secretary of State and then as Pope Pius
|
|
XII. When you know of these indisputable losses, which are not
|
|
obtruded upon public notice, you see that the line followed by the
|
|
Black International was quite inevitable in view of its primary
|
|
aim. It is the folk who do not know of the losses who are puzzled
|
|
by the plain evidence of the Italian Church's enthusiastic support
|
|
of Mussolini in all his crimes, the Vatican's open alliance with
|
|
Japan, or the Pope's strident call upon various governments to
|
|
cooperate with him in the extinction, by war, of Bolshevism in
|
|
Spain, Russia, China, and Mexico. Therefore in dealing with each
|
|
country in which we trace the action of the Black International I
|
|
give definite evidence from electoral statistics or Catholic
|
|
admissions of the enormous losses of the Church. In the last book
|
|
I showed this in the case of Italy and South America.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It is vitally necessary in the case of Germany. References to
|
|
the Church in that country suggests to the reader at one moment
|
|
that it is tremendously wealthy and powerful -- a good third of the
|
|
nation -- and the next day represent it as cowering powerlessly
|
|
under the Nazi lash. The American public his been particularly
|
|
puzzled by Cardinal Mundelein making himself the chief spokesman of
|
|
the Church. Here was a great Churchman, praised in the highest
|
|
terms by the Pope and the warmest friend of Pacelli when he visited
|
|
America, scourging the Nazis at a time when no statesman in the
|
|
world ventured to warn his people of the coming evil.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The human side of these consecrated movements is always
|
|
interesting. Mundelein sent larger sums to the Papal treasury than
|
|
any other cardinal in the Church and promised even vaster funds
|
|
when prosperity returned to Chicago. So the Vatican courageously
|
|
refused to condemn him when requested by Hitler to do so. Besides,
|
|
it was convenient to have a rather muddle-headed enthusiast
|
|
assuring America that these charges of vice against the holy monks </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
2
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>of Catholic Germany were wicked Nazi fabrications to cover a
|
|
persecution of the Church. It was not necessary to tell Mundelein
|
|
that, as we shall see presently, the Pope had already suppressed
|
|
the whole body of these Franciscan monks in Westphalia for
|
|
comprehensive corruption -- they were all in jail Anyway -- and
|
|
that the Catholic bishop of Berlin had told Hitler in a published
|
|
letter that the bishops of Germany admitted that there was a large
|
|
amount of "moral perversity" in the monastic world. How could
|
|
Mundelein know that the Vatican and the German hierarchy were still
|
|
pressing Hitler to be friends? He had sworn to exterminate
|
|
Bolshevism, after a kiss of betrayal, and there was nothing in the
|
|
whole world that the Vatican more fiercely desired than the
|
|
destruction of Bolshevism, by hook or by crook, in every country.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> When the Pope, who would presently so solemnly assert "the
|
|
right to life and freedom of all nations," was asked to condemn the
|
|
invasion of Norway, the beginning of Hitler's monstrous enslavement
|
|
of Europe, he objected that there were only 2000 Catholics in
|
|
Norway and he had to think of the consequences for the "30000000
|
|
Catholics of Germany." What he meant was that, since the Church of
|
|
Rome does not admit that a man can quit it when his reason or his
|
|
conscience demands this, there were in Germany some 30000000 men
|
|
and women and their children who had received Catholic baptism. In
|
|
1905 the Church claimed to have 25000000 members. Taking into
|
|
account the beautiful fertility of Catholic parents these ought by
|
|
1940 to have grown to at least 35000000. In point of fact it is
|
|
easy to show that there were at the latter date not more than
|
|
15000000 German Catholics, probably not more than 10000000.
|
|
This implies a loss in the present generation of at least
|
|
15000000, probably 20000000; and this loss is not so much due
|
|
to the action of the Nazis as to the rapid growth of Socialism and
|
|
Communism since 1918. It implies also a proportionate loss of
|
|
wealth.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The new world-conditions which led to the disintegration of
|
|
the medieval Church everywhere -- the advance of culture, universal
|
|
free education, cheap literature and free libraries, the growth of
|
|
urban and industrial populations, etc, -- had had at least as
|
|
devastating an effect in Germany as in Britain and America. Think
|
|
of the huge circulation of such writers as Nietzsche and Haeckel.
|
|
In cities like Berlin hardly a fifth of the inhabitants went to
|
|
church. But in Germany the Roman Church had special conditions.
|
|
Bismarck had switched off his attack on Catholicism from 1872 to
|
|
1881 and directed it to the Socialists, and he now had the
|
|
enthusiastic alliance of the Church. Some say that Socialism is a
|
|
crime, and some that it is folly, but the Church said that it is a
|
|
sin; which, of course, is much more likely to got men to avoid it.
|
|
The Catholics organized politically in a Center Party and a
|
|
Bavarian People's Party, and there was a very sharp line of
|
|
division between. Catholic votes and those of the sinful Socialists
|
|
and even worse Communists. Thirty years ago the Social Democratic
|
|
Federation dropped its official opposition to all Churches, on the
|
|
painfully familiar plea of Socialist leaders that this would
|
|
shorten the path to power, but this did not affect the
|
|
irreconcilable hostility between Socialists and Catholics. In fact,
|
|
when Communism in turn became a powerful force, as it did in
|
|
Germany, and in the Vatican policy Socialists and Communists were
|
|
lumped together as Bolsheviks, the mutual antagonism was increased.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
3
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I have earlier explained that in the very promising new phase
|
|
of German life between 1924 and 1930 the Catholics and Socialists
|
|
cooperated politically, and when Nazism grew they had another link
|
|
in hatred of their common enemy. Catholics for the first time rose
|
|
to the highest offices in the state. But the bishops knew, and
|
|
Pacelli who lived in Germany from 1917 to 1929 saw, that the
|
|
leakage from the Church was now disastrous. Before the 1914-1918
|
|
war the Catholic vote had already fallen, in spite of the high
|
|
Catholic birth rate. from one-fifth to one-sixth of the total
|
|
electorate, whereas Catholic writers like the Jesuit Father Krose
|
|
had estimated that by superior birth rate alone Catholics would
|
|
raise their percentage of the population by one percent every
|
|
decade. After the war their percentage, instead of rising, fell
|
|
steeply, though the masses of Catholic peasants and farmers
|
|
continued to have large families while the masses of non-Catholic
|
|
urban workers increasingly practiced birth control. It is enough to
|
|
quote the figures at the last democratic elections. In November
|
|
1932, when the last entirely free election was held, the combined
|
|
Catholic vote was 5326583 in a total of 35000000 votes or not
|
|
much more than one-seventh. In March, 1933, when Hitler was
|
|
Chancellor and there was a good deal of trickery and intimidation
|
|
-- but, we shall see, complete freedom for the Catholics -- the
|
|
Catholic vote was 5496054 in 39316873, or less than one-
|
|
seventh. Catholics who were represented in American literature as
|
|
one-third of the population could not in this supreme crisis get
|
|
one-seventh of the adult community. Their proportion would have
|
|
been even less if they had not had the energetic support of the
|
|
Jews against Hitler, as the Catholic Emil Ritter shows in his work
|
|
Der Weg des Politischen Katholizismus (1934). The Jews were ordered
|
|
by their rabbis to vote with the Catholics, and in Berlin the
|
|
Catholics ran a Jewish candidate.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Now turn to the other side, At the time when the Church began
|
|
to fight the Socialists the latter could poll only 349000 votes.
|
|
By 1907 the Socialist vote had risen to 3010800. The total number
|
|
of voters had doubled: the Socialist vote had increased ten-fold:
|
|
the Catholic vote had, taking into account the growth of
|
|
population, considerably decreased. But again it will be enough to
|
|
quote the final figures, just before the sun of freedom sank below
|
|
the horizon. In November, 1932, the Socialists and Communists
|
|
polled 13712292 votes, or much more than a third of the adult
|
|
community, Before the March election Goering's men had fired the
|
|
Reichstag to raise the Communist scare and, as Hitler was
|
|
Chancellor, Socialists and Communists were forbidden to hold
|
|
meetings and their papers suppressed, so the Communist vote fell
|
|
considerably and the Socialist vote slightly. Yet the two parties
|
|
still cast 12321684 votes, or moire than twice as many as the
|
|
combined (and free) Catholic parties and nearly a third of the
|
|
whole. The Nazis, I may add, even in the final election, with the
|
|
help of the Communist scare, the Pope's blessing -- as we shall see
|
|
-- and corrupt tactics, did not get one-half of the total vote
|
|
(17265823 votes out of 39316873). Germany never voluntarily
|
|
accepted Hitler. His party took power because it was the largest of
|
|
ten.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
4
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The glibness with which works of reference continue year after
|
|
year to say that Catholics in Germany are one-third of the
|
|
population, or 25000000 out of 75000.000, make the German puzzle
|
|
worse than ever for most people. How could a group of men who set
|
|
out upon one of the most colossal aggressive enterprises in history
|
|
begin by defying and persecuting one-third of the nation in
|
|
addition to a savage repression of the still larger body of
|
|
Socialists and Communists? Why are all our experts (or oracles)
|
|
convinced that the overwhelming majority of the German people
|
|
support Hitler yet pay respectful attention to the shrieks of men
|
|
like the late Cardinal Mundelein that the Catholic third of the
|
|
nation is bitterly persecuted?</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The truth is plainly shown in the above figures. As late as
|
|
the November election of 1932 -- we shall see presently what
|
|
happened after it -- the Catholic hierarchy was violently opposed
|
|
to Socialism and Communism as well as to Hitler and insisted on
|
|
Catholics voting for Catholic candidates. This was easy in Germany,
|
|
where the main body of the Catholics is found in certain provinces
|
|
where they form the great majority of the community. On this
|
|
occasion, moreover, the appeal of the bishop to their flocks was
|
|
the most urgent and solemn since Bismarck had fought the Church 60
|
|
years earlier. Is it seriously suggested that any large proportion
|
|
of genuine Catholics voted, in so grave a crisis, either for the
|
|
Socialists or for the bunch of apostates who, their leaders said,
|
|
were just as anxious as the Socialists to abolish the Church? If
|
|
you want to make an allowance for invalids and other possibilities
|
|
remember that on the other hand the Catholics had the support of
|
|
half a million Jews, who were too scattered to have their own
|
|
candidates. In the circumstance's the voting figures give us a much
|
|
safer indication of the truth than any statements of writers.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> These figures show that in 1932 Catholics were 13 percent, not
|
|
33 percent, of the adult community. A desperate apologist might
|
|
suggest that in Germany, differently from in other countries, the
|
|
young are more religious than the older folk and this would give
|
|
the Church a larger total than the election figure's suggest. Such
|
|
an apologist would have to be very ignorant of German conditions.
|
|
In Great Briton, priests publicly admit that in many towns 50
|
|
percent of the boys quit the Church when they leave the school. And
|
|
in Britain the atmosphere is not quite as poisonous for the young,
|
|
from the Church angle, as in Nazi Germany. You have heard of the
|
|
Strength through Joy movement, but you may not have heard how
|
|
youths have a song with the refrain, "On the heath and in the
|
|
meadows I lose my Strength through Joy," how working girls sing on
|
|
the streets a hymn to Mary which suggests -- I forget the exact
|
|
words -- that her name was probably Cohen and her baby was born on
|
|
the wrong side of the blanket. But suppose we take a generous view.
|
|
Thirteen percent of the nation in 1932 meant about 12000000
|
|
Catholics. Make what allowance you like for absenteeism from the
|
|
polls (though every possible voter was whipped up) or other
|
|
factors, but you cannot raise that figure to 15000000, which is
|
|
only half what the Pope claims.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> And it is admitted that since 1932 the Church has suffered
|
|
further and catastrophic losses. The organization which held the
|
|
Catholic body together is torn to shreds. Think of the numerous </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
5
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>societies (Knights of Columbus, Daughters of Mary, etc.) which in
|
|
America are extremely important in keeping the faithful loyal and
|
|
docile to the clergy. They are all suppressed in Germany. The two
|
|
political parties are dissolved. The Catholic press, the supreme
|
|
instrument of the clergy, is ruined. "All that remains of the one-
|
|
time great Catholic press of Germany," said the Vatican Radio in
|
|
March (1941), "are a few parish magazines, and even these have to
|
|
be edited with the greatest care." All Catholic schools in the
|
|
Catholic provinces have been closed and all the charitable and
|
|
other institutions which were one of the chief advertisements of
|
|
the Church have been taken over. All religious brothers, nuns,
|
|
etc., have been ignominiously expelled from education and every
|
|
Catholic child knows from its Nazi playmates that this is said to
|
|
be on account of a discovery of a plague of some kind of shameful
|
|
wickedness amongst them. A ghastly reproach has been put upon the
|
|
whole by jailing thousands of them for moral turpitude and
|
|
seduction of the young. Then there is the economic pressure, as
|
|
good jobs must be got from Nazi bosses, the social pressure, and so
|
|
on. There cannot be more than 10000000 Catholics in Germany
|
|
today, and that means a loss of at least 15000000, if not
|
|
20000000. The Catholic author of a special article in the London
|
|
Daily Express (November 15, 1939) the most widely circulated paper
|
|
in the world said that by 1936 priests in the Rhineland admitted
|
|
that they had lost half their flocks and added that "if the Nazis
|
|
remain in power another decade Roman Catholicism may be obliterated
|
|
from Germany." That is stronger language than I have used.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Any man who finds this difficult to understand may reflect on
|
|
the following experience. A friend of mine, a person of high
|
|
character and a Catholic by baptism, went in 1937 to pay a
|
|
prolonged visit to relatives and friends in the Rhineland, his old
|
|
home. Everywhere he found the Catholics speaking with genial
|
|
disdain both of the Nazis and the Church. It was a mainly Catholic
|
|
district, and when my friend asked what they thought of the charges
|
|
of vice against the monks they laughingly replied that they had
|
|
always had a suspicion about life in those institutions. Catholic
|
|
belief, in other words, was never so deep amongst them as Catholic
|
|
writers pretend. They just wanted to be left alone to drink and
|
|
feed and smoke in the way of their fathers. How are such folk
|
|
likely to have fared under the pressure of the last five years?</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> However that may be, stupendous losses are, as I said,
|
|
admitted. And these losses are the key to the Vatican policy in
|
|
Germany. It is to check them and to recover ground that, in spite
|
|
of one deception after another, the Vatican has ordered German
|
|
Catholics to submit and has tried year after year to enter into
|
|
alliance with Hitler. That is why the Pope in spite of his discreet
|
|
letters of sympathy to Queen Wilhelmina and King Leopold and his
|
|
protests against the ghastly attempts to annihilate the Poles after
|
|
they had been conquered, never uttered one word of straight moral
|
|
condemnation of any one of the long series of cynical breaches of
|
|
treaties, ruthless aggressions, and foul treatment of subject
|
|
peoples by which the Nazi government has roused against itself the
|
|
anger and disgust of the whole free world except its Catholic
|
|
allies. That terrible indictment I will proceed to justify point by
|
|
point.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
6
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Chapter 11</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> THE POPE JOINS THE GANG</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> We saw that two grave dilemmas confronted Pacelli when, in
|
|
1930, he became Secretary of State to the late Pope and took over
|
|
the supreme control of the international policy of the Vatican.
|
|
There was an acrid quarrel with Mussolini over the terms of the
|
|
Treaty and Concordat he had signed and a request from Japan that
|
|
the Papacy should recognize its annexation of Manchuria, which the
|
|
conscience of the civilized world condemned. We saw how he resolved
|
|
these dilemmas. He linked the Church firmly to two partners of the
|
|
criminal Conspiracy; which would come to be known as the Axis. He
|
|
had hardly accomplished this, when the third problem arose. Hitler,
|
|
doubtless encouraged by the holy alliance with Italy and Japan,
|
|
sent an emissary to ask for recognition of his share in the brewing
|
|
plot against civilization. He got it. The Black International
|
|
joined the gang.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> When you sum up events in this bold fashion many folk shake
|
|
their heads skeptically, so, although in the mad rush of life in
|
|
our time it seems almost to be ancient history -- it is less than
|
|
ten years old -- I must briefly repeat the evidence of what
|
|
happened in 1932. Remember that Pacelli knew Germany thoroughly. He
|
|
had left it, after twelve years close observation of its life, in
|
|
1929, and his new office as Secretary of State compelled him to
|
|
watch carefully the critical course of events in that country.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bitterly as he hated Socialism, because he expected it
|
|
everywhere sooner or later to turn to the Russian model and declare
|
|
religion "the opium of the people," he was fully aware that in face
|
|
of the Nazi threat and in view of the distress which the world-
|
|
slump and the sudden cessation of loans had brought upon the
|
|
country the Catholics were cooperating with the Socialists under a
|
|
Catholic Chancellor, Bruning, and later the Catholic General von
|
|
Schleicher. Bruning was a shrewd opportunist who leaned to the
|
|
Right or the Left as occasion required, but he was a good
|
|
statesman. As long as he held together the coalition of Liberals,
|
|
Catholics, Jews, Socialists, and Communist the Nazi's had no chance
|
|
of success. It was in very large part the Vatican that ruined this
|
|
defense and the leadership of Bruning by forcing him away from the
|
|
Socialists and patronizing the Nazis.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> That Pacelli was guilty of a criminal blunder must be
|
|
admitted. He knew that Hitler had already given proof of his
|
|
duplicity and of his infamous intentions but like Mussolini, he
|
|
gambled on the success of Nazi militarism and the spinelessness of
|
|
the democracies. All the world now knows how first the German
|
|
industrialists, headed by Thyssen and Hagenberg, brought their
|
|
millions to the Nazi treasury and used every means in their power
|
|
to influence their Liberal and Radical workers in Hitler's favor.
|
|
The new Nazi Party emerged from as slimy a mess of intrigue and
|
|
deception as one can imagine. Hitler had won a large body of the
|
|
workers -- the Nazi group had started as a semi-Socialist working-
|
|
class movement, pure and simple -- by promising to improve their </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
7
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>condition at the expense of "the bloated capitalist." By 1931
|
|
Hitler welcomed the gold of the capitalist -- and any other gold
|
|
that came along -- and sold his semi-Socialism. Ambassador Dodd,
|
|
who was then in Berlin, describes in his Diary how he saw the
|
|
royalists and land-owners as well as the industrialists buzzing
|
|
round the Nazi headquarters.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Hitler double-crossed them all. He took their money and rose
|
|
in November, 1932, to the electoral strength which I have
|
|
described. In 1930 the Nazi vote had been one-sixth of the whole.
|
|
In 1932 it was one-third. But they had used up all their resources
|
|
and were very dejected. They could get no more from the Liberals
|
|
and Conservatives and they could not approach the Socialists and
|
|
Communists, however ready they were to sell what soul they had to
|
|
the devil. What about the Catholics?</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Von Papen was the queerest figure in the bunch of Nazi
|
|
leaders. His Catholic standing was such that he received a high
|
|
decoration from the Vatican -- he is a Chamberlain of the Papal
|
|
Court -- and he was a friend of the very conservative President
|
|
Hindenburg and the Prussian aristocrats. In the summer of 1932 he
|
|
had, through his influence with Hindenburg, got the Chancellorship
|
|
away from Bruning, though he had in turn soon lost it to the
|
|
Catholic General von Schleicher. Note carefully that Germany thus
|
|
had three Catholic Chancellors (Premiers) in succession, an honor
|
|
of which they had not hitherto dreamed, under the Liberal-Socialist
|
|
coalition, which Pacelli helped to destroy in favor of the Nazis.
|
|
Von Schleicher, in close touch with the German hierarchy, adopted
|
|
an even more pronounced policy of cooperation with the Socialists
|
|
against the Nazis than Bruning had followed. With their support he
|
|
dared to publish the fact that the aristocratic Prussian land-
|
|
owners had shamelessly dipped into the public funds, and Von Papen
|
|
easily persuaded Hindenburg to protect their noble caste by
|
|
dismissing Von Schleicher and making Hitler Chancellor. He would
|
|
now control the next election; and the greasy Goering would do
|
|
dirty work in the country for him.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> About the same time, the beginning of 1933, Von Papen was sent
|
|
to Rome to propose an alliance with the Vatican. It is quite stupid
|
|
to affect to dispute these statements because Von Papen in a
|
|
published speech (Der 12 November, 1933, p. 7), which I have read,
|
|
actually boasts of his work. On November 9, 1933, he made this
|
|
speech to a very large audience of Catholic working men at Cologne,
|
|
speaking as one Catholic to others and rousing them to support
|
|
Hitler. He said, unctuously: "Providence destined me to render an
|
|
essential service in the birth of the government of the national
|
|
regeneration." As his bosom friends, Hitler and Goebbels, were
|
|
apostates and half the secondary leaders were notoriously
|
|
sodomists, I do not wonder that folk find this chapter of German
|
|
history perplexing, but that Von Papen did in fact propose to
|
|
Pacelli, in Hitler's name, that he should order the German
|
|
Catholics to drop their hostility to the Nazis in return for, when
|
|
they attained power, a favorable Concordat with the Church --
|
|
during his twelve years in Germany Pacelli had tried in vain to get
|
|
this -- and that Pacelli accepted is abundantly proved, and most
|
|
clearly by the subsequent course of events.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
8
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Early in 1933 the statement was widely repeated. in the German
|
|
Press that the bishops, meeting at Fulda, had received instructions
|
|
from Rome to abandon the hostility to Hitler and had passed these
|
|
on to the clergy. It is further stated in all histories of the time
|
|
that in preparation for the March election only Catholics and Nazis
|
|
were allowed to organize and appeal to the country. See, in
|
|
particular, the account, which will certainly not be accused of
|
|
anti-Catholic bias, in Seldes (The Vatican). He adds that one of
|
|
the Catholic clerical leaders, Msgr. Kaas, was sent to Rome to
|
|
advise Pacelli to agree and that he said of Hitler: "This man, the
|
|
bearer of high ideal's, will do all that is necessary to save the
|
|
nation from catastrophe."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I gather that there were already some in the German Church who
|
|
were in favor of alliance with Hitler. A few years later one of the
|
|
most important priests in Munich died and his funeral was
|
|
officially honored by the Nazi government; and in the heat of the
|
|
later struggle, when many German Catholics blamed Cardinal
|
|
Faulhaber, head of their Church, the Valerist paper, the Irish
|
|
Independent (August 13, 1938), which was in close touch with the
|
|
clergy, said that "Cardinal Faulhaber was very friendly to National
|
|
Socialism in the beginning" -- in other words, until Hitler double-
|
|
crossed the Vatican. Hitler had by this time begun to wash out any
|
|
suspicion that he would, if returned to power, injure the Church.
|
|
In one of his first speeches in the Reichstag, on March 23, 1933,
|
|
he said that "as we see in Christianity the unshakable foundation
|
|
of the moral life so it is our duty to continue to cultivate
|
|
friendly relations with the Holy See and to develop them."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The great majority in the Church could not so easily reconcile
|
|
themselves to cooperation with a disreputable bunch of apostates
|
|
and sodomists, and there were many complaints in the Catholic press
|
|
when the bishops circulated the Papal order to observe at least
|
|
benevolent neutrality. The terms of the order are, of course, not
|
|
known but we may gather them from the result. The Annual Register
|
|
for 1933, says, in recording Hitler's triumph at the election: "The
|
|
gigantic swing-over of the Catholic middle-class in West and South
|
|
Germany to the Nazi Party broke the power of the old middle-class
|
|
Catholic parties, the Center and the Bavarian People's Party" (p.
|
|
169). The word "gigantic" will seem misplaced if you look back upon
|
|
the electoral statistics I have given. The Catholic vote fell but
|
|
not so heavily. But note that the writer is referring only to the
|
|
middle class, and it is significant that the Catholic vote fell
|
|
even by 20000 when every party feverishly whipped all its
|
|
supporters to the poll.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It is, at all events, another witness to the change of
|
|
attitude of the Catholics under ecclesiastical direction, and a
|
|
fourth, and still more important witness, is a French priest
|
|
writing later in the French Catholic fortnightly, the Revue des
|
|
Deux Mondes (January 15, 1935, article "Le catholicisme et la
|
|
politique mondiale") and boasting of it as one of the diplomatic
|
|
triumphs of the Vatican.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> But surely these witnesses are superfluous in view of the
|
|
acknowledged fact that on July 20, 1933, Pacelli proudly signed the
|
|
Concordat he had arranged with the Nazis. Does anybody suppose that</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
9
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>the Nazis' who are now represented as from the start a horde of
|
|
irreligious blackguards, went out of their way after they had won
|
|
their triumph, to promise Rome that they would respect rights which
|
|
it claimed and that were drastically opposed to their principles?
|
|
The man who writes history on suspicions and assumptions, cannot
|
|
complain if his readers are skeptical, but the apologist who
|
|
suggests such things as this must have readers who are incapable of
|
|
ordinary judgment. Hitler's aim was to form a totalitarian state in
|
|
the most literal sense: a state in which every implement of
|
|
instruction or mind-forming should be used by Nazi officials to
|
|
instil racial pride and a readiness for aggressive war. Yet the
|
|
first thing he does after securing power is to promise a Church
|
|
which he hates that it shall control the education of millions of
|
|
children, continue to have a press that is pledged to
|
|
internationalism and peace, and draft its members into societies
|
|
and fraternities for the cult of a Jewish Bible and a Gospel of
|
|
Peace. He was carrying out a bargain; but one that he never had the
|
|
least intention of honoring in practice.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> We no more say that the Black International put Hitler in
|
|
power than we say that it caused the war. We will not even linger
|
|
to consider how much influence the Papal policy had amongst the
|
|
various corrupt factors that put him in power. The point is that
|
|
the Cross embraced the Swastika: the Pope joined the Gang. The
|
|
Vatican sold its position as international moral censor as
|
|
shamefully as it had sold it to the other partners of the Axis.
|
|
Incredible? Then let the apologist quote any Papal condemnations of
|
|
the appalling crimes against humanity and civilization that have
|
|
been committed every year since Hitler seized power. I decline to
|
|
count mild protests against actions which injured the Church.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The world, bemused by a press which could see nothing in the
|
|
future except "the menace of Bolshevism," took little notice of
|
|
this at the time. But let it not now be suggested that perhaps
|
|
Pacelli himself understood Nazism no more than the majority of
|
|
folk. After twelve years in Germany for the single purpose of
|
|
studying developments! A few years later editors began to profess
|
|
that they wished they could penetrate the secret of Nazi policy. It
|
|
was tragicomic. The substantial part of Hitler's program -- it was
|
|
expanded when he saw the criminal sluggishness of Fiance and
|
|
Britain -- had been for years in Mein Kamph. In 1938 I put in the
|
|
form of a program, in Hitler's own words, statements of his aims
|
|
which are scattered over, and often repeated in, that immense flood
|
|
of twaddle. It will be of use if I reproduce the main part of it
|
|
here.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> "We must see that the strength of our people has, its roots,
|
|
not in colonies, but in land of our own in Europe (p. 754). The
|
|
regaining of our lost provinces cannot be achieved by solemn
|
|
appeals to God as pious hopes but only by force of arms (708). The
|
|
South Tyrol and our lost provinces can be won back only by a bloody
|
|
struggle (708). The most sacred right in the world is the right to
|
|
land that you can till yourself and the holiest sacrifice is the
|
|
blood you shed for it (755). Our policy in the East [Russia] must
|
|
be that we will win more land for the German people. Since we need
|
|
strength for this, yet the mortal enemy of our people, France,
|
|
strangles us mercilessly, we must make every sacrifice that is </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
10
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>necessary to destroy the position of France in Europe (757). This
|
|
policy can be carried out only by an alliance with England (689).
|
|
There, is no English, American, or Italian statesman who was ever
|
|
pro-German. Any man who says that we can form alliances with
|
|
foreign nations in virtue of a pro-German spirit in the leading
|
|
statesmen of those countries is either an ass or a liar (698). The
|
|
alliance with England and Italy will enable Germany to make its
|
|
case, under the shelter of such a coalition, all the preparations
|
|
that are needed for a final settlement with France (755)."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> There, written nearly twenty years ago, is the whole program
|
|
of duplicity, callousness, and aggression. As the current
|
|
"translation" of Mein Kampf, subsidized by the Nazi government, was
|
|
grossly fraudulent. I translated these sentences, which are
|
|
expanded and justified at great length in the work, from the 1935
|
|
(mature) edition, and sent them to two editors of radical London
|
|
papers, with a circulation of about 4000000 copies, who professed
|
|
to be puzzled about Hitler's intentions. Both refused to print my
|
|
article, and Britain slumbered and blundered on.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> If any man supposes that Pacelli and the Vatican did not know
|
|
the contents of Mein Kampf, which already circulated by the
|
|
million, he must have a singularly low estimate of the ability with
|
|
which their work is conducted. Before Pacelli put his pen to
|
|
parchment the Day of the Long Knife, about which Nazi youth's had
|
|
sung chants all over Germany for two years, occurred. More than
|
|
100000 Jews, Communists, Socialists, Pacifists, etc., were
|
|
barbarously treated and robbed of their possessions and in many
|
|
cases their lives. Pacelli amiably continued to work out the
|
|
details of his compact with the devil, and the church bells rang
|
|
when it was signed. And the German bishops deputed Cardinal Bertram
|
|
to assure Hitler that they were "glad to express as soon as
|
|
possible" their joy at the agreement and their "sincere readiness
|
|
to cooperate to their best ability with the new government" (the
|
|
Catholic Universe, August 18, 1933). Hitler's followers, especially
|
|
the notorious pervert Roehm and his friends, scorned the concordat
|
|
and insulted the Church, and infringements of the agreement began
|
|
at once. But when Catholic writers say that Cardinal Faulhaber at
|
|
once took a firm stand against the Nazi they gravely mislead their
|
|
reader's.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The sermons which Faulhaber delivered can be read in an
|
|
English translation Judaism, Christianity, and Germany, 1933). They
|
|
are a painful exhibition of moral cowardice and sycophancy. I have
|
|
already quoted the Valerist organ saying that Faulhaber was
|
|
favorable to Nazism "in the beginning." It adds that "the fact that
|
|
he found it impossible later not to oppose certain elements of
|
|
their policy, hurt us as well as annoyed them." What were these
|
|
elements? Did he, as a Catholic prelate professes to regard as his
|
|
duty, censure Hitler for his perjury in violating his solemn oath
|
|
to preserve the Constitution? Did he denounce the brutality of the
|
|
attack on Jews and Socialists? Not a word. His attack was purely
|
|
theological. The Anti-Semitic language of the Nazis was opposed to
|
|
the Catholic doctrine that the Old Testament was inspired and that
|
|
Jehovah was the God of Christianity and was incarnated in the Jew
|
|
Jesus. The Nazis laughed at him. Rosenberg, who had at that time
|
|
some idea that because I admired pre-Nazi Germany I could be won to
|
|
support them, sent me a copy of his drastic reply.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
11
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> In the preceding book I said that Pacelli at this time wrote
|
|
the most severe attack on Hitler that ever carne from a Papal
|
|
source. He was engaged in his mission -- not a "good will" mission
|
|
but arranging a bloody Fascist reaction -- in South America. From
|
|
there he sent to Cardinal Schulte at Cologne a letter in which he
|
|
roused German Catholics against the Nazi leaders. "When in Satanic
|
|
pride, false prophets arise, pretending to be the bearers of a new
|
|
creed," he said, it behooved the faithful to stir themselves, I
|
|
cannot trace that the Cardinal passed on the warning to his flock
|
|
but, in any case, what was the point of the attack?</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> In June (1934) Hitler had surpassed his record of outrage to
|
|
date by the infamous Blood Purge in which Catholic leaders like
|
|
General von Schleicher and Strasser were murdered together with
|
|
Roehm and other notorious perverts. The excuse was a confused plea
|
|
that the party had to be morally purified and that there was a Plot
|
|
against Hitler. But whereas in the Russian executions, about which
|
|
the world press poured out streams of indignation, the conspiracy
|
|
was proved in open court after trials which distinguished foreign
|
|
lawyers declared unassailable, there was no pretense of a trial in
|
|
Germany. Hitler, already under the influence of the semi-insane
|
|
egoism that developed after his success, shouted "I am the law and
|
|
justice in Germany", and the men -- hundreds of them -- were shot
|
|
down in their houses or their cells! Was this what Pacelli
|
|
condemned? Not at all. He had heard that the Nazis were helping
|
|
Catholics who favored them to found in Germany a National Catholic
|
|
Church, acknowledging no obedience to Rome and finding room for
|
|
Nazi doctrines. Notice carefully that Pacelli denounces the Nazis
|
|
as "pretending to be the bearers of a new creed". So it was with
|
|
the protests of the German Catholic bishops which are quoted. They
|
|
protested against the increasing violations of the Concordat by
|
|
interference with their schools and their Catholic organizations.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Chapter III</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> HOW HE HELPED HITLER IN AUSTRIA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> We shall resume presently the revolting story of how the Pope,
|
|
with Pacelli at his elbow, helped Hitler to consolidate his power
|
|
in Germany but at this point it is necessary to turn aside and
|
|
consider what was happening in Austria. Bavaria is a sister-state
|
|
of Austria rather than of Prussia, and from Munich, its capitol,
|
|
Pacelli had watched very closely the development in the southern
|
|
Republic. It was of absorbing interest from the ecclesiastical
|
|
angle. Austria was the only country in the world where a Catholic
|
|
priest, Msgr. Seipel, a man of intense loyalty to the Vatican, had
|
|
supreme power. During fourteen year's after the war Seipel, a
|
|
professor of moral theology and a leader of the Christian Socialist
|
|
movement, was either himself Chancellor (President) or the power
|
|
behind the Chancellor. He represented the Church, for it at once
|
|
transpired that there was as much Socialism in Christian Socialism
|
|
as there is science in Christian Science.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
12
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The state was thus a theocracy, the only one in the world
|
|
except Thibet, and as such of profound interest to every Vatican
|
|
official. This interest was all the greater from the fact that,
|
|
while the state was Catholic, its capitol, Vienna, was Socialist
|
|
and Atheistic. Socialism and Communism had made the same progress
|
|
in Austria after the war and the expulsion of the emperor as they
|
|
had made in Germany. In Vienna, Linz, and other industrial towns
|
|
the Socialists had outvoted the Catholics and Liberals in the
|
|
municipal elections and had won control and carried out their
|
|
principles in a civic policy. Two features of their rule must be
|
|
noted.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The first is that the Austrian Socialists were emphatically
|
|
anti-Catholic. The well-known amiability (Gutmuthlichkeit) of the
|
|
Austrian character saved them from the worst libels of Bolsheviks
|
|
that were served upon the world-press, but the fierce hostility to
|
|
them of the Church, which made fruitless constitutional efforts to
|
|
capture Vienna, hardened their attitude to it. Here every vote cast
|
|
for Socialist or a Communist was sternly pronounced a vote against
|
|
the Church. "Even to this day," says C.A. Macartney, a
|
|
distinguished and conservative scholar of Rambridge University,
|
|
"the real battle of Austrian Socialism is directed against the
|
|
Church" (The Social Revolution in Austria, 1926, p. 54). And the
|
|
Socialists continued to win, large numbers from the Church year
|
|
after year and to gain ground in the country. At the 1927 election
|
|
they polled 830000 votes outside Vienna and increased their vote
|
|
in Vienna by 120000. Is it a mere coincidence that in that year
|
|
the Christian Socialist government began to resort to persecution
|
|
and violence?</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The second feature was of no interest at all to churchmen but
|
|
ought to have been -- and was not -- frankly described in the
|
|
press. It is that while Austria as a whole under its clerical
|
|
'statesmen' was so badly administered that the League of Nations
|
|
had to step in periodically to save it from bankruptcy, Vienna, in
|
|
spite of the heavy depression caused by the mutilation of the
|
|
country at Versailles, effected a very remarkable social
|
|
improvement. I was in Vienna when it took 500 Kronen -- a Krone
|
|
used to be worth 50c -- to buy a small apple, and a very small
|
|
cake, or the cheapest postage stamp, and half the workers were so
|
|
near "starving" that, the police told me, civil war was feared. Yet
|
|
after years of this, and still seriously crippled economically,
|
|
Vienna made extraordinary progress in education, housing, and other
|
|
social reforms. I have described it elsewhere and need say here
|
|
only that every impartial social student in Europe acknowledged it.
|
|
Macartriey says that in a few months the Socialist Municipal
|
|
Council "did more to better the condition of the masses than had
|
|
previous decades of legislation from above": Catholic legislation,
|
|
you understand, A London daily which is opposed to Socialism said
|
|
of this Socialist administration after the Catholics had
|
|
treacherously destroyed it that it had been "a model of democratic
|
|
government, as close to the ideal platonic Republic as the world
|
|
has ever seen" (News-Chronicle, February 12, 1935).</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The British editor was wrong on one point. Vienna was not
|
|
closer to the ideal Republic than Moscow, and Madrid and (with
|
|
reserves on account of the mass of illiteracy) Mexico City were </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
13
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>approaching it under Socialist rule. If it seems rash to claim that
|
|
this was of no interest from the ecclesiastical angle you have only
|
|
to reflect on the facts. Had the Vatican, indeed in this case
|
|
Catholics throughout the world, given any consideration to the
|
|
actual social fruits of Bolshevism when from 1935 onward they
|
|
shrieked for its extinction in Russia, Spain, and Mexico? The laity
|
|
were obviously ignorant of the truth. Their Catholic press never
|
|
mentioned countries or cities under Socialist rule except to repeat
|
|
the most venomous libels about their social condition. Were the
|
|
higher clergy equally ignorant? If you can suppose that they were,
|
|
you have to conclude that they were blind to every issue but one --
|
|
the wealth and power of the Black International.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> As I have written at length elsewhere, particularly in the
|
|
Appeal to Reason Library No. 5., on the development in Austria I
|
|
sum up the events briefly, with the addition of a few details that
|
|
have since transpired. The most important of these additions is
|
|
that we have now to review all these events since 1930 in the light
|
|
of Pacelli's scheme to have Socialism destroyed by alliance with
|
|
anti-Socialist powers, however criminal and unsavory they might be.
|
|
In 1934 his plan was not fully developed. He saw Socialism spread
|
|
in Germany but the destructive power was still almost below the
|
|
political horizon when he left the country. He saw it spread, with
|
|
devastating consequences to the Catholic missions, in China, and he
|
|
linked the Papacy with Japan. He saw it in South America and went
|
|
there to bring the Church and the wealthy to a practical agreement.
|
|
He saw it in Mexico but, for lack of definite evidence, we do not
|
|
say that in his visit to the States he encouraged the idea of a
|
|
beautiful Catholic-Wall-Street alliance. He saw it in Spain and
|
|
promoted the slowly maturing plot to destroy it. He saw it in
|
|
Russia, but until 1936 he still dreamed of a friendly alliance with
|
|
the Soviet authorities, and it was only when he definitely
|
|
abandoned this hope that he gave the Church the slogan: Extinguish
|
|
Bolshevism in Russia, China, Mexico and Spain. It was already
|
|
extinct, with his assistance, in Germany and Italy.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> In 1933 his plans were still piecemeal, and Austria was the
|
|
next obvious, province for his intrigues. By this time it was
|
|
evident that in a field of fair propaganda and free discussion the
|
|
Socialists won every time, and it could not plausibly be said in
|
|
the case of Austria, as it was lyingly said of Italy and Germany,
|
|
that Socialism led to distress and disorder. The only serious
|
|
criticism I have seen of the fine social work done in Vienna is
|
|
that it was financed by foreign loan's which were advanced for a
|
|
different purpose. That is false The city council at Vienna never
|
|
received any part of the advances. They went to the Christian
|
|
Socialist government, which means in large part to the Church.
|
|
Vienna paid its way by taxes and a financial system of great
|
|
ability.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> There was a special difficulty in the case of Austria: the
|
|
mutual jealousy of Mussolini and Hitler, who still hated and
|
|
distrusted each other and each wanted control of Austria. The
|
|
Vatican favored Italy, especially as before the end of 1933 Hitler
|
|
betrayed his duplicity and Austria was predominantly Catholic. In
|
|
1931 the Pope, assisted by Pacelli, had issued an Encyclical to the
|
|
effect that the Italian corporative state was (especially as it </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
14
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>bowed to Canon Law, put education under the Church, and heavily
|
|
subsidized the clergy) the model for Catholic countries. The
|
|
corporative state meant, of course, the destruction of Socialism
|
|
and Trade Unions, the workers being drafted into corporations under
|
|
the firm hand of Church and State, and the recognition of the
|
|
capitalists right of private property (or all the wealth he could
|
|
make) with a right of the state to conscript such of the wealth as
|
|
it needed. Portugal had adopted the scheme, as France and Spain
|
|
have since done.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Hitler, though he affected to despise the Austrians, was by no
|
|
means willing to see it pass under Italian influence or, as the
|
|
Catholics wanted, restore the imperial rule, but he was not yet in
|
|
a position to force a bargain upon Mussolini. As I quoted, he had
|
|
written long before this in Mein Kampf that Germans must win back
|
|
by force of arms even the South Tyrol from Italy, which had been
|
|
awarded it, at Versailles. This meant the annexation of Austria. He
|
|
cynically watched the Church coquetting in Austria with Italian
|
|
Fascism. If they chose to destroy Socialism for him, so much the
|
|
better. And Socialism was, in spite of its steady progress, doomed
|
|
from 1927. It not only mocked the financial ineptness of the
|
|
national government but it brought to light a series of grave
|
|
scandals in connection with the government and its supporters.
|
|
Seipel rallied to his support all the industrialists and landowners
|
|
and looked round for a knight in shining armor like Mussolini or
|
|
Hitler.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Prince Starhemberg, a conceited puppy of the type of Ciano or
|
|
Suner, but a wealthy noble, chose himself for the part. By Seipel's
|
|
treacherous connivance and with Italian assistance he was allowed
|
|
to create a private Fascist army, the Heimwehr -- "created in its
|
|
final form by Seipel," says the Annual Register, and Seipel did
|
|
nothing independently of the Vatican -- which very obviously
|
|
intended to attack the Socialists and Communists. In fact,
|
|
Starhemberg provoked a clash prematurely, but the Catholic
|
|
government had so small a majority in the Reichsrath that it was
|
|
beaten. Seipel was driven from the Chancellorship and streams of
|
|
Austrians quitted the Church (1933).</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Seipel and the Church put into the Chancellorship a priest-
|
|
ridden little man of peasant extraction and no particular ability
|
|
whom the American press came to glorify as "gallant little
|
|
Dollfuss." You may remember how he "stood up to Hitler"; though it
|
|
was not clearly explained at the time that in resisting Nazism he
|
|
was defending Fascism. In his first budget as Chancellor he
|
|
admitted a deficit of $70000000, a colossal sum for so small a
|
|
state and after all the loans, and he rarely had a majority of more
|
|
than one in Congress. The railway-men, who were very largely
|
|
Socialists, disclosed the fact that, against international
|
|
agreement, he was allowing Italy to use Austrian railroads to send
|
|
arms secretly into Hungary; which also Italy and the Vatican wanted
|
|
to make Fascist and allied to Italy. Dollfuss solemnly assured
|
|
France and Britain that the traffic should cease, but he secretly
|
|
maintained it, and the Socialists again exposed it. So "the
|
|
Socialist watch-dog had to be destroyed." That is the language of
|
|
the Annual Register in its impartial summary of the events of 1933.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
15
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Dollfuss went to Rome and had long talks with Mussolini and
|
|
Pacelli; with, incidentally, a talk to the Almighty in St. Peters.
|
|
You will, of course, not for a moment suspect that he discussed
|
|
with Pacelli the plot to destroy Austrian Socialism. The Church
|
|
never interferes in polities. But the course of the events that
|
|
followed the return of Dollfuss to Vienna clearly shows that this
|
|
second step in Hitler's march to world-domination was facilitated,
|
|
like the first, by the Black International. And in order to avoid
|
|
all suspicion of the use of tainted sources I will give a short
|
|
summary of these events as they are described, objectively, in the
|
|
Annual Rdgister, which certainly does not lean to Socialism or
|
|
Atheism.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Before he had set out for Rome Dollfuss had given a solemn
|
|
engagement (his second) to France that he would take no action
|
|
against the Socialists for disclosing the Hungarian-Italian
|
|
traffic. France and Britain feared Civil war in Austria and were
|
|
assured that all parties would be forbidden to store arms. They
|
|
were probably aware that both parties were collecting arms, but
|
|
while the Fascist Heimwehr was encouraged and made no secret of its
|
|
armament, the government took every measure to hamper the
|
|
Socialists, who had to store arms very secretly in their model
|
|
tenement-blocks. On his return, however, Dollfuss, the idol of the
|
|
clergy, disowned his solemn engagements and assumed dictatorial
|
|
powers. Mussolini had promised to see him through.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> He closed the Reichsrath (Congress) and announced that Austria
|
|
was to be "a corporative authoritative state." He suspended the
|
|
Mayor of Vienna and abolished the municipal government or paralyzed
|
|
it by cutting off its financial resources. He allowed Starhemberg's
|
|
army to take over provincial towns and to show itself openly in
|
|
Vienna. There is, in fact, evidence that agents of the Heimwehr
|
|
offered to sell pieces of artillery to the Socialists in order to
|
|
encourage them to rebel. It wits obvious that they were very
|
|
seriously threatened with extinction, but the prospect of success
|
|
against the government and the Heimwehr (which had artillery), with
|
|
Mussolini in the background, was so poor that there was no
|
|
agreement on a plan of revolt when the Catholic Fascists put into
|
|
circulation a report that they were in a few days going to enter
|
|
the blocks of workers tenements in search of the hidden arms and
|
|
Dollfuss publicly supported the Heimwehr, large numbers of the
|
|
Socialists and the Communists decided to fight. Dollfuss lied to
|
|
the world about the struggle he had provoked. He announced that 137
|
|
men, women, and children were killed. The number was at least 1500.
|
|
Eleven of the leaders were executed and 1188 men and women were
|
|
imprisoned; and many of these prisoners testified in court that
|
|
they were tortured in jail in the traditional and almost invariable
|
|
fashion of clerical counter-revolutions. So sordid was this chapter
|
|
of Catholic history from beginning to end that the impartial writer
|
|
in the Annual Register (1934, p. 194) concludes his account in
|
|
these ironic words:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> "At the cost of hundreds if not thousands of lives . . . the
|
|
Heimwebr Fascist movement, which was created in its final form by
|
|
the late Chancellor Msgr. Ignaz Seipel, achieved in 1934 its oft-
|
|
proclaimed aim of the destruction of the Social Democratic Party,
|
|
their violent ejection from the control of Vienna to which two-</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
16
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>thirds of the people had elected them, and the sweeping away of
|
|
parliamentary government in Austria. Thus culminated the anti-
|
|
Socialist policy inaugurated by the late Msgr. Seipel in 1926."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Seipel had died in 1922, and "gallant little Dollfuss" had,
|
|
after a visit to the Vatican, carried his policy to its logical
|
|
conclusion. Whatever difficulty we may have in some cases in
|
|
tracing the intrigues of the Black International there is none
|
|
here. The struggle was ecclesiastical. It was directed by priests
|
|
and aimed at restoring the power of the Church from beginning to
|
|
end. Pacelli had won his first campaign in his war for the
|
|
extinction of Bolshevism.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The Socialists had taken the chief part in the revolution of
|
|
1919 against Church and State. It had been, a Socialist historian
|
|
says, "the most peaceful and the most humane of all revolutions,"
|
|
for the successful republicans "had not hurt a hair of anybody's
|
|
head." The only error of this writer is his claim that it was a
|
|
unique revolution in its humanity. Five democratic revolutions in
|
|
Spain during the nineteenth century. several in Italy and Portugal,
|
|
and all the revolutions of 1848 had had the same character; and the
|
|
Spanish revolution of 1932 had lived up to the democratic
|
|
tradition. And the treachery and truculence of the clerical
|
|
counter-revolution of 1934 had followed the model of all such
|
|
movements. Yet journalists and essayists everywhere continued to
|
|
speak of the Reds as dangerously prone to violence and the Church
|
|
as the world's noblest guardian of peace, humanity, and justice.
|
|
Who are the real Reds?</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The Church followed up its victory with the customary
|
|
inhumanity. All funds and buildings belonging to the workers were
|
|
confiscated, and the arbitrary arrests of Socialists continued. By
|
|
the beginning of 1937 there were 24000 political prisoners,
|
|
largely men and women who had had no trial, in the jails of
|
|
Austria. In that year Miss Margery Fry, a very sane and respected
|
|
British prison-reformer, Wm. Rackham of Cambridge University, and
|
|
Professor Kimberg, a high authority on prisons, traveled over
|
|
Europe on a tour of inspection. They were not permitted in any
|
|
country to see how political prisoners were treated, and were not
|
|
allowed to visit any jails in Austria, Italy, Germany, and
|
|
Portugal. But they brought back and told in the British press a
|
|
horrible story of overcrowded jails in Hungary, Rumania, Bulgaria,
|
|
and Yugo-Slavia, of the use of torture and brutality by jailers and
|
|
police, of semi-starvation and cruel conditions, of tens of
|
|
thousands who had never had any sort of trial. On the very day on
|
|
which I write this a cautious Liberal British paper (News
|
|
Chronicle, September 25, 1941), describes just such brutality in
|
|
Spanish jails today. And the world-press still refused to see in
|
|
these things the shadow of things to come.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> That was the new situation in Austria: overcrowded jails,
|
|
refusal of trials, torture, and brutality by Catholic jailers. And
|
|
over it all the Church waved its blessing. Cardinal Innitzer issued
|
|
a special address to the workers, saying that their Holy Mother the
|
|
Church affectionately welcomed them back to the fold. There was not
|
|
much tenderness about the process, for the Church at once set up an
|
|
intolerable tyranny. Every government employee must attend church </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
17
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>regularly or be fired. Every teacher must go to confession at least
|
|
once in three weeks. The splendid system of education which, to the
|
|
admiration of the educational world, the Socialists had created was
|
|
destroyed and text books of the most mendacious Catholic type were
|
|
substituted. Socialist efficiency was replaced by Catholic-Fascist
|
|
inefficiency. Though the worst of the world-depression had now
|
|
passed. Austria fell into a condition of semi-famine, and the
|
|
priests used even this for their purposes. The Annual Register
|
|
tells us that the priests at first refused all foreign aid so as to
|
|
"force those in distress to apply to Catholic organizations", and
|
|
two Englishmen were arrested for giving money to starving people.
|
|
Fifty out of sixty seats on the State Cultural Council were
|
|
allotted to Catholics.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> How Pacelli must have rubbed his hands! So did Hitler. On the
|
|
ruins of the Socialist-Communist movement the Nazis of Austria
|
|
quickly grew in power. They murdered Dollfuss, whom the priests
|
|
replaced with the unhappy and purblind Schuschnigg. Hitler drew
|
|
nearer to Mussolini and bought off his interest in Austria by
|
|
promising him, with his usual brazen dishonesty, that be should not
|
|
only have Savoy, Coisica, and Tunis from France and Dalmatia from
|
|
Yugo-Slavia but he should continue to be the dominant power in
|
|
Hungary and in all countries south of the Danube. That suited
|
|
Pacelli. The Catholics of Austria added to the Catholics of Germany
|
|
would give the Vatican a stronger hand in its new deals with the
|
|
Nazis, and there might be a glorious bloc of Catholic powers from
|
|
Portugal (when the new revolution was accomplished in Spain) to
|
|
Bulgar. If I were a man of pinity I should be disposed to quote the
|
|
old Latin adage: Those whom God wishe's to destroy he first makes
|
|
mad. The destruction of Socialism in Austria and enslavement of the
|
|
whole country to Cardinal Innitzer was a most beneficent removal of
|
|
obstacles to Hitler's annexation of the country. To this and the
|
|
share of the Black International in it we will return later.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Chapter IV</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> HITLER EXPOSES THE SHAME OF THE CHURCH</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Pacelli had soon repented of the hasty attack on Hitler which
|
|
he had sent from South America to Cardinal Schulte. Apart from weak
|
|
complaints that the Nazis did not observe the Concordat and a
|
|
sharper note when he saw the Gestapo men annihilating his treasured
|
|
Polish Church by castration and other gentle Nazi methods, he has
|
|
never condemned Hitler. Certainly he has never condemned Nazi crime
|
|
and bestiality as such, though all the world recognizes that he had
|
|
a magnificent field for moral censorship. And his restraint, if you
|
|
like to call it that, was not due to any better observance of the
|
|
Concordat in Germany. On the contrary, Catholic schools and
|
|
associations were disappearing. But to challenge Hitler would lead
|
|
at once to more drastic treatment of the Church and he must try to
|
|
win a compromise.</p>
|
|
|
|
<div> </div>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
18
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> An opportunity occurred in 1935. The rich Saar province had at
|
|
the Congress of Versailles been entrusted to the League of Nations
|
|
-- really to the exploitation of French industrialists -- for 15
|
|
years, and the time had now expired. The inhabitants were to vote
|
|
whether or no they would return to Germany. They were
|
|
overwhelmingly Catholic so that an issue that was of the greatest
|
|
possible importance to Hitler was to be decided by the Church; for
|
|
it would be preposterous to suggest that in so delicate a matter
|
|
the local hierarchy would act without instructions from the
|
|
Vatican. On January 6 the bishops of Speier and Trier, the heads of
|
|
the local Church, Issued a letter of instruction that was to be
|
|
read in every Catholic Church of the province. Whether or no you
|
|
call this interfering in politics they ordered their people to vote
|
|
for Hitler. "As German Catholics," they said, "it is out duty to
|
|
uphold the greatness, the Welfare, and the peace of our
|
|
Fatherland." On the following Sunday, 13th, the voting day, special
|
|
prayers were said after Mass for a victory for Hitler (London
|
|
Times, January 18). On the same day (18th) the Catholic Times
|
|
boasted that Hitler owed his triumph to the Catholics of the Saar,
|
|
and it remained to be seen how grateful he would prove. The bells
|
|
rang in every Catholic Church when the overwhelming vote in favor
|
|
of Hitler was announced; just as they had rung in every Church of
|
|
Italy for the triumph of Mussolini.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Hitler made no change in his policy of ignoring the Concordat.
|
|
More Catholic schools and associations were closed, and Cardinal
|
|
Faulhaber vaguely threatened in one of his sermons to excommunicate
|
|
the Nazi leaders: not for their crimes, of course, but for
|
|
interfering with Catholic education. Hitler had directed that
|
|
Catholic parents in Munich should vote whether they wanted to send
|
|
their children to Catholic or to national schools. As a result of
|
|
the vote the pupils attending Catholic schools fell from 36464 to
|
|
19266, and the pupil's of Nazi schools rose from 33 to 65 percent
|
|
of the whole. Every priest knew that this meant further enormous
|
|
leakage from the Church.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It must have put Pacelli in a painful dilemma when, soon after
|
|
this, Hitler demanded a vote of confidence from the entire country.
|
|
He had just, in defiance of France and the League of Nations, taken
|
|
a very serious step in the realization of his aggressive plan. He
|
|
had sent troops to occupy the Rhine provinces which by the terms of
|
|
the Treaty were to remain demilitarized. The German people were to
|
|
pronounce upon his entire policy: his crimes to date and the
|
|
aggressive campaign of which, as everybody knew, the defiance of
|
|
Versailles was the first clause.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> One would have thought that here was a fine opportunity to
|
|
take refuge in the worn cliche that the Church never interferes in
|
|
politic's, but the German hierarchy composed a letter that was to
|
|
be read in every Church before the vote was taken. It is one of the
|
|
many clerical masterpieces of improper advice masquerading as
|
|
evasion, which the last ten years have produced. The bishops
|
|
recognized the painful dilemma of the faithful. If they voted for
|
|
Hitler they might seem to approve of various "measures antagonistic
|
|
to the Church" which he had ordered. So they are free to vote as
|
|
they will. But if any of them care to vote for Hitler they could do
|
|
so with a clear conscience by saying to themselves: "We give our </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
19
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>vote to the Fatherland but that does not signify approval of
|
|
matters for which we could not conscientiously be held responsible"
|
|
(Catholic Times, March 27, 1936). In other words, Vote for Hitler.
|
|
We recognize the accents of Pacelli-Pius.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The vote of confidence was a farce as such. The point of
|
|
interest is that the Black International which had helped to put
|
|
Hitler in the saddle in 1933 still supported him in spite of all
|
|
his outrages and his open menace to the world's peace. This was in
|
|
gratitude for favors to come, and it is one of the most acute
|
|
ironies of the time that while the priests were instructing the
|
|
Catholic laity in the moral acrobatics by which they could vote for
|
|
Hitler that most brazen of adventurers since Caesar Borgia was
|
|
actually at work on a measure that would deal the German Church and
|
|
the Papacy the most terrible blow they had suffered since Luther
|
|
had nailed his theses to the Church door at Wittenberg.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> This was the revelation that monasteries which were
|
|
represented in Catholic literature -- even in works that circulated
|
|
in America -- as fragrant gardens of piety and virtue were
|
|
cesspools of moral perversity and that the vice was widespread
|
|
amongst the parochial clergy. I have given an account of the early
|
|
stages of this exposure in the Haldeman-Julius booklet Vice in
|
|
German Monasteries (1937), which is, as far as I can ascertain, the
|
|
only lengthy account in the English language. Had so spectacular an
|
|
exposure, on so vast a scale, been made in regard to any other body
|
|
or Church than the Roman Catholic the press would have erupted into
|
|
its largest scare-type and its warmest moral indignation. Such is
|
|
the backstairs influence of the Black International in America and
|
|
Britain that journalists had to suppress, or publish lies about
|
|
the greatest sensation of the year 1936. Here let me round off the
|
|
story and set it in the light of later disclosures.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> All that the great majority of Americans knew about the matter
|
|
was that Cardinal Mundelein of Chicago, as part of his indictment
|
|
of the Nazis for persecuting the Church -- which was itself
|
|
conducting a far worse persecution in Poland and Austria and soon
|
|
would be in Spain -- charged them with fabricating an atrocious
|
|
libel against the German clergy and said that of the 25635 priests
|
|
of Germany only 58, or a quarter of 1 percent, had been arrested on
|
|
a vice-charge. This was a statement (which no one in America could
|
|
cheek) made by the German bishops, and it was an audacious evasion,
|
|
if not untruth. The B.U.P. and Reuter message which conveyed the
|
|
words of the bishops added, significantly, that "eleven Roman
|
|
Catholic priests were arrested in Munich this week-end" and told of
|
|
two other arrests for assaults on little girls a few days later.
|
|
The figure is preposterous but the implication is worse. The
|
|
"thousands" of offenders of whom the Nazis spoke were not priests.
|
|
They were monks or what the Catholic calls lay brothers.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The difference is important. Priests in Germany as in America
|
|
have parochial duties, an important part of which is visiting homes
|
|
in the husband's absence and being visited by girls and women, like
|
|
ministers of other denominations. All of them have female domestic
|
|
servants in their houses. When they are disposed to violate their
|
|
vow of chastity they have ample opportunities, and of this sort of
|
|
indulgence the German law takes no more cognizance than the </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
20
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>American law does, as long as they do not seduce minors under their
|
|
charge. Their circumstances do not particularly incline them to
|
|
sodomy. It is in the monastic communings, especially of lay (or
|
|
non-priest) brothers, who are devoted to teaching and the care of
|
|
the sick, mentally feeble, etc., that the pretense of special
|
|
holiness breaks down. The word "monk" is not a technical but
|
|
popular word, and it is applied to these in Catholic literature.
|
|
The large communities and work of charity are particularly
|
|
recommended in Catholic literature as proof of the Church's
|
|
inspiration, and they and the nuns number, or numbered, ten's of
|
|
thousands in Germany. Those of the Franciscan Order were
|
|
particularly praised, and the largest community of them, at
|
|
Waldbreitbach, in Westphalia, were described as a holy institution
|
|
to which no other religion could show a parallel.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It was just here, at Waldbreitbaeb and other Franciscan
|
|
communities, that the police were busy gathering evidence at the
|
|
very time when the bishops were telling Catholics to vote for
|
|
Hitler, and proof was accumulating that these holy places were not
|
|
only comprehensively but revoltingly corrupt. Father-confessors
|
|
seduced for years the young novices who came in. Monks confessed in
|
|
the witness-box how on the holiest days (when all monks feed and
|
|
drink most) they reeled along the corridors to the chapel and
|
|
halted in dark corners I have told all that from their own
|
|
confessions in court. There is nothing like it in Boccaccio or
|
|
Rabelais; and it had been going on for an indefinite time. There
|
|
had been prosecutions early in the century, but in those days one
|
|
quickly let the Catholic curtain fall again if it revealed anything
|
|
nasty.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> One point only must be repeated here. The charge that the
|
|
trials of the monks were travesties of justice, on a level with the
|
|
Berlin trial of the Communists for the burning of the Reichstag, is
|
|
entirely false. The public is apt to assume this, since the Nazi
|
|
variety of justice is notorious and the plain man has no means of
|
|
checking statements about Germany. But men like Mundelein or the
|
|
German-American priests who assisted him must have known better.
|
|
One such priest visited Germany to ascertain "the truth" in 1938
|
|
and lingering in Britain to communicate this personally ascertained
|
|
"truth" to the British press -- and Catholics, as usual, got
|
|
replies to him excluded from the press -- he returned in triumph to
|
|
America. His verdict was just what Mundelein said: Less than 60
|
|
priests in Germany had been prosecuted, and the rest was Nazi
|
|
fabrication. This priest knew that the German bishops from whom he
|
|
got his figure admitted the depravity in monasteries's of religious
|
|
brothers, that the Vatican also admitted it by suppressing whole
|
|
provinces of them for irregularity of conduct, and that the
|
|
Catholics of Germany fully admitted it.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> There can be very little doubt that Hitler directed the
|
|
prosecution. He knew that he had in this epidemic of vice a ground
|
|
that would go very far even in the eyes of Catholics to justify his
|
|
refusal to honor the terms of the Concordat he had signed. But he
|
|
also knew that he would give the bishops a means to stir the
|
|
Catholic body bitterly against him instead of winning its support
|
|
unless such charges were proved beyond cavil. He took care that
|
|
this was done.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
21
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The arrests and trial's were, in the first place, almost
|
|
entirely in the Catholic provinces where these communities are most
|
|
numerous and, as it proved, most vicious; as the small communities
|
|
in Protestant provinces are as critically watched as in America and
|
|
Britain. All the police-officials charged with the preliminary
|
|
inquiries and the arrests were Catholics and the courts
|
|
predominantly Catholic. Every witness against the monks was a
|
|
Catholic, and nearly every one of the accused pleaded guilty,
|
|
blaming the morbid conditions of the life and the drunkenness that
|
|
was permitted. The trials were held, in the normal form, in the
|
|
high courts of the capitals of these Catholic provinces (mostly
|
|
Cologne, Bonn, Coblentz, and Munich) and were reported daily in the
|
|
chief papers of the provinces, which have three Catholic reader's
|
|
to one non-Catholic; and these papers fully sustained the verdicts
|
|
and admitted the guilt.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Are these just Nazi allegations? Not at all. During 1936 and
|
|
1937 I followed the trials in these papers -- effectively, Catholic
|
|
papers -- chiefly the Koinische Zeitung and the Westfalische Kurier
|
|
checked by Berlin and Munich papers, and got the details from them.
|
|
They even sometimes rapped their own prelates on the knuckle's for
|
|
trying to gloss over or deny the ugly facts. I read fairly lengthy
|
|
reports of scores of individual trials of monks, priests (sometimes
|
|
of high rank), and even a nun (for seducing boy-pupils). Nine out
|
|
of ten of the monks were convicted of sodomy, as were most of the
|
|
priests, though some were charged with indecent relations with
|
|
young girls (down to 12 or 13) and were proved by their
|
|
parishioners to have done this over a period of many years.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The charge was generally sodomy, and this, as I said, fully
|
|
explains why there were, comparatively, so few priests. Fornication
|
|
is not an offence in law, and so the priests do not as a rule come
|
|
under the notice of the police. There were a few arrests of zealous
|
|
priests for attacking the government (over the Concordat) in
|
|
sermons and many prosecution for smuggling currency out of Germany.
|
|
The police found that the Church used demure looking nuns and
|
|
venerable friars, their holy costumes stuffed with notes, to make
|
|
a profit in the sternly forbidden exchange-transactions or to
|
|
smuggle money to Rome. But in the overwhelming majority of cases
|
|
the charge was sodomy, and the next most frequent charge the
|
|
corruption of young girls. The World Almanac for 1939 says (p.
|
|
236):</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> "Up to October, 1938, more than 8000 Catholic monks and lay
|
|
brothers had been arrested by Nazi officials, approximately 50
|
|
percent of the 16000 members of German monasteries, on various
|
|
charges, including immorality, sedition, breaches of exchange laws,
|
|
abuse of the pulpit, collecting fund's without government
|
|
permission, or failure to fly the Swastika flag on national
|
|
monuments. Forty-five monks, 176 lay-brothers, and 21 monastery
|
|
employees were sentenced on immorality charges: 188 priests were
|
|
acquitted or released without trial."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It is pleasant to find that an American publication had the
|
|
courage to print so much -- no British publication had, and I
|
|
failed to get a publisher for a book -- but the details are
|
|
misleading. "Arrested by Nazi officials" does not mean the Gestapo,</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
22
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>but, generally, Catholic policemen and officers. The list of
|
|
charges is misleading because sodomy far outnumbered the others;
|
|
and the last sentence is particularly unfortunate. Over the period
|
|
of nearly two years in which I followed the trials 90 percent were
|
|
for vice, and very few of the accused escaped, and then only in
|
|
virtue of an earlier amnesty. Many of these were priest-monks,
|
|
though of the 400 Franciscan monks of the Westphalian province, who
|
|
were the first to be arraigned, 61 (mostly the directing priests
|
|
and superiors) got secret warning and fled the country (many to
|
|
Rome), which left a disproportion of priests to monks in the 276
|
|
who were arrested. The province was found to be wholly corrupt and
|
|
the Pope abolished it after a few trials. The non-monastic priests
|
|
who were arrested were scattered over Germany and only casually
|
|
mentioned in the press, but of the cases I collected nine-tenths
|
|
again were for vice (boys and little girls), hardly one in ten was
|
|
acquitted. Later there were more numerous arrests for "sedition" or
|
|
criticism of the "persecution of the Church".</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Chapter V</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> THE POPE CONTINUES TO COURT HITLER</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Hitler is a rotten speaker: raucous in voice, graceless in
|
|
gesture, and loose in the composition of his speeches. It is not
|
|
"personal magnetism" that makes him a power with the young -- the
|
|
older are mostly driven to his gatherings -- but a belief in his
|
|
genius that is artificially created by years of the most elaborate
|
|
and most persistent boosting. The most effective speech he ever
|
|
made was on January 1, 1939, when he replied to the Vatican and
|
|
world-complaint that he persecuted the Church. There was, of
|
|
course, a fallacy in his argument. Unquestionably he wanted to
|
|
change the Catholic Church in Germany in a sense which the Vatican
|
|
could not possibly accept and of this he said nothing, but his
|
|
direct reply to the charge of persecution of religion was
|
|
effective.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The German government has always subsidized the Churches but
|
|
Hitler had more than trebled the subsidy. Between 1933, when he
|
|
took office, and 1938 it rose from 150000000 Marks to
|
|
500000000 a year. What was your subsidy to the Churches, he
|
|
asked of France, Britain, an America? He had never closed a church,
|
|
and he left the Roman Church the richest land-owner in south and
|
|
west Germany. It drew 1500000000 Marks a year from its property
|
|
alone. (German papers give its wealth as $20000000000). All that
|
|
he asked was that priests should behave themselves as respectably
|
|
as other citizens. "Paederasty and the corruption of children," he
|
|
said, "are punished by law like other crimes in this state." The
|
|
roars of applause in this case expressed the sentiment of
|
|
practically the whole of Germany.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> And the Black International knew it. In foreign countries they
|
|
dare not stake their case on the question whether the vice-trials
|
|
were or were not genuine. An impartial press-inquiry would soon
|
|
settle that. They preferred to use their censorship of the press to</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
23
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>prevent any mention of them or to confuse the public with a vague
|
|
charge of persecution and talk about smuggling currency and
|
|
criticizing the Nazis. I cannot speak for the American press but as
|
|
far as I could ascertain no British paper even mentioned the
|
|
Sensational trials that were spread over 1936 to 1938 and then
|
|
extended to Austria. Was there ever such self-denial on the part of
|
|
newspaper men? You know why.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> At the Vatican and in Germany this was clearly recognized. The
|
|
trials had begun at the end of May (1936). After ten trials the
|
|
Pope suppressed the Westphalian province of the Franciscan Order,
|
|
its largest and richest province, for irregularity: a step without
|
|
precedent in modern times and so grave that only a desperate hope
|
|
of disarming Hitler can have prompted it. But the trials went on
|
|
until the influx of foreigners for the Olympic Games made it
|
|
advisable to suspend them. Some of these foreigners might be able
|
|
to read German and learn how monks of pure Aryan blood talked
|
|
indecency to children under ten on the steps of their houses, raped
|
|
helpless youths in their hospitals . . . In the period of
|
|
suspension, with 260 friars still in prison awaiting trial, the
|
|
bishops, who probably knew how far the search for culprits would
|
|
reach -- for evidence had been given in court that youths had
|
|
reported the matter to ecclesiastical authorities and been silenced
|
|
-- approached Hitler. The British press reported in August that
|
|
they had conferred with Hitler on the "currency-charges" against
|
|
priests and monks. There were then few currency-charges but
|
|
hundreds of vice-charges, so we know what they wanted; especially
|
|
as there was nothing to protest against in the fines for smuggling
|
|
currency.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Next month the bishops, now clearly under Pacelli's orders,
|
|
made a fresh attempt. On September 12, 1936, the Nazionale Zeitung
|
|
published a copy of a letter from the bishops to the faithful which
|
|
was to be read in all the Catholic Churches of Germany next day. It
|
|
trusted that Hitler would bury the past and admit Catholics to
|
|
cooperate with him in the fight against the ever-increasing threat
|
|
of world-Bolshevism which shows its sinister hand in Spain, Russia
|
|
and Mexico. As they added that "guns are not enough to fight the
|
|
Bolshevik danger -- a sound lead is necessary to secure victory,"
|
|
they very clearly wanted Hitler to crush Bolshevism in Russia by
|
|
war and so consecrated his program of aggression. And as these
|
|
words of theirs are an echo of words that the Pope had used a few
|
|
weeks earlier it is obvious that Pacelli was the author. He had at
|
|
last, in the summer of 1936, matured his program and found his
|
|
slogan: the extinction of Bolshevism in Russia, Spain, and Mexico.
|
|
Sometimes to give respectability to his Japanese alliance, he added
|
|
-- China. As I have earlier said, the A.F.L. defeated his plan to
|
|
get America to attack Mexico, but it remains true that he wanted
|
|
the war. The rest of his slogan stands. He was pledged to support
|
|
the plans of aggressive war of Germany, Italy, and Japan, the
|
|
foulest nations on earth.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Hitler ignored the bishops, but Pacelli still pressed. On
|
|
November 4 the Times reported that Mussolini was pressing Hitler to
|
|
come to terms with the Vatican, as this would not only give him
|
|
more weight in the "clerical state" which Franco was to set up in
|
|
Spain but would help him in his designs on Austria: a hint at the </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
24
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>part the Church would play when the time came to annex that
|
|
country. Mussolini was at this time a practicing Catholic once
|
|
more. Also he had begun, with the enthusiastic support of the Black
|
|
International his brutal campaign in Abyssinia and his hypocritical
|
|
action in Spain.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> A week later (Times, November 13, 1936) Hitler had a request
|
|
for an interview from Cardinal Faulhaber. He received him
|
|
grudgingly and more or less secretly, and when the Cardinal put
|
|
before him the request of the bishops and asked in return for the
|
|
control of Catholic education by the Church, the Minister of
|
|
Education, whom, Hitler had invited to be present, advised him to
|
|
refuse. The Churches were, he insisted, negligible allies, as they
|
|
had lost their power over men's minds in many part of the world."
|
|
The offer of the Church was refused, and the destruction of
|
|
Catholic schools, as new vice-trials of the religious teachers gave
|
|
a pretext, and associations continued.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Nevertheless the Vatican remained on such terms with Germany
|
|
that when, in March, 1937, there was a mild rebuke of breaches of
|
|
the Concordat in a new encyclical and Mundelein continued his
|
|
violent campaign in America, the German government sent a complaint
|
|
to Rome. Catholics boasted that the Vatican refused to listen, but
|
|
there was no breach. Indeed, a month later Count Preysing, the
|
|
aristocratic Catholic bishop of Berlin, addressed another appeal to
|
|
Hitler (Times, July 3, 1937). It is in this that we get the
|
|
admission of monastic corruption. It said that the bishop's "do not
|
|
deny that in certain orders of lay brothers many members had been
|
|
drawn into a sphere of serious moral perversities." Perhaps one
|
|
could not expect a more strongly worded admission from such a
|
|
source, but the shifting of responsibility from the priests to the
|
|
lay brothers is very misleading. These lay brothers of the
|
|
Franciscan Order, of whom nearly 300 in one province were arrested
|
|
for sodomy, were under the direct authority of the clerical heads
|
|
of the Order, were periodically examined by representatives of
|
|
those authorities and were in each monastery ruled by a number of
|
|
priest-monks. Evidence was given by the brothers in the trials that
|
|
the epidemic of vice had been reported to the authorities in these
|
|
periodical examinations which are (of the most intimate character)
|
|
and no notice had been taken.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> There was no modification of the Nazi policy. In December the
|
|
Pope feebly complained to his cardinals, when they came to him with
|
|
their Christmas greetings, of the persecution in Germany. The
|
|
excuse was, he said, that the Church interfered in polities. Even
|
|
the cardinals must have smiled when the aged and not very clear-
|
|
headed Pope went on to say that "no fair-minded man" could Say that
|
|
the Church ever interfered in politics. A few month's earlier he
|
|
had summoned the powers to crush by war the kind of government
|
|
which the people of Spain and Mexico had freely chosen and
|
|
supported at every election: the form of government which, whatever
|
|
its beginning, had won the support of the entire Russian people, as
|
|
all the world now realizes. At that very moment the Vatican was
|
|
working with its murderous allies to change the political form of
|
|
Spain, had mercilessly intervened in polities in Austria for years,
|
|
had given, its blessing to the enslavement of the Abyssinian
|
|
people, and had helped to establish Fascism in South America.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
25
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> One might have expected that in these circumstances the Papacy
|
|
would assert what was left of its moral dignity and abandon the
|
|
dishonoring opportunism that had characterized its relations with
|
|
the brutal Nazis since 1932. On the pretty theory of the Papacy
|
|
which is put before the world its duty was to denounce the crimes
|
|
of Nazi Germany and the menace to the world of its naked ambition
|
|
and let German Catholics take such punishment from the criminals as
|
|
Catholics are supposed to endure with heroism rather than bow the
|
|
knee to iniquity.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It may be objected that at the most we can accuse Pacelli, who
|
|
was entirely responsible for the policy of the senile Pontiff, of
|
|
an error of judgment in a grave dilemma. That would be a
|
|
misrepresentation of the position. He clung to his German, Italian,
|
|
and Japanese allies, not singly to avert persecution from Catholics
|
|
in their dominions -- and we must remember that even in this the
|
|
real concern of the Black International is the loss of members
|
|
under the strain -- but because his policy coincided with theirs.
|
|
When the time comes for China to recover its territory, as it
|
|
surely must come if the poison is to be got out of the veins of the
|
|
world, Roman Catholic influence in the Far East will be very justly
|
|
restricted. The Vatican has irretrievably pledged itself to the
|
|
Japanese bully. in Italy it is not less firmly pledged to the
|
|
support of Mussolini. What Cardinal Hinsley said, that if Mussolini
|
|
falls the "cause of God" - of the Black International -- falls,
|
|
remains true. Socialism would get control of Italy, and the time
|
|
has gone by for triumphant democrats to handle with kid gloves the
|
|
reactionary elements that have shed blood whenever they temporarily
|
|
recovered power; besides that Fascist Italy is indispensable to the
|
|
Pope's fantastic plan of a great bloc of Fascist-Catholic powers to
|
|
offset the influence of the democracies, or their rich Catholic
|
|
minorities, in the Church.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> And beyond all this is the Church's indispensable need of a
|
|
Fascist atmosphere in any state in which it is to flourish. As I
|
|
have shown, the apparent progress of the Church in such democracies
|
|
as America and Britain is a fallacy. Not only does it lose instead
|
|
of advancing if the birth rate is taken into account, but migration
|
|
from backward Catholic countries is the adequate explanation of the
|
|
apparent progress. In France, where there has been no such
|
|
immigration on a large scale, the membership of the Church fell in
|
|
30 years from 30000000 to about 5000000 when (in 1871) the
|
|
country became a democracy; and it was the same in Italy and Spain
|
|
as long as they were democracies. There is not a single exception
|
|
to the law that free discussion is fatal to the Roman system. Its
|
|
effect is merely modified in America and Britain by the conspiracy
|
|
of the Black International to intimidate editors, publishers,
|
|
booksellers, librarians, etc., and the drastic law that. Catholics
|
|
shall not read critics of the Church.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Hence in Germany a policy that is purely ecclesiastical and
|
|
takes no account of moral and social considerations has to cling at
|
|
all cost and in spite of all rebuffs to the hope of disarming the
|
|
hostility of the Nazis and helping to maintain them in power. Both
|
|
the rebuffs and the policy of appeasement continued. On October 15,
|
|
1938, the Volkischer Beobachter, a recognized Nazi organ, said: "We
|
|
are armed to continue the battle against Catholicism to the point </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
26
|
|
.
|
|
HOW THE CROSS COURTED THE SWASTIKA</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>of total annihilation." Vice-prosecutions multiplied, and the Nazis
|
|
called for, and would presently obtain, the suppression of all
|
|
Catholic schools in Bavaria. And remember that while Catholic
|
|
influence in America could, by getting the essential facts
|
|
concealed from the American public, represent this as a piece of
|
|
wanton persecution of religion, every German knew that it was done
|
|
on the ground judicially established in hundreds of cases, that the
|
|
most respecter Catholic teachers, the brothers who were vowed to
|
|
chastity and asceticism, were corrupt and corruptors. The
|
|
philanthropic institutions-schools, orphanages, infirmaries, etc.,
|
|
of which the Church had been so proud were taken over by the
|
|
authorities and entrusted to laymen.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I am in this booklet confining myself to Germany so that the
|
|
reader may get a clear view of the strange situation in that
|
|
country insofar as it concerns the Church. It must, however be
|
|
understood that the humiliation of the proud Church in 1938 was far
|
|
greater than we realize if we restrict our attention to Germany. In
|
|
Spain the Vatican and the Nazis were actually cooperating in that
|
|
holy war for the extinction of Bolshevism, which was now Pacelli's
|
|
ruling passion. In Austria and Czecho-Slovakia the Black
|
|
International rendered even more useful service than cooperation.
|
|
It prepared the way for those bloodies's triumphs of the Nazis
|
|
which history will record to the deep shame of the western
|
|
democracies; the triumphs of lying by which Hitler preserved his
|
|
armies for the attack on France, Britain, and Russia and gradually
|
|
pressed all the rest of Europe into the position of bleeding slaves
|
|
in his war-galley. How the Vatican helped him to do this, and how
|
|
Pacelli became Pope in 1939 and contemplated the ghastly
|
|
consequences of his policy yet persisted in it while the whole
|
|
civilized and free world was filled with moral indignation will be
|
|
told in a later book.</p>
|
|
|
|
<div> **** ****</div>
|
|
|
|
<p> Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
|
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
|
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
|
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
|
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
|
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
|
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
|
that America can again become what its Founders intended --</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The Free Market-Place of Ideas.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
|
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
|
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
|
us, we need to give them back to America.</p>
|
|
|
|
<div> **** ****</div>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
27
|
|
</p></xml> |