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<div class="article">
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<p> 30 page printout</p>
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<p> Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.</p>
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<p> This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.</p>
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<p> Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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**** ****</p>
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<p>Edited by E. Haldeman-Julius</p>
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<p>THE BLACK INTERNATIONAL No. 6</p>
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<p> THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
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<p> HOW THE NEW POPE TALKED PEACE
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AND WORKED FOR WAR</p>
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<p> HALDEMAN-JULIUS PUBLICATIONS
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GIRARD -- : -- KANSAS</p>
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<p> Chapter</p>
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<p> CHAPTER</p>
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<p> I The Church Crowns the Papal Policy ........... 1</p>
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<p> II The Pope's Peace Efforts ......... 9</p>
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<p> III Poland Pays for its Piety .............. 17</p>
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<p> IV The German Church and the War .......... 25</p>
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<p> THE CHURCH CROWNS THE PAPAL POLICY</p>
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<p> At the close of the book on the monstrous perfidy of the Black
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International in Czecho-Slovakia I asked: What did Pius XII, the
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new Pope, and his local hierarchies do when the hellish bugles
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sounded and the black flag was unfurled?</p>
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<p> In our day-to-day reading of the crowded events of our time,
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under the changing strain of feelings which one day are warmed with
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stories of heroism and next day are chilled with despair, we
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naturally lose sight of whatever continuity there is in the
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bewildering procession. We could not readily answer such questions
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as this, although it refers to only two years ago. But I have
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prepared the reader for the answer. The Black International has
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pursued a consistent policy during the last ten years, to say
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nothing of earlier times. It has fawned upon the three Powers which
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had already by 1930 openly exhibited such shameless programs of
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greed and barbaric violence that the war was inevitable. I have </p>
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<p> Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
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<p>proved that. So the answer to our question also is inevitable. The
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Black International clung still to the arch-enemies of the human
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race through all their crimes and atrocities as long as they had a
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confident prosPect of victory.</p>
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<p> Will it change its policy when that prospect changes to one of
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defeat and dire punishment? I write with the hum of war-planes
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overhead, the slender fingers of the searchlights probing for the
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enemy that would make a shuddering pulp of us. Round me are the
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horrid gaps in the rows of little peaceful homes from which I have
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seen the men -- the garbage-men of a "New Order" -- bring out the
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shrouded, crumpled forms of the dead. In the press daily are the
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rumble of a struggle in Russia that surpasses everything in the
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calendar of human folly and perversity and the tremulous
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foreshadowing of an agony that the winter may bring upon
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200000000 broken-hearted folk. The end is not in sight, and I
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have no gift of prophecy. But should, as I confidently expect, the
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heroism of the Russian people hurl back the advancing wave of
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savagery and give us an unwavering hope of victory the Papacy will
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change its policy.</p>
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<p> Remember the last war. The Papacy supported Germany, which had
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promised it the usual reward -- more power and wealth to the Church
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-- even against Italy, but as soon as America entered the arena and
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the defeat of Germany seemed probable, it recollected that the Pope
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is the Great Neutral. The signs of change already flicker in the
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press, but notice how feeble, how anonymous, how easily repudiated
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they are as long as the terrific might of Germany still rears its
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brutal head! Whatever be the next or the final phase, let the world
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never forget how the Papacy helped its deadly and unscrupulous
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enemies during the long years of corrupt preparation and supported
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them during two years of shuddering criminality. The one virtue
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which its best apologists claim for it that it preached the virtues
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of peace, did but help to dope the innocent nations while the
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crooks armed themselves. At least from 1936 onward war was
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inevitable because Japan, Germany, and Italy could attain the
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objects to which they were openly pledged by no other means, and
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they saw the rest of the world so beguiled with their pipe-dream of
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peace that it seemed to them safe to open the insidious campaign.</p>
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<p> And in case the reader has become to some extent confused by
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the mass of details and testimonies which it has been necessary to
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give in support of this indictment let us sum up and formulate very
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clearly the charges against the Black International. The intimate
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connection of the Vatican by solemn agreements and the exchange of
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ambassadors with Japan, Italy, and Germany and with such satellites
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of theirs as Franco Spain, Vichy, Portugal, Hungary, etc., is a
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fact of ordinary record. A desperate apologist might say that this
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has no more significance than the diplomatic relations of other
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neutral powers with those countries. The Catholic apologist is so
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accustomed to writing for his own people, who are forbidden under
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pain of hell to read criticisms of what he says, and treated with
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such generosity in the general press that there is no limit to his
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audacity. Listen to this. On the very day on which I write this I
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receive a letter from a correspondent who tells me that a Catholic
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to whom he spoke of the infamous agreement of Mussolini and the
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Pope in 1929 denies that there ever was such a compact and that it </p>
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<p> Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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.
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THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
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<p>is just one of McCabe's lies! Can you beat that? The Concordat and
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Treaty were editorially discussed in every paper in the world,
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especially the Catholic papers, which hailed the agreement as a
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superb triumph of Papal diplomacy, and it seems impossible that a
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Catholic should not know that the Vatican City and all its
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privileges (independence, radio, etc.) only began with and were
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founded by that treaty.</p>
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<p> There is one fundamental difference between the position of
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secular powers that exchange ambassadors and courtesies with the
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Vatican and that of the Vatican itself: to say nothing of the fact
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that these powers make no pretence of moral responsibility and
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spiritual guidance of the world. They have not in Germany or Italy
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a black army of 50000 to 100000 servants under their control --
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bishops, priests, monks, nuns, religious brothers, organizers,
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teachers, journalists, etc. -- which professes that it has to build
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the character of the nation. The Vatican has. It is one of the
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loudest boasts of the Church of Rome over its rivals that it is
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international, its various national branches being entirely subject
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to the Vatican, and that this gives it a unique power to judge
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events from the universal moral, not the narrow national viewpoint.</p>
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<p> What, then, are the vices of this triumvirate of poisoning
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nations which the Vatican ought, on its own profession, to have
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denounced to the world instead of protecting them by friendly
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alliance? It will be enough here to select three.</p>
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<p> The first is that the war for which they are responsible is
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the most bestial in modern history because it is a war of naked
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greed. Shires tells us in his Berlin Diary that he once said this,
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in less blunt language, to the Nazi Economic Minister Funk, and the
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man admitted that the aim of it was to secure "the maximum economic
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opportunity" for Germany. Notoriously its aim is to concentrate
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industrial production in Germany or to permit it in subject
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countries, which are to provide food and raw material -- a much
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less profitable service -- only under German control. Japan won
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over the mass of its workers to the plans of its militarists and
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capitalists by just the same bait. Even the leaders of the Social
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Mass (Socialist) Party support the Chinese Incident. They say that
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the British workers have a good status because the country seized
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vast colonies overseas and exploits them. I should like to hear
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them tell an Australian, Canadian, or South African that his
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country is a "colony" and is exploited by Great Britain. In Italy
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the original idea was the same. The chief argument of the
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government during the Abyssinian War was that the country contained
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at vast amount of undeveloped wealth which would raise the income
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of every class in Italy. Today, it is true, they complain that the
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word Axis is heard no longer, and that their German overlords
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brutally tell them that the destiny of Italy is to be a playground
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and kitchen-garden for Germans. But a share in the vast spoils of
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the war was the lure that brought them into it.</p>
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<p> It is a much-disputed point whether all modern wars can be
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brought under an economic formula. In the case of the present war
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there is no dispute. Mussolini and Hitler may have medieval dreams
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of conquest and empire, and the Japanese fanatics may talk about </p>
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<p> Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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.
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THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
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<p>the divine mission of the Yamata race to uplift the world, but the
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real motive is that the division of the earth into two spheres of
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influence means incalculable wealth for Germany and Japan and huge
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fortunes for their politicians, bankers, and industrialists.</p>
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<p> That is the war the Pope helped to bring on. It promised more
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wealth and power to the Church. It meant the paralysis of
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industrial development and its consequences -- education, urban
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life, free discussion and the growth of Socialism and skepticism --
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in the countries in which the Papacy had lost most heavily. Notice
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what is happening in France. Petain makes no secret of his design
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to destroy the old industrial life in the interest of the Church.
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Even if you think a bunch of Italian clerics hardly capable of a
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world-plot so subtle as this you have their cry, repeated for years
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throughout the Church, for the destruction of Bolshevism and
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Liberalism, the most prolific sources of rebellion against the
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Papacy. Whichever way you take it the Black International has, for
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its own profit, lent its aid in preparing the conditions of success
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of the most sordid war of greed in modern history and has in each
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country, through the local Church, boisterously supported every
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step that Was taken in the direction of world-domination.</p>
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<p> The second general vice is that the ambition of these Powers
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has led to a quite repulsive degradation of the standards of public
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conduct. Here there is no possibility of pleading ignorance on the
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part of the simple-minded Vatican. The Nazis have lied to and duped
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the Papacy itself repeatedly since their first bargain with it in
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1933, and four-fifths of its complaints about Germany and Italy are
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grumbles that the Concordats which were solemnly signed have not
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been observed. Even Japan is now beginning to give it serious
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concern by its scheme to make Christianity purely national and
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independent of foreign influence.</p>
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<p> Broadly we have seen years of such lying, treachery, and
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corruption as we thought that we had buried forever. Nearly a
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hundred pacts, treaties, or international agreements of one kind or
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other have been signed in the last 20 years and cynically disowned
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as soon as it was expedient. An Australian paper, The Vigilant,
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sends me a copy of an issue in which it quotes Hitler's solemn
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assurance of non-aggression to every country he has attacked or
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annexed. "Germany neither intends nor wishes", he says in 1935, "to
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interfere in the international affairs of Austria, to annex
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Austria, or to conclude an Anschluss." His books show that he
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wished and intended it long before that time. "The Sudetenland is
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the last territorial claim I have to make in Europe," he said on
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September 26, 1938. Within a few month's he took the whole of
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Czecho-Slovakia and began to prepare for Poland. "Germany has
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concluded a non-aggression pact with Poland and she will adhere to
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it unconditionally", he had told Poland and Europe. So with
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Holland, Belgium, and Yugo-Slavia. And all Germany Heil Hitlered
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when on June 22, 1941, he said, with his usual ferocious solemnity:
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"When the German Reich gives a guarantee, that means that it also
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abides by it."</p>
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<p> It is not only that the leading statesmen of the aggressor
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nations have lied so brazenly and cynically for years that the
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problem of the future historian will not be their psychology but </p>
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<p> Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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.
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THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
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<p>that of the democratic statesmen. No trick has been too dirty to
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use. The corruptor, or advance-agent, was considered as respectable
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as the missionary. Japanese young "ladies" prostituted themselves
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in the good cause in China and Mongolia, and in France dames of the
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highest elegance used their charms for Germany and the Church.
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Japanese and German gold corrupted even Russians. Buddhist monks
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were used in Southern Asia, and women and promises of advancement
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everywhere to provide the miserable brood of traitors, almost a
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novelty of our age, whom we call Quislings. In short, the near-success of the trinity in crime was won by as vast and
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comprehensive a debasement of our standards of honor as had not
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been known in Europe since those flowers of the Age of Faith -- the
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Age of Chivalry and the Renaissance.</p>
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<p> Now not even a Bernard Shaw or an Aldous Huxley will say that
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this foulness, this reversion to pre-civilized ways of living, is
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found on all sides. Paradox is amusing but a paradox of that sort
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would be revolting. Certainly we all have our faults. I write for
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men and women who discount the utterances of statesmen and bishops
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and do not see the present struggle as a Miltonian conflict of
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angels and devils. We are poor enough, heaven knows, and much of
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the motivation of our conduct even in this war is far from angelic.
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But that this corruption of the standards of conduct is
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overwhelmingly on one side will be generally recognized. It is on
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the side of the Pope's allies; and it has done incalculable harm to
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the democracies, for whom he has not a good word.</p>
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<p> And the third vice, closely connected with this, is the
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bestiality with which the friends of the Vatican have conducted the
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campaign to attain their bestial greeds. A war inspired by such a
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purpose could not very well be otherwise. It is on the gangster
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level. Fear of retaliation has restrained that use of poison-gas
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which we expected but the horrors thicken as I write. We thought
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that we had reached a stage when soldier's recognized the rights of
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man and confined their killing within certain lines. Now some blond
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beast in Paris or Prague, to get praise or higher profit from his
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Fuhrer, shoots fifty entirely innocent men for the act of an
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unknown. Bulgar officers bloodily exterminate whole villages.
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Russian villagers are shut in their houses and burned alive. The
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food of children is stolen in Denmark and Holland. Japanese
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officers indulge themselves or their men in rape and force opium
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upon the Chinese. Gestapo men, trained in Hitler Colleges to give
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the rein to sadistic impulses . . . But you have read enough about
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these things.</p>
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<p> What does the Pope say about this conduct of his allies?
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Nothing. It would be "interference in polities" to notice what the
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Italians did in Abyssinia or are doing in Greece and Yugo-Slavia,
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what the Germans -- But I beg the Pope's pardon. He has twice used
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very eloquent and moving language about outrages. You may not think
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two protests in five years of bestiality a very high record for a
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Pope. In fact, if we look into them the protests are not so
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impressive. On January, 22, 1940 he referred to Poland in a
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broadcast address and lamented that he heard of "infamy of all
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kinds" and "horrible and inexcusable excesses." What did his German
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allies say to that? Nothing. You see, he was referring to the
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Russians. He said that he had heard that these outrages were "not
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confined to districts under Russian occupation." We must, it is </p>
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<p> Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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5
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.
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THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
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<p>true, make some allowance for the Pope's ignorance. He evidently
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imagined that the Russians had taken over some ten million Pole's
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and were beating the life out of them, whereas, as the rest of us
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know, the Russians had taken back only White Russians and
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Ukrainians and were only too eager to make them feel at home in the
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Soviet Union. In any case, although the press was still acridly
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anti-Russian no responsible paper even suggested that they were
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committing outrages.</p>
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<p> A little earlier a censure of the seizure of part of Finland
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by Russia had shown that the eagle eye of the Vatican ranged even
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over the frozen north in search of outrages to rebuke -- if they
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were not committed by its allies. There were many of us who did not
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at that time know what Russia had offered for the territory and how
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vitally necessary it was in view of the coming war, but we knew
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that Russians did not behave like the Pope's friends. The Papal
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organ, however, the Osservatore Romano, surpassed itself --
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especially as it had never condemned outrages before. It had such
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lyrical passages as:</p>
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<p> "After twenty years of Bolshevik tyranny it now appears that
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Communism which had already suppressed political liberty, stilled
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individuality, reduced work to the status of slavery, and erected
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violence into, a system, has added a new pearl to its diadem . . ."
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After hounding men it now hounds nations.</p>
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<p> The Papacy complaining that some other institution stifles
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individuality is rich, and one cannot help reflecting today that
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for slaves the Russian workers fight with remarkable spirit. But
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these are incidental trifles such as we pick up in all Papal
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pronouncements. The broad comment on this Vatican rebuke of
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aggression is this: by that time Germany had drenched the Jews with
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horrors, carried out its infamous Blood Purge, and savagely
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destroyed Czecho-Slovakia. Italy had perpetrated the grossest
|
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outrages in Abyssinia and Albania, and Japan had overrun five
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province's of China and treated tens of millions of the Chinese
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with barbarity. The Vatican, which had representatives of the three
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Powers in the Papal Court, had seen none of this wanton and
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monstrous aggressiveness and its accompanying savagery. Just as
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today it knows nothing about the savagery that is being perpetrated
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on Serbs, Greeks, and other conquered peoples. But the moment
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Russia enters upon a normal military operation -- not after a
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treacherous pact of friendship, but after an earnest effort to
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bargain for what it vitally needed -- the Pope ceases to be the
|
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Great Neutral and discovers that he is the supreme judge of the
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moral life of the world.</p>
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<p> The Russians committed no outrages in either Finland or the
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provinces they recovered from Poland, although Poland had, as I
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will show presently, shamefully persecuted those provinces for
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twenty years. Today the Germans are in Russia and are surpassing
|
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their own record of brutality. Mr. Winston Churchill does not love
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Russia, so when he says that he has, officially, full and solid
|
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information about the German atrocities we have to believe him. On
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August 24 he said, speaking of Germany, in a carefully-prepared
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broadcast:</p>
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<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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6
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.
|
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THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
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<p> "As her armies advance whole districts are being exterminated.
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Scores of thousands -- literally scores of thousands -- of
|
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executions in cold blood are being perpetrated by the German
|
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police-troops. Since the Mogul invasion of Europe in the sixteenth
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century there has never been methodical, merciless butchery on such
|
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a scale or approaching such a scale."</p>
|
|
<p> On September 29 he spoke again about "the absolutely
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frightful, indescribable atrocities which the German police-troops
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are inflicting on the Russian population in the rear of the advance
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of their armored soldiers."</p>
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<p> But the Pope has less to say than ever. One might gather from
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the Catholic papers that he is so busy praying for peace that he
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cannot maintain his customary moral survey of the world. Bunk. Not
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even the banks and exchanges are watching the ebb and flow of the
|
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red tide in Russia and calculating the chances of the issue more
|
|
carefully than the Vatican. He will not utter a word of censure
|
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until we know that Germany is beaten. The common decent German
|
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soldier is sickened by the infamies committed by the Nazi-trained
|
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troops and police under Nazi leaders. A letter to his wife that was
|
|
found on the body of one ran:</p>
|
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<p> "I hate the day when I was born in Germany. I am shocked by
|
|
what goes, on in our army in Russia. Vice, loot, violence, murder,
|
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murder, and murder. We destroy old men, women, and children and
|
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kill simply for the sake of killing . . . If I survive the Russian
|
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bullets and shells I will, in my present mood, perish from a German
|
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bullet."</p>
|
|
<p> Evidence accumulates daily that the Italian people and
|
|
soldiers, and most of the officers, are sick of the bestial
|
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alliance into which Mussolini, with the cowardly connivance of the
|
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King and the blessing of the Vatican, has drawn them. But the Pope
|
|
says nothing. The German and Italian clergy, 100000 of them
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besides paid officials, still cry whoopee.</p>
|
|
<p> Will the Catholics of America and Britain try, when the day of
|
|
human judgment comes, to throw all the blame on Secretary of State
|
|
Pacelli who is now Pope Pius XII? It would not be surprising. A
|
|
year or two ago the plea was that the poor, harassed, aged Pope
|
|
felt that he must in the general interest of the Church let Spanish
|
|
bishops rejoice over the brutalities in Spain, Italian bishops lead
|
|
their people in cheering for the "victories" in Abyssinia and
|
|
Albania, and German bishops rub shoulders with the Nazis. Now they
|
|
discover that, as we or they knew all along, behind the Pope,
|
|
issuing orders in his name, was the vigorous Pacelli, Will they,
|
|
when the war is over or the tide of battle definitely turns, say
|
|
that the Church was compromised by a man of unfortunate character?</p>
|
|
<p> We may have to defend poor Pacelli against the archbishops and
|
|
cardinals who lifted him to the skies a couple of years ago. He is
|
|
no more inhuman than my of themselves. He is a man of normal but
|
|
controlled sentimentality. In more fortunate circumstances he might
|
|
have been a successful Roman lawyer or banker, kind and generous to
|
|
his wife or some blonde baby. He is just a stricter churchman, more
|
|
narrowly concentrated on the interests of the Church, than any of
|
|
the others, and that is precisely why they made him Pope.</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
7
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p> And as far as one can penetrate the august secrets of these
|
|
proceedings it was not so much the Italian as the foreign,
|
|
including the British and American cardinals, who turned a wavering
|
|
scale in his favor. Pius XI, of unhappy memory -- no Pope in modern
|
|
times had been so severely criticized by Catholic writers of
|
|
several countries -- died on February 10, 1940, and the cardinal
|
|
voters flew to Rome. The world learned how scrupulous is the
|
|
procedure of the Church, the cardinals are locked in a room where
|
|
they sleep and eat (and drink) until two-thirds of them agree upon
|
|
a Pope.</p>
|
|
<p> What -- incidentally -- the world did not learn was the rather
|
|
amusing meaning of this Conclave (or "'shut in with a key"). The
|
|
history of Papal elections for the last sixteen centuries, or since
|
|
the Papacy became rich, beats the history of presidential elections
|
|
to a frazzle for bribery, intrigue, and good honest fighting. If
|
|
you read French and can get it read Petrucelli della Gattina's
|
|
Histoire diploinatique des Conclaves (4 vols, 1864-6), though you
|
|
will find a good deal of the material in miss V. Pirie's Triple
|
|
Crown (1935). However, in 1271 the cardinals who were assembled for
|
|
an election in the Italian provincial town of Viterbo so disgusted
|
|
the towns folk by wrangling for three years that the civic
|
|
authorities locked them in a room and saw that none of them left it
|
|
or intrigued with outsiders until they elected a Pope. From that
|
|
date Conclaves began, though it must be confessed that the new
|
|
institution by no means put an end to bribery, intrigue, and
|
|
fighting.</p>
|
|
<p> On March 2, Pacelli was elected. Unlike profane elections that
|
|
of a Pope begins with a very solemn invocation of the Holy Ghost --
|
|
it did even in the days when the bribery ran to a million dollars
|
|
and the murders to 200 -- and then there are grave deliberations,
|
|
and the cardinals visit each other in their cells (the cubicles
|
|
into which part of the room is divided). After each vote the papers
|
|
are burned and the smoke is conducted out by a pipe so that the
|
|
Romans shall see. We thus know that there were three "scrutinies",
|
|
or examinations of votes, so that it took a considerable time for
|
|
Pacelli to get the necessary two-thirds of the votes. In other
|
|
words, although he was certainly the ablest candidate, the best
|
|
expert on international affairs, and the best linguist, more than
|
|
half the cardinals were at first opposed to him. It is useless to
|
|
speculate on the reasons, but we receive with skepticism the report
|
|
that German and Italian cardinals tried to prevent his election at
|
|
the bidding of Hitler and Mussolini. Had Pacelli as Secretary of
|
|
State not done enough for them? The best authority, the Pope's
|
|
biographer Rankin, says that the non-Italian cardinals carried the
|
|
day for him.</p>
|
|
<p> The final vote is said to have been unanimous, as was very apt
|
|
to happen when it was seen that other candidates had no chance. In
|
|
other words -- this is why I enter into detail -- the Church put a
|
|
crown not merely on the head of Eugenio Pacelli, but on the policy
|
|
he had pursued for ten years. We will remember that if a day comes
|
|
when American and British prelates try to disavow that policy. It
|
|
is probably true that he fooled them by his suave assurances when
|
|
he visited England and America that he was a friend of democracy
|
|
and peace. But it would be juster to say that they fooled </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
8
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>themselves. The Catholic Teeling, a layman, was fully aware and
|
|
gave it as a fact of common Catholic knowledge, that the Vatican
|
|
had for years been making every effort to counteract western
|
|
[democratic] influence, which is not considered very good for the
|
|
Church (The Pope in Politics, p. 3). The American cardinals and
|
|
prelates who reported after his visit to the United States in 1936
|
|
that he was "a great friend of democracy" knew that his visit to
|
|
South America in 1934 had been followed by the truculent
|
|
suppression of democracy, in which the Church cordially helped, in
|
|
nearly the whole of that half of the continent. Cardinal Hinsley,
|
|
who stressed above all others that they had elected a Pope of Peace
|
|
-- even making absurd play of the fact that pace is the Italian for
|
|
peace -- knew just as well that for three years he had urged an
|
|
attack on Bolshevism that would involve Italy, Germany, Japan, and
|
|
the United States in war, and that he had given his support to
|
|
Hitler, Mussolini, and Japan. Whoever was fooled, we will not be.
|
|
The princes of the Church set the seal of his most solemn approval
|
|
on Pacelli's policy by electing him King.</p>
|
|
<p> Chapter II</p>
|
|
<p> THE POPE'S PEACE EFFORTS</p>
|
|
<p> Many will remember the note of synthetic admiration and
|
|
rejoicing that was struck in the entire press of the world when
|
|
Pacelli was elected on March 12. His biographer observes that while
|
|
for some obscure reasons the Italian papers grumbled those of
|
|
America and Great Britain glowed with satisfaction. The Archbishop
|
|
of Canterbury talked like an elderly virgin in the House of Lords
|
|
at Westminster, and his promise that if the new Pope would lead the
|
|
world into paths of peace and justice he would follow and support
|
|
him was hailed as a new and most promising religious phenomenon.
|
|
Ransom sums up the general enthusiasm by pointing out that upon a
|
|
world in flames there came at last a Pope with the inflexible
|
|
motto: Peace, Truth, and Charity.</p>
|
|
<p> We skeptics are accused of stirring up sectarian strife in a
|
|
world that needs cooperative action, of indulging in destructive
|
|
criticism when what the race wants is constructive idealism. Who,
|
|
in the light of recent events, was right? Four years before the
|
|
election of Pius XII I wrote, in the Appeal to Reason Library,
|
|
every word that I say in these booklets about the tendencies in
|
|
life and about all events and developments to 1935. My work was
|
|
neither destructive nor constructive. It was realistic: a statement
|
|
of facts. And it differed from the statements of fact of these
|
|
spiritual people and the newspapers which broadcast everything they
|
|
said and ignored everything we said in that it was a full and
|
|
truthful statement of facts. If all those facts which I gave -- the
|
|
programs of Hitler and Mussolini, the origin and trend of Nazism
|
|
and Fascism, the situation in Spain and Austria and Poland, and so
|
|
on -- had been put squarely before the public in 1938 or 1939 there
|
|
would have been much less school-girlish rejoicing because a new
|
|
Pope spoke prettily about Peace, Truth, and Charity and much more
|
|
demand for a realistic analysis of what was wrong and for
|
|
appropriate action.
|
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
9
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p> The world was not in flames at the beginning of 1939. It had
|
|
accepted Mussolini's assurance that with the annexation of
|
|
Abyssinia for his surplus population he was now content; Hitler's
|
|
assurance that with his annexation of the German fringe of Czecho-Slovakia he had reached the limit of his ambition; Japan's
|
|
assurance that it did not now covet a single additional square mile
|
|
of Chinese or other Asiatic territory.</p>
|
|
<p> But every man who saw the broad truth about the world-situation, that the race had entered upon a titanic conflict
|
|
between privilege -- wealth, Churches, all vested authority -- and
|
|
a new spirit that was reviled as Bolshevism, and that the utterly
|
|
corrupt and dangerous forces of Nazism, Fascism, and Japanese
|
|
Imperialism had been enlisted on the side of privilege, knew that,
|
|
while the world was not yet in flames, a sinister fire shouldered
|
|
underground, and it was no time for pretty talk about Peace and
|
|
Charity. Sluggish as British statesmen were, we now know that they
|
|
were preparing for the conflict that broke out later in the year,
|
|
though they protested that the risks of disturbing the peace of the
|
|
world by overt action (raising vast monition-plant's) restricted
|
|
them to such matters as secretly hiring premises for ministries in
|
|
the country, drafting schemes, and organizing medical and
|
|
undertaking services for vast numbers of wounded and dead
|
|
civilians.</p>
|
|
<p> I must confine myself to these matters in so far as they
|
|
involve the Church of Rome. The idea that the new Pope entered a
|
|
world of danger and confusion for which others were responsible
|
|
brought to it a new and beautiful gospel is, we now understand,
|
|
tripe. He had had as Secretary of State at least for the preceding
|
|
five years the same power which he would now wield as Pope, and he
|
|
had deliberately used it to help the work of the forces of evil
|
|
because, he believed, it was to the interest of the Church. It was
|
|
nothing new for him to talk about peace. As the inspirer of Pius XI
|
|
he had put the praise of peace on his lips or in his fountain-pen
|
|
twice a year for years. In the intervals he had called through the
|
|
Pope's mouth for the extinction of Bolshevism and upon that cry
|
|
only one possible interpretation can be put -- war. We saw that
|
|
Papal policy after 1919 was bound to seek this end above all
|
|
others. Socialism and Communism were running the Church. And the
|
|
only possible explanation of the Vatican entering into and in spite
|
|
of every rebuff clinging to the alliance with the corrupt forces of
|
|
Nazism, Fascism, and Japan is that they promised to accomplish
|
|
that. It was the reason, also, why Pacelli, in the name of Pius XI,
|
|
wrote an encyclical enjoining every Catholic state to become a
|
|
Fascist Corporative State, and practically all the South American
|
|
Republics as well as Portugal and Hungary, and later Spain, France,
|
|
and Belgium complied. Coercion alone brought apostates to heel.</p>
|
|
<p> I made short reference in one booklet to -- as far as I can
|
|
discover -- the first public declaration by the Papacy -- except
|
|
that the Pope began to lash out with his hatred of Russia in 1926
|
|
-- of the sentiment that had long been forced upon it: that
|
|
Socialism and Communism must be destroyed and that, since argument
|
|
about the beauty of the Catholic faith ran off Socialists and
|
|
Communists (who knew its history too well) like water off a duck's
|
|
back, they must be destroyed by violence. As the point is </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
10
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>fundamental let us return to it for a moment. The occasion was a
|
|
reception at the Vatican of Spanish refugees on September 14, 1936.
|
|
The Pope's speech to them, which is published in English by the
|
|
Catholic Truth Society -- I do not know if by this time they
|
|
realized their blunder and suppressed it -- with the title The
|
|
Spanish Terror is no rambling talk of an aged and agitated priest.
|
|
It is a polished rhetorical address, prepared in the Secretariat of
|
|
State. It represents the rebellion of Catholic Fascist generals in
|
|
Spain as a "satanic" attack on the established order by the very
|
|
men who had established it, and it says that this is the work of
|
|
"those forces which have already given proof and estimate of their
|
|
quality in the attempt to subvert established order of every kind
|
|
from Russia to China, from Mexico to South America". As Chiang Kai-Chek had already, under the treacherous guidance of his earlier
|
|
associates in Japan, destroyed Communism in China (and prepared the
|
|
way for Japan), the Pope's allies were destroying it in Spain, and
|
|
the Fascist governments of South America had destroyed it there at
|
|
Pacelli's request, the meaning is clear. The Pope invited Germany
|
|
(with the aid of rugged divisions from Catholic countries) and
|
|
Japan to attack Russia and the United States to attack and annex
|
|
Mexico. From that date the cry for the extinction of Bolshevism in
|
|
Russia and Mexico echoed every month through the Catholic world.</p>
|
|
<p> It is plain that this sentiment of the Pope is not merely
|
|
inconsistent with his gospel of peace, but it shaped a policy which
|
|
was the very worst possible for the world and for the real prospect
|
|
of peace at that time. I do not suggest that the Pope was either
|
|
muddle-headed or hypocritical. He had made his position clear a
|
|
score of times: peace -- when Communism was extinct by the conquest
|
|
of Russia and Mexico and his Nazi and Fascist allies had received,
|
|
as a gift, what the Pope thought they wanted. It was the Pope's
|
|
admirers who were muddle-headed or -- when they told the world that
|
|
Pacelli was going to work for peace without qualification --
|
|
hypocritical.</p>
|
|
<p> Recent events have now shown that the peace of the world and
|
|
the removal of the corruption that threatened civilization depended
|
|
above all upon the democracies and (in some form or other) the
|
|
United States allying themselves closely with Russia. I may be
|
|
pardoned for explaining that this is not on my own part a case of
|
|
being wise after the event. In the A. B. C. Library of Living
|
|
Knowledge (No. 3, Economic Gains of the Soviet Union, 1937) I fully
|
|
vindicated that great civilization against calumnies that were
|
|
current in nearly the whole press and showed how peace was the
|
|
first condition it required for the completion of its splendid
|
|
work. I pointed out that whatever dreams Russians may have had at
|
|
an earlier date of inspiring revolution in other countries had been
|
|
long abandoned, and they were content to let the peoples of the
|
|
world judge for themselves between the civilizations of the west
|
|
and that of the Soviet Union. I warned the reader that it was just
|
|
because the Russians were so successful in creating a civilization
|
|
without private capital and without religion that the combined
|
|
influence of capitalism and the Churches used almost the entire
|
|
press to libel them. "This generation," I said (p. 29), "is the
|
|
most heavily duped and doped in all recent history, and its blunder</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
11
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>may prove the most costly in history to the workers of the world.".
|
|
I insisted that a great war of aggression was, on the open
|
|
professions of Hitler and Mussolini and because of this criminal
|
|
aloofness from Russia, certain to come and said:</p>
|
|
<p> "If this war of aggression, which, if it were successful,
|
|
would be a signal to Mussolini to take up -- at the deadly expense
|
|
of France and England -- his dream of an eastern empire, is
|
|
averted, the world will have to thank the Soviet Union (p. 29)."</p>
|
|
<p> I have knowledge of even Rationalists who had long read my
|
|
books but refused to read another line of mine because of that
|
|
little book on Russia. They preferred the superficial gush and
|
|
treacherous optimism of accepted writers and journalists who fooled
|
|
them about the new Papal era of Peace and Charity.</p>
|
|
<p> Since this is the one defence of the action of the Black
|
|
International, that the Pope used his world-prestige to issue one
|
|
fervent appeal after another for peace, we must make a decisive
|
|
reply to it. We are concerned with the action of the Church and
|
|
will not be diverted by this trick of distinguishing between local
|
|
hierarchies, as if they had a remarkable degree of independence of
|
|
the Vatican, and the Pope. We shall see, indeed everybody knows,
|
|
that the German Church loudly supported Hitler, as usual, when he
|
|
launched the world-war and all its horrors, the Italian Church
|
|
fully supported Mussolini in his miserable entrance into the war as
|
|
soon as he felt that victory was certain, and the Spanish, Irish,
|
|
Hungarian, and Portuguese Churches -- and when the time came the
|
|
Belgian and French Churches -- supported their governments in
|
|
assisting and fawning on the aggressors.</p>
|
|
<p> But for the moment we must clearly understand the action of
|
|
the Pope himself. Chanting the virtues of peace is as idle as
|
|
preaching justice in the abstract and is often far more dangerous.
|
|
The only occasion on which I ever addressed a meeting of a Peace
|
|
Society was in 1938. I at first declined the invitation and
|
|
consented only on the understanding that I would tell them truths
|
|
which they would not like. The bulk of the members refused to
|
|
attend -- the local Churches had been busy -- and to the few who
|
|
did I presented a realistic analysis of the state of the world,
|
|
which the chief officials described as masterly and worthy of their
|
|
deepest consideration, and a solemn warning of what was coming. I
|
|
was not further invited to address one of the hundreds of Peace
|
|
Societies in Great Britain, and a few months later they were all
|
|
enthusiastic over the new Pope's beautiful sentiments! These people
|
|
flatter themselves that they have superior sentiments to the rest
|
|
of us when they really differ from us in flabbiness of intellect
|
|
or, in the better cases, in lack of realism.</p>
|
|
<p> The plain truth is that the Pope talked peace and worked for
|
|
war. He had a very large share in the libel and hatred of Russia
|
|
which prevented the one combination of sound forces that could
|
|
ensure peace. France had entered into an alliance of mutual defense
|
|
with Russia, but the Pope openly condemned it, and the Catholic
|
|
military chiefs robbed it of reality and effectiveness. On the
|
|
other hand the Pope clung to the alliances with the corrupt forces
|
|
which he had cemented. It required very little intelligence and </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
12
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>study of world-affairs at that time to perceive that the only
|
|
possible danger to the peace of the world lay in Germany, Italy,
|
|
and Japan. A closer student, as the Pope was supposed to be, could
|
|
go further. He would know that those three Powers, his friends,
|
|
were determined to start an aggressive war. What, in such
|
|
circumstances, was the value of his appeals to the world at large
|
|
to see the beauty of peace?</p>
|
|
<p> Well, says the apologist, wearily, at least he soon perceived
|
|
his error and entered upon a series of practical proposals for
|
|
ensuring peace. Did he? He was crowned Pope on March 12. I said in
|
|
an earlier essay that it detracts somewhat from the beauty of his
|
|
words about Charity that on the very day of his coronation the Jews
|
|
were, with terrible injustice and suffering, turned out of Italy,
|
|
and he said nothing. Again I beg his pardon. He protected some of
|
|
the Jews. In October (1941) the Italian paper La Vita Italiana
|
|
sourly complained that not only were there still Jews in Italy but
|
|
some of them were millionaires and occupied very high positions in
|
|
the state-service. One of these, a Signor Sacerdoti, had just been
|
|
appointed Director General of all the shipyards of Italy. The paper
|
|
went on to say:</p>
|
|
<p> "The appointment again confirms the general conviction that
|
|
Italian Jews are strongly favored and protected by the Catholic
|
|
Church and that wealthy Jews in Italy are still very influential."</p>
|
|
<p> I always acknowledge without a qualm these little injustices
|
|
to the clergy into which incomplete knowledge betrays me at rare
|
|
intervals. At the same time I must point out, in case you do not
|
|
know, Italian, that "Sacerdoti" means "Priests", so that this one
|
|
protected Jew of whom I have heard was obviously a Roman Catholic
|
|
as well as a millionaire, and therefore a fit person, to come under
|
|
the Pope's mantle of Charity: which did not cover the 69999 Jews
|
|
who were robbed and cast out.</p>
|
|
<p> March 12 was not merely a real Yom Kippur for the Jews of
|
|
Italy. It was the day on which, as I have elsewhere stated, the
|
|
sleek and treacherous priest, Msgr. Tiszo, went from Slovakia to
|
|
see Hitler and arrange with him for the final betrayal, or sale, of
|
|
Czecho-Slovakia. That foul deed was certainly done with the
|
|
agreement of the Vatican. It made a final end of the Liberalism,
|
|
which the Pope hated, of the Czechs, and it made solidly Catholic
|
|
Slovakia an independent state, another member of the Pope's new
|
|
dream of a Catholic bloc and abjectly submissive to the Vatican. As
|
|
I said, you can believe if you like that Tiszo accomplished this
|
|
without consulting Rome. But the step meant far more. It finally
|
|
remained the great obstacle to Hitler's march to Russia and the
|
|
Balkans. How did the Pope of Peace regard that? It is well known
|
|
that even Chamberlain was now convinced that war was absolutely
|
|
inevitable. The whole world saw it. Are we to suppose that the new
|
|
Pope in the weeks, intense brooding and praying, with three hours'
|
|
sleep a night, that followed his coronation (his biographer, says)
|
|
did not see what every statesman and editor in the world saw?</p>
|
|
<p> Well, says the apologist, still more wearily, Pacelli girded
|
|
his thin loins and settled down to six months' fighting to avert
|
|
the great calamity. Let me say at once that Pacelli was not such a
|
|
fool as one might be tempted to think when one reflects how he had </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
13
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>prepared the irresistible conditions of a great war. He is a man of
|
|
considerable ability and I suggest the alternative view that he
|
|
knew well that war was inevitable, was convinced that Germany,
|
|
Italy, and Japan -- we shall see later that he was aware of the
|
|
joint plan -- would win, and was equally convinced that this would
|
|
prove to be to the advantage of the Church. The known facts permit
|
|
us to make only one concession to the claim that after all he was
|
|
human as well as ecclesiastical: he would work sincerely for peace
|
|
in the sense of appeasement or granting Hitler, Mussolini, and
|
|
Japan what they quite obviously wanted, and he probably did not
|
|
realize how much they wanted that they did not make obvious.</p>
|
|
<p> In this light we may review his peace-efforts in the fateful
|
|
summer of 1939. The first was unfortunate. He was crowned on March
|
|
12 and he emerged from his week of Yogi meditation on the "9th.
|
|
Easter Sunday was to fall on April 9, and he had to have a
|
|
particularly fervent appeal to the world for peace ready for that
|
|
date. But on Good Friday Mussolini took the second step in his war
|
|
by invading Albania! The Pope's biographer tells us that he was
|
|
annoyed, in so far as consecrated persons can be, both by the
|
|
desecration of the holy day and the need to rewrite some passages
|
|
of his appeal for peace. To what extent he was really duped we do
|
|
not know. Catholics say that he wrote a letter to the King of Italy
|
|
to prevent the invasion. It would be as futile as writing to the
|
|
king of toyland, but there is no evidence that such a letter was
|
|
ever written. Everybody in Italy knew -- was bound to know -- that
|
|
a large Italian force was concentrating at the Adriatic ports for
|
|
the invasion of Albania; and every thoughtful Italian must have
|
|
known that Albania was for Mussolini just the same stage in a
|
|
journey to the East as Czecho-Slovakia had been for Hitler. But
|
|
whether or no it is true that Mussolini double-crossed his partner
|
|
in crime by taking the step, in order to make sure that he got the
|
|
southern half of the Balkans for Italy, need not be discussed here,
|
|
and the desecration of Good Friday does not interest us. We will
|
|
examine the eastern expansion as a whole and the Vatican's relation
|
|
to it in a separate essay.</p>
|
|
<p> The upshot was that, while nice-minded people all over the
|
|
world read the Pope's appeal with the usual moist eyes and muddled
|
|
brains, for serious folk it was at the best a damp squib, at the
|
|
worst a mockery. And the Pope soon knew it. Many believe that,
|
|
while Hitler has certainly not the vast planning and organizing
|
|
intelligence with which Nazis credit him, he probably does throw
|
|
off the general plans or imaginative scheme's which the massive
|
|
military and economic brain behind him then works out in detail.
|
|
However that may be, we see a steady and very able method in the
|
|
great plot: a step, very carefully prepared (the Saar, the
|
|
Rhineland, Austria, etc.) every six months or so, then six months
|
|
of covert preparation for and open lying about the next step. After
|
|
Czecho-Slovakia the lying became useless. Only Dutchmen and
|
|
Belgians were duped by it. Poland was to be the next stage; and the
|
|
next stage meant war on a European scale.</p>
|
|
<p> There is evidence, which we will see later, that, as we should
|
|
assume, the Vatican knew this as well as the French and British
|
|
Foreign Offices. A fortnight after Easter the Pope, his biographer
|
|
tells us, received so secret a message from his Nuncio in Berlin </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
14
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>that he opened the letter with his own hands and kept the contents
|
|
secret. Only his Secretary of State, Maglione, knew what reply he
|
|
made to it. Is it fanciful to suppose that it apprised him of the
|
|
next step that Hitler meditated? It was followed, the biographer
|
|
says, by "feverish activity" at the Vatican, the Pope consulting
|
|
his Nuncios from Berlin and Warsaw and seeing numbers of bishops
|
|
from France, Germany, and Poland. As the quarrel about Dantzig, the
|
|
unmistakable herald of Hitler's next step, soon broke out, the
|
|
Vatican could not even pretend to be taken by surprise.</p>
|
|
<p> What, then, were all these efforts to secure peace of which
|
|
the Catholic apologist speaks? We ignore the Easter lyric. It
|
|
reminds us of one gangster sending a wreath to the funeral of
|
|
another. In May he suggested -- so unobtrusively that it could be
|
|
denied when the plan failed -- a Five Power Conference over the
|
|
German-Polish dispute. The five Powers were to be Poland, Germany,
|
|
Great Britain, France, and Italy. You may think him either
|
|
unpractical or insincere but the fact is that he wanted Russia,
|
|
which was deeply interested, excluded, on his usual assumption that
|
|
it was not a respectable Power, and Italy, which was not interested
|
|
and would intervene only to support Hitler, included. France, which
|
|
was now, to the Pope's annoyance, allied with Russia, and Great
|
|
Britain refused. The Conference would certainly not have checked
|
|
Hitler.</p>
|
|
<p> It is said -- and, of course, denied -- that the Pope then
|
|
suggested a Conference on the economic grounds of the world-unrest.
|
|
Mussolini had been complaining for some time that Great Britain and
|
|
France were trying to starve the Axis economically, and that Tunis,
|
|
Jibute, and a share in the control of the Suez were vital economic
|
|
requirements of Italy and would entirely satisfy it; while his
|
|
troops were trying to cross Albania to Greece and his Fascist
|
|
toughs were encouraged to bawl in the streets and theaters that
|
|
Italy must have Savoy, Corsica, Malta, etc. Hitler was pleading
|
|
that once the question of Dantzig and the Corridor was settled he
|
|
would lay aside his armor forever. Any man who wishes may assume
|
|
that the Pope really believed them. His economic peace plan was an
|
|
attempt to get Great Britain and a France that was already weakened
|
|
by treason to give them what they wanted. In any case his
|
|
suggestion was rejected as amateurish.</p>
|
|
<p> These various proposals are interesting only in connection
|
|
with the belief of many that the Vatican has as fine an
|
|
intelligence-service as any Chancellory in Europe. If that were so,
|
|
the Pope would know that these pretended economic grievances of
|
|
Germany, Italy, and Japan were dishonest pretexts for crime. They
|
|
were based upon two lies: over-population and a disadvantage in
|
|
getting supplies from parts of the world which were included in the
|
|
empires of Great Britain and France.</p>
|
|
<p> The grievance about over-population is nauseous when we recall
|
|
how Hitler for six years and Mussolini for fifteen years had been
|
|
whipping up the birth rate by every means in their power; and in
|
|
this their action coincided with that of the Catholic clergy.
|
|
Neither in Italy nor Germany was there the least reticence about
|
|
the reasons for demanding early marriages and giving special prizes
|
|
to parents of large families. They wanted soldiers. "We were born </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
15
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>to die for Germany" was painted up in boys schools in that country,
|
|
and leading statesmen urged mothers to look anxiously for the first
|
|
mystic flicker of the "starlight of battle" in a baby boy's eyes.
|
|
The Italians were less absurd but equally frank. The men who will
|
|
be called to account in future history are the states-men and
|
|
writers of other countries who saw year by year this frenzied and
|
|
artificial attempt to increase the population, accompanied by
|
|
hypocritical pleas that the countries were already so
|
|
overpopulated, that they must have more territory. The Catholic
|
|
clergy were the worst offenders. They pretended to discover that
|
|
birth control was immoral. Their real purpose in their ban on it
|
|
was to secure an increase of the Catholic population while the non-Catholic practiced birth control.</p>
|
|
<p> In point of fact, Germany was very far from overpopulated, and
|
|
Italy was by no mean's one of the most densely populated countries.
|
|
England has about 800 people to the square mile, while Italy has
|
|
only 350 and Germany 322. Belgium, Holland, and other countries
|
|
annexed by Germany on the plea of wanting more "living room" for
|
|
its distressed population are twice as densely populated as it is.
|
|
The whole economic plea of Germany, which the Pope wanted gravely
|
|
discussed, stank with mendacity. Sir Norman Angell, one of the most
|
|
anxious of men to remove grounds of war, proved years ago in a
|
|
special study "that England had very little economic advantage from
|
|
its empire." You can trust the Canadians and Australians to see
|
|
that any advantage is mutual. Hitler says repeatedly and
|
|
emphatically in Mein Kampf that Germany does not want colonies: in
|
|
which he includes dominions of the British type. It wants land in
|
|
Europe, he insists, and we now see it clearly. He wants to reduce
|
|
Europe to economic servitude to the Nazis.</p>
|
|
<p> The Pope's biographer complains that after a time both Great
|
|
Britain and Germany refused to take the Pope further into their
|
|
confidence. We do not wonder. But, whether you prefer to believe
|
|
that he was not willing to be pushed out of the spotlight or that
|
|
he really thought he could help the interest of peace, he tried
|
|
again. He issued a very pretentious document in which he stated the
|
|
conditions of peace, and half the world began again to discuss the
|
|
marvelous sagacity and moral serenity of his famous "Five Points".</p>
|
|
<p> It was, in point of fact, his worst effort. The material part
|
|
of his first and most important point was: "A fundamental postulate
|
|
of an honorable and just peace is that of the right to life and
|
|
freedom of all nations, big and small, powerful and weak." It is
|
|
exasperating that most papers, in their eagerness to please
|
|
Catholic readers and advertisers, promised this as a very clear-headed piece of moral guidance in a world of confusion. Such a
|
|
right has been a platitude in political theory for more than half
|
|
a century. One is tempted to say ever since the ropes were
|
|
compelled by the Italian armies to let the inhabitants of Central
|
|
Italy decide by plebiscite how they preferred to live. But for
|
|
Pacelli-Pius to formulate this principle solemnly to the world in
|
|
the year 1939 was a breath-taking piece of audacity.</p>
|
|
<p> As I showed in an earlier booklet, four-fifths of the
|
|
Catholics of the world live under a Fascist regime, and they are
|
|
assured by their priests that this is in accordance with the Pope's</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
16
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>teaching! What is worse, most of them have had this despotic regime
|
|
imposed upon them under Pacelli and at his direct instigation. I
|
|
have shown how freedom disappeared almost whenever he visited a
|
|
country or it came under Catholic authorities: in 20 Republics of
|
|
Central and South America, Portugal, Hungary, Slovakia, Poland, and
|
|
in the end France and Belgium. The Black International was solely
|
|
responsible for robbing the people of Vienna of their right to
|
|
choose their mode of life and cordially cooperated in depriving the
|
|
Spaniards of that right. The Papacy had been an intimate ally of
|
|
the Fascists for ten years in refusing the Italians the means of
|
|
expressing their wishes and of the Nazis for six years. It had
|
|
consented by silence to the theft of that right from the people of
|
|
Abyssinia, Bohemia, Moravia, and Albania. It demanded almost every
|
|
month that the people of Russia and Mexico should be violently
|
|
deprived of that right. And the Pope crowns this formidable list of
|
|
encroachments on the liberty of peoples which he inspired or
|
|
blessed by assuring the world that to respect the right of self-determination is the first condition of the peace it ardently
|
|
desires! I need not go on to ask what serious prospect he thought
|
|
there was of Germany, Italy, and Japan, the only three powers to
|
|
whom it was necessary to preach, agreeing to it.</p>
|
|
<p> The least that the world could do, since the press is not open
|
|
for candid reflections on the Pope's actions, was to ignore him and
|
|
his Five Points. The other points were platitudes. The second
|
|
condition of peace was disarmament: a very practical thing to say
|
|
in 1939. Then we get counsels to learn from the past, to consider
|
|
the demands of racial minorities, and to cultivate mutual goodwill
|
|
and a sense of justice. It was like proposing to sell a man
|
|
asbestos paint when his house was burning furiously. If the Pope,
|
|
had framed these points in the office of the Secretariat of State
|
|
in 1929 and had broadcast them sternly whenever a violation of them
|
|
seemed imminent he might not have averted the coming tragedy but he
|
|
would have saved the honor of the Papacy. He could not. Authority
|
|
is the first principle and coercion the indispensable instrument of
|
|
the Church. Some Protestant bishops applauded the Pope's Five
|
|
Points. Others asked what freedom, good-will, and justice non-Catholics had in Poland, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Hungary, and a
|
|
score of other Catholic states.</p>
|
|
<p> Chapter III</p>
|
|
<p> POLAND PAYS FOR ITS PIETY</p>
|
|
<p> What passed between the Vatican and the Nazis before the
|
|
invasion of Poland and the opening of the European War only the
|
|
Pope and a very small number of his collaborators know. On April
|
|
24, as I said, the question of Slovakia being now settled and
|
|
Hitler in possession of the bridge to the Ukraine and the Balkans,
|
|
the Pope got a letter from his Berlin representative in a secrecy
|
|
that surprises and puzzles his biographer, it took two days of
|
|
solitary reflection for him to decide upon the answer, and only he </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
17
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>and Cardinal Maglione know to this day what the answer was. Then
|
|
there were visits to the Vatican of the Rumanian and French
|
|
ambassadors and various German and Polish bishops, and there was a
|
|
brisk secret correspondence with the Nuncios at Berlin, Warsaw, and
|
|
Paris.</p>
|
|
<p> Clearly the new Pope was confronted with a terrible dilemma
|
|
and he was anxious to keep secret even from the Church what
|
|
decision he took. Rome is one of the busiest sounding boardes of
|
|
rumors in Europe and the Vatican press bureau is as Pegler has
|
|
shown, one of the leakiest or most venal, but at this stage the
|
|
secret was guarded with unprecedented rigor. If you will next
|
|
notice the significant fact that the Pope refrained from an
|
|
explicit condemnation of the invasion of Poland as carefully as in
|
|
the case of Abyssinia and Albania -- he certainly never used a word
|
|
to compare with his language about the Russians when they simply
|
|
took back Rusalan provinces which Germany would have annexed -- you
|
|
will hardly hesitate in your guess what the secret was. The Pope
|
|
was informed of the plan to invade Poland and was induced to assent
|
|
on certain conditions: probably that the occupation of Poland would
|
|
be temporary and was indispensable for the attack on Russia, that
|
|
religion would be respected in Poland, and that the Church would
|
|
get concessions in Germany and great opportunities in Russia. The
|
|
idea seems to have been that the Pope would persuade the very
|
|
docile Poles to submit on these conditions and would continue to
|
|
inflame them against Russia, the only Power that could save them.</p>
|
|
<p> In refraining from condemning the invasion of Poland -- I do
|
|
not count later protests when the Catholic, body was threatened
|
|
with annihilation -- the Pope could not plead, as he did in the
|
|
case of Norway, that the Catholic body was small and he must think
|
|
of his German Church and not offend the Nazis. Whether or no that
|
|
is a respectable ground of action in a Pope, the fact is that there
|
|
were twice as many sincere Catholics in Poland as in the Reich. A
|
|
cynic would add that, though it had more adherents and of a more
|
|
passionate loyalty, the Polish Church was not a quarter as rich as
|
|
the German Church. We will, of course, not admit that the Vatican
|
|
was moved by so profane a consideration, but the numbers are
|
|
indisputable. We have seen that by 1939 there were not 12000000
|
|
Catholics left in Germany: probably not more than 10000000. No
|
|
one disputes that of the 33000000 people of Poland more than
|
|
20000000 were sincere Catholics and several further million were
|
|
compulsory members of the Church: a type of Catholic of which the
|
|
Vatican seems to be equally proud.</p>
|
|
<p> This strange situation requires an historical explanation, but
|
|
for even a short summary of the history of Catholicism in Poland I
|
|
must refer to my Appeal to Reason Library (No. 5., "Roman
|
|
Catholicism in Poland and Russia") and confine myself here to a few
|
|
points which are essential to understand what follows. There is, as
|
|
I have often pointed out, a close parallel between Poland and
|
|
Ireland, especially if you think of Catholic Ireland before British
|
|
Liberalism relieved many of its grievances. Both countries suffered
|
|
from their geographical position, on the outskirts of civilization,
|
|
and in both cases this gave the priests a rich opportunity to
|
|
exploit the poor and very backward population. And just as the
|
|
earlier tyranny of Protestant England had hardened the faith in </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
18
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>Ireland and brought priests and people closer together, so had the
|
|
long tyranny of Orthodox Catholic Russia in Poland. While, however,
|
|
Britain had very materially modified its treatment of the Irish
|
|
more than half a century ago, Russian tyranny had continued until
|
|
1917.</p>
|
|
<p> We thus recognize a very serious traditional ground for that
|
|
hostility to Russia which prevented Poland from entering into
|
|
alliance with the one Power that could protect it, but it is due
|
|
mainly to the Black International that hostility became worse after
|
|
1918 and completely destroyed the chances of checking Nazism on
|
|
that side.</p>
|
|
<p> At Versailles, to which the Poles sent Paderewski to lull the
|
|
ears of statesmen with his music, a Republic of 30000000
|
|
inhabitants was set up. Not much more than half of these were
|
|
Poles, so that there were few parts of Europe in which the
|
|
Conference of Versailles sowed the seeds of a future war so
|
|
recklessly as in Poland. In particular the Poles claimed Russian
|
|
territory (White Russia and the Galician Ukraine) containing seven
|
|
or eight million people of alien race and generally alien religion,
|
|
and, to the disgust of the British representatives, the French
|
|
bulldozed Wilson, who reeled under the shower of weird geographical
|
|
names (and lies) into consenting. The Poles also claimed Silesia
|
|
from Germany, but it was so obviously far more German than Polish
|
|
that the League of Nations was directed to take a plebiscite.</p>
|
|
<p> The time came when the French were disgusted with their Polish
|
|
pet -- they had supported it as a bulwark against Bolshevism -- and
|
|
they gave away the fact that the plebiscite was corrupt. See the
|
|
Catholic Rene Martel's La France et la Pologne (1931). The Poles
|
|
had formed a special organization for corrupting and intimidating
|
|
voters and officials, and one of the three directors of it was
|
|
Msgr, Adamski, Catholic Bishop of Posen. The Black International
|
|
had begun its record in Poland, and there is no other part of the
|
|
world in which it has proceeded with such gross inhumanity, as we
|
|
shall see presently. The vote was still 700000 for Germany and
|
|
400000 for Poland, and the Commissioners decided to divide the
|
|
province. This division was, carried out with the same corruption,
|
|
the richest districts going to Poland even when the great majority
|
|
of the inhabitants were found to be Germans. They had to sell out
|
|
to Poles, at a heavy loss, and transfer to Germany. Still the Poles
|
|
were not content. The League of Nations permitted them to take
|
|
advantage of Russia's distress and seize Vilna and part of
|
|
Lithuania. Ever since that period of grab and corruption there has
|
|
been a monument on German soil facing Poland with the inscription:
|
|
"Germans, never forget of what blind hatred has robbed you."</p>
|
|
<p> How in spite of all this greed and the large loans extended by
|
|
France and Britain, Poland sank to the position of the poorest
|
|
country in Europe -- read Spivak's Europe Under the Terror if you
|
|
want to know what exploitation really is -- cannot be discussed
|
|
here. The point of interest to us is that the country no sooner rid
|
|
itself of the tyranny of Czarist Russia than it set up a still more
|
|
galling tyranny over its own minorities, and in this the Black
|
|
International worked in intimate cooperation with the Dictator
|
|
Pilsudski. Marshal Pilsudski, over whose death in 1935 we shed </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
19
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>tears as we read the record of his virtues in all our papers, was,
|
|
not to put too fine a point on it, a brute and a crook. He had led
|
|
the Poles who fought for Germany against us in the 1914-1918 war,
|
|
and they had not thought it discreet to send him to Versailles. He
|
|
had joined the White War against Russia, which he hated with all
|
|
the bitterness of (like Mussolini) a renegade Socialist, and only
|
|
the French had saved him from losing Poland to them. He disgusted
|
|
every group of politicians, and the Socialists saved him from ruin
|
|
and he then sent their leaders to a fortress and tortured them
|
|
exactly (even to the guards putting excrement in their food) as
|
|
Nazis later tortured Jews in Germany.</p>
|
|
<p> As far as I can discover Pilsudski never became a sincere
|
|
Catholic -- again like his friend Mussolini -- but he acted with
|
|
and on behalf of the Church, which is more powerful than in Ireland
|
|
or Peru. Let me explain at once that the appalling persecution that
|
|
lasted twenty years in Poland was a joint affair of Church and
|
|
state and aimed equally at destroying the nationality and the
|
|
religion of the immense non-Polish minorities. In the Galician
|
|
Ukraine alone there were 1000000 Catholic Poles, 1250000 Jews,
|
|
4000000 Greek Uniates (acknowledging the Pope but with a Greek
|
|
liturgy), and 4000000 Orthodox or Greek Catholics. In the west
|
|
were about 1000000 German Protestants; and there were, of course,
|
|
representatives of all minorities and not a few skeptics in the
|
|
cities. For twenty years every device of persecution and brutality
|
|
was used to destroy the religious liberty and the national tongues
|
|
and customs of these minorities, although the Poles had given
|
|
Versailles a solemn engagement to respect them. I am concerned only
|
|
with the coercion in religious matters, and the reason for
|
|
recalling it here is obvious. During all the years when the Vatican
|
|
and the Black International in every country, but especially in the
|
|
United States and Canada, was inspiring, on the ground of its
|
|
"persecution of religion", that hatred of Russia which has been of
|
|
incalculable service to the Nazis, this same Black International
|
|
not only knew that there was no persecution of religion in Russia
|
|
-- it was Polish conspiracy that brought punishment on the
|
|
Catholics there but was conducting a quite fiendish persecution of
|
|
religion in Poland and preventing the press in other countries,
|
|
with only four exception's amongst all the dailies of Canada, the
|
|
United States, and Great Britain, from publishing the facts. The
|
|
honorable exceptions were the Toronto Evening Telegram, the Chicago
|
|
Daily News, the New York Herald-Tribune, and the Manchester
|
|
Guardian (England); and the persecutions had been in progress for
|
|
eleven years when they discovered it.</p>
|
|
<p> The Ukrainians of Galicia had sent a deputation to Versailles
|
|
to protest against incorporation in Poland and claim independence.
|
|
The French had got the petition dismissed, and the Poles had
|
|
promised to respect their minority-rights. Six months later they
|
|
addressed to the French a memoir (Les atrocites polonaises en
|
|
Galicie Ukrainienne) which showed a very brutal persecution,
|
|
political and religious raging over the whole vast area. In one
|
|
overcrowded and filthy jail 200 of the 2000 prisoners were Orthodox
|
|
priests. More than 1000 priests had been arrested and Polish Roman
|
|
priests stalked like ghouls in the rear of the police and soldiers
|
|
taking over the schools and chapels of the dispossessed Greek
|
|
priests. The soldiers were instructed to subject the Greek priests </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
20
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>to every kind of humiliation and mockery so as to break the
|
|
attachment of the people. But the peasants and farmers reacted with
|
|
the fiery protests that might have been expected, and "whole
|
|
villages were depopulated by massacre." The women were raped and
|
|
beaten, the men shot by the thousand. In other words, the Catholic
|
|
Poles were perpetrating in Poland twenty years ago just those
|
|
atrocities which are now exercised upon themselves by the Germans,
|
|
and, except for this authoritative account in French, which was not
|
|
translated into any other language, the world was not permitted to
|
|
know anything about it.</p>
|
|
<p> It is an important secondary aim of these booklets to warn the
|
|
reader of the extraordinary extent and pernicious nature of the
|
|
Catholic censorship of the press and of publicity generally. Just
|
|
about that time, twenty years ago, I spent six months in New York
|
|
and when I suggested to a well-known publisher, who asked me for a
|
|
book, that I should write on the Catholic Church, he refused and
|
|
assured me that I would not find a publisher for such work in New
|
|
York. Few publishers have any sympathy with the Church -- the only
|
|
one I found with such personal admiration of it was, curiously, my
|
|
Rationalist friend G.H. Putnam -- but the press would not bring to
|
|
the notice of the public, in the usual way, books that were
|
|
(offensive to Catholics", and they submitted that it was useless to
|
|
publish them. Libraries were often intimidated from buying them and
|
|
booksellers from exposing them for sale. Haldeman-Julius is the
|
|
only publisher in America during the last ten years who has enabled
|
|
me to tell truths of the kind I tell here, yet it will be evident
|
|
that the world would have been far better equipped to meet the
|
|
darkening future if the whole truth had been put before it year
|
|
after year.</p>
|
|
<p> I have devoted a paragraph to events of twenty year's ago
|
|
because they were but the first page in a chapter of persecution
|
|
which covers the whole intervening period and is very material from
|
|
several angles to my present theme. The matter not only affords a
|
|
very striking illustration of the suppression of truth which it is
|
|
important to know. It shows that the worst blunders of Versailles,
|
|
which we blamed so fluently, were enormously aggravated by the
|
|
conduct of the Catholic Poles. It explains that bitter hostility of
|
|
the Poles to the Russians which caused them to lend a hand in every
|
|
conspiracy against the Soviet government since 1919 and brought
|
|
upon the Catholic priests in Russia, most of whom were Poles, the
|
|
legitimate legal proceedings which the Vatican and the American
|
|
bishops represented as persecution of religion. It shows that
|
|
outrages as vile as any committed by the Japs in China and now by
|
|
Nazis in many lands were being perpetrated by the most profoundly
|
|
Catholic state in the world for twenty years while nice-minded folk
|
|
everywhere were wondering whether the new barbarism was not due to
|
|
a decay of religion. And it puts in a strange light that standing
|
|
excuse of the Vatican for its conduct, that the extension of its
|
|
rule over further millions of men or the maintenance of that rule
|
|
over million's who seem to be rejecting it is so important for the
|
|
moral and social good of men that we must be lenient in regard to
|
|
the crookedness of its policy.</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
21
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p> If ever this appalling record of persecution in Poland by the
|
|
Catholic Poles is forced upon general public notice we shall
|
|
probably hear the usual distinction between the action of a local
|
|
hierarchy and the action of the Vatican, I need not repeat that we
|
|
are here considering the conduct of the Black International as a
|
|
whole not simply of the Popes, and we are not embarrassed by being
|
|
unable to trace in every case the instructions of the Vatican to
|
|
national Churches. But this distinction is not even plausible in
|
|
the case of Poland. The present Pope Pius XII, has, we saw, an
|
|
intimate knowledge of German affairs, and no plea of ignorance or
|
|
misinformation can be made in connection with any of his relations
|
|
to that country. But the late, Pope Plus XI, had the same personal
|
|
interest in Poland, his pontificate (1922-1939) exactly coincides
|
|
with the Catholic Reign of Terror in that country.</p>
|
|
<p> Any writer must dwell with reluctance on the misconduct of a
|
|
people which bore, and with great heroism, the first brutal onset
|
|
of the European War and suffers so bitterly for it today. It is,
|
|
however, necessary to tell the whole truth if we are to appreciate
|
|
the insincerity of the pretensions of the Black International, the
|
|
truth about its conduct, and the mendacity with which a good deal
|
|
of that conduct is concealed. It is fortunately easier in America
|
|
than elsewhere to learn the truth. When the Chicago Daily News and
|
|
the Herald-Tribune disturbed the clerical folk who were raving
|
|
about persecution in Russia -- Jewish rabbis joining in processions
|
|
with bishops in New York while financiers applauded from the
|
|
windows -- by showing that the real persecution was in Poland,
|
|
officials in Washington answered inquirers with the suave
|
|
assurances of the Polish Catholic representatives that it was "all
|
|
lies." But there is a large body of Ukrainians in the United
|
|
States, and in 1931 they collected and published a large volume of
|
|
testimony (letters, reports, journalistic accounts, etc.) of the
|
|
outrages.</p>
|
|
<p> No impartial person who reads this (Atrocities in the Ukraine,
|
|
1931, edited by Emil Revyuk) can for a moment doubt the truth of
|
|
the statements. The authority is absolute. The details are
|
|
revolting. The defense urged by some is that, the Ukrainians had
|
|
rebelled against their Polish masters. Yes, after years of brutal
|
|
treatment in violation of the promise's made by Poland when it
|
|
received the province. But a nation of 30000000, spending a very
|
|
high proportion of its revenue on an army which could stand up to
|
|
Germany for three weeks hardly needed torture and brutality to
|
|
suppress any revolt in a province. Flogging, with whips loaded with
|
|
wire or iron, was a daily occurrence. Pregnant women and girls were
|
|
beaten. Heated irons were applied to the feet. Water, sometimes
|
|
mixed with oil, was forced down their nostrils. Men -- not merely
|
|
peasants but professional men and scholars -- were deprived of
|
|
sleep until they became half-insane. There were 200000 in jail in
|
|
1930 and torture was used lavishly on them to make them betray
|
|
others. The brutality was even worse in 1934 and 1935, though it
|
|
seems to have relented a little after the death of Pilsudski in the
|
|
latter year.</p>
|
|
<p> The first encyclical that the Pope issued in 1939 deplored
|
|
that the root of all evil in the world was the decay of religion.
|
|
One wonders how many sage editorials took up and confirmed that
|
|
text; and not one in a hundred of these papers had informed its </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
22
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>readers that bestiality of the kind that will make sociologists of
|
|
the future hesitate to call our social order a civilization had
|
|
been going on for twenty years in the most religious country in
|
|
Europe. Poland was to 1939 far more Catholic than Eire or Peru. A
|
|
French Catholic visited it in 1932 and wrote an article on it in
|
|
the Catholic Revue des Deux Mondes (February 1, 1933). He describes
|
|
exhibitions of piety in public to which you will find no parallel
|
|
in any other country. American Catholics were, at the time, telling
|
|
non-Catholic neighbors that if they could only see religious life
|
|
in a solidly Catholic country they would perceive the beauty of the
|
|
Church. Well, Poland was the most solidly Catholic country in the
|
|
world, and its priests and bishops were equally behind this
|
|
persecution, which extended also to German Protestants and Polish
|
|
Freethinkers, with the politicians of the Pilsudski school, They
|
|
were just as eager to destroy the Uniate, Orthodox, and Protestant
|
|
Churches as the politicians were to make everybody thoroughly
|
|
Polish. That is abundantly shown in Revyuk's book.</p>
|
|
<p> It is hardly necessary to point out how these facts make a
|
|
mockery of the Vatican's assurance to the world that when the
|
|
Russian troops entered this Galician Ukraine in 1939 they committed
|
|
outrages as the German troops did in Posen. Roman Catholic Poles
|
|
and the few other Roman Catholics in the province fought against
|
|
the Russians, but what was likely to be the mutual attitude of the
|
|
Ukrainians and the Russian's after 20 years of this agony? The
|
|
Ukrainians hated the Poles mortally. The Russians were an army of
|
|
liberation. The jails were opened. The farms were restored to their
|
|
owners. But the Papal lie was reproduced respectfully in the world-press. I remember very few papers which even troubled to explain
|
|
that the two provinces taken over by Russia, palpably to anticipate
|
|
a German annexation of them, were Russian provinces wantonly torn
|
|
from their natural unity by Versailles, but I do not remember a
|
|
single paper that explained what grounds the Ukrainians had for
|
|
relief and how bitterly they hated the Poles.</p>
|
|
<p> Another reason why I enlarge on this painful chapter of Polish
|
|
history just before the war is because it has a vital bearing on
|
|
one of the grossest blunders of the democracies and greatest
|
|
advantages of the Nazis, the estrangement from Russia. Since I
|
|
cannot put before the reader any correspondence of the Vatican with
|
|
the Polish hierarchy he must decide on a general knowledge of
|
|
Church methods how far the Vatican knew and approved of the brutal
|
|
persecution I fancy he will not have much difficulty -- but that
|
|
the Papacy inflamed the Catholic Poles against Russia is patent.
|
|
The Poles had, we saw, very strong traditional grounds to hate
|
|
Tsarist Russia, and Pilsudski had carried his hatred over to Soviet
|
|
Russia and had gravely implicated the Roman Catholics in Russia in
|
|
the White War and subsequent conspiracies. Grave difficulties were
|
|
bound to arise when there was a common frontier between the most
|
|
religious and the most irreligious country in Europe. It will,
|
|
however, not be questioned that these difficulties were immensely
|
|
aggravated by the appeals to the Catholic world of the Papacy to
|
|
work for the extinction of Bolshevism after 1926. It was in large
|
|
part owing to this that the democracies lost the last opportunity
|
|
of either preventing the war or making it short and restricted.</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
23
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p> Poland had signed a non-aggression pact with Germany in 1934,
|
|
and there cannot be the least doubt that, imbued as it was with the
|
|
Pope's idea of a crusade against Russia, in which Germany must play
|
|
at least the leading part, Poland regarded this as a preparatory
|
|
condition for the eventual attack on Russia. When Hitler and
|
|
Mussolini had hamstrung Czecho-Slovakia, Catholic Poland and
|
|
Catholic Hungary had, like wolves waiting until a buffalo is
|
|
wounded, bitten large pieces of territory out of its flanks. On
|
|
January 25, 1939, Hitler had sent Ribbentrop, the vilest agent of
|
|
his more treacherous moves, to Warsaw to represent Germany at the
|
|
celebration of the fifth anniversary of the non-aggression pact. It
|
|
was, he said in his speech, "one of the firmest bases of European
|
|
peace." What children these Europeans were the historian will one
|
|
day reflect! Germany was then, he knew, plotting the destruction of
|
|
Poland and a world war.</p>
|
|
<p> Ribbentrop returned to Germany to join in the plot against
|
|
Czecho-Slovakia in which, as I have elsewhere explained, it
|
|
received most valuable help from the Black International. The
|
|
Germans entered Prague on March 15 (1939), while the new Pope was
|
|
preparing his moving address on peace and charity; and the world
|
|
began to prepare for what seemed to be the inevitable war. Most of
|
|
my neighbors in London had gas-masks by that date and looked
|
|
forward with amazing apathy -- or was it lack of imagination? -- to
|
|
the horrors that were predicted. The French signed a mutual
|
|
defensive alliance with Poland. In fact, in the course of the next
|
|
few months France and Great Britain had such alliances also with
|
|
Rumania, Greece, and Turkey.</p>
|
|
<p> We can imagine some imperfectly informed reader of the next
|
|
generation exclaiming impatiently: But why string together these
|
|
small, scattered, and not wholly reliable nations and omit the one
|
|
great power, Soviet Russia, which was Germany's natural enemy and
|
|
was worth all the others put together? We did not ask the question
|
|
at the time because we knew the answer. These Catholic countries
|
|
and even Great Britain regarded an approach to Russia much as a
|
|
Baptist mothers meeting would regard a suggestion, in case of need,
|
|
to call in the aid of a gunman to protect their virtue. For that
|
|
the Pope had a very large part of the responsibility.</p>
|
|
<p> Naturally there were approaches, of a sort. The French signed
|
|
a pact with Russia, almost useless because it did not include a
|
|
military alliance, in April. The Vatican promptly condemned it. The
|
|
British asked Russia to promise military aid to Poland and Rumania,
|
|
but only in such form and measure as those powers decided, and they
|
|
would not promise British aid to Russia if it was attacked. Russia,
|
|
sore about the insulting exclusion from Munich, rightly distrusting
|
|
a Britain which, it knew, regarded it as an outlaw, refused. Poland
|
|
refused to have adequate Russian armies in it, and the little
|
|
Baltic states, prizes set up by Versailles for the first grabber,
|
|
also refused. Great Britain half-heatedly pushed on. It sent a
|
|
diplomatic mission, of a character it would not send to any other
|
|
country, to Moscow, then a military mission of the same inferior
|
|
quality. Russia did not need to read how one of the Blimps of a
|
|
London club had said: "We may, of course, have to get Russia to
|
|
help, but, please God it will not come to that." It, in August 23,
|
|
sent the old women of the clubs into hysterics by announcing that </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
24
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>it had signed a non-aggression pact with Germany. A few weeks later
|
|
it sent the Nazis into what we might call a subdued hysteria by
|
|
snatching the Galician Ukraine -- for reasons which I have surely
|
|
fully explained -- from under their guns.</p>
|
|
<p> We quite understand Russia. We also now understand Poland,
|
|
which entered upon its three-years war-agony on September 1st, and
|
|
its three-years peace-agony a few weeks later. Only one feature in
|
|
that year of tragic blunders concerns us here. Poland, which
|
|
thought it had been following the luminous lead of the Church for
|
|
so many years, had been led by the nose. The brave, exploited,
|
|
perversely educated people had been cursed with blundering leaders
|
|
who were in closer alliance with the Church than leaders were in
|
|
any other Catholic country. They had brought upon the land the
|
|
contempt of Europe and had made it refuse the aid of the big
|
|
brother who, with real aid from the British and French fleets,
|
|
Rumania, Yugoslavia, and Greece might have averted its tragic fate.
|
|
The poles paid for their piety. Little did the French dream that
|
|
they also, the least religious people in Europe after the Russians,
|
|
Would soon be led by the Black International, and without the
|
|
redeeming trait of honor and bravery which we accord to the Poles,
|
|
into same black pit. Never was there before such lack of
|
|
foresight in an age of mortal danger. We know why the statesmen and
|
|
churchmen of democratic countries were reluctant to face realities.
|
|
Hitler and Mussolini and their satellite promised to kill
|
|
Socialism. Would the catastrophe have been as grave if the peoples
|
|
of the world had had all the facts candidly before them?</p>
|
|
<p> Chapter IV</p>
|
|
<p> THE GERMAN CHURCH AND THE WAR</p>
|
|
<p> On September 1st, 1939, began, with the invasion of Poland,
|
|
the greatest war, it maybe the most terrible and tragic three-year
|
|
period, in the whole of history. The aggression-mongers, the Pope's
|
|
biographer affirms, thrust him aside and excluded him from their
|
|
counsels. "When the swords flash let the lawyers be silent" said an
|
|
old Roman proverb. The new Roman applied it to churchmen: Mussolini
|
|
assured the Pope that he would see that Rome was respected as a
|
|
sacred city, and, although Italian planes have taken part in the
|
|
foul bombing of London, Rome has never been bombed. Churchill
|
|
persistently refuses to tell why. Perhaps the Catholic authorities
|
|
of the United States and the British Empire could tell us. The
|
|
Pope, to make doubly sure that he would remain out of heaven some
|
|
years longer, had a luxurious shelter prepared under an ancient
|
|
tower with walls fifteen feet thick. Germany would not require his
|
|
services again until the attack on Belgium and France.</p>
|
|
<p> A pathetic spectacle for the moral ruler of the world! If he
|
|
had been the austere world-figure that Catholic literature
|
|
represents him -- nay, if he had been a man -- what would he have
|
|
done? He would certainly not have been content, as he was to ask
|
|
the nations of the world, as if they were equally guilty, to make </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
15
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>peace: certainly not have proposed economic conferences, as he did,
|
|
to make the aggressive powers still stronger by conceding territory
|
|
for which they need not expend any of their forces. Indeed, the
|
|
whole world knew at that time that only one nation threatened its
|
|
peace, Germany. The Italian and Japanese jackals would not move
|
|
until the lion had scattered a few corpses about the landscape. So
|
|
the Pope's function, unless America apologetic literature is
|
|
admitted to be insincere, was clear. He ought to have branded as
|
|
criminal in the highest degree the ambition to annex and exploit
|
|
other countries, one by one, of which Germany had given ample
|
|
proof. He ought to have condemned in the most explicit and severest
|
|
terms the glorification of war by the German and Italian leaders,
|
|
the lies they put forward about encirclement and over-population,
|
|
the racial arrogance with which they were poisoning their people,
|
|
the murderous outrages with which they had begun to say to all the
|
|
little nations of Europe: See what you will get if you resist us.</p>
|
|
<p> It is hardly worthwhile discussing the immediate pretexts of
|
|
the opening of hostilities. For my part -- I have never hesitated
|
|
to say that Dantzig was a German city and ought never to have been
|
|
taken from it, and that to take from it a slice of East Prussia
|
|
measuring 260 miles by 80 to give the Poles -- Polish capitalists
|
|
and French bond-holders, that is to say -- a "Corridor" to the sea
|
|
was little less monstrous. But no one in Europe expected Germany to
|
|
be satisfied with these. The situation was as clear as the Eiffel
|
|
Tower at Paris. Germany meant to take Poland, and England and
|
|
France were sworn to regard such a step as proof of a large
|
|
aggressive design and declare war. Those of us who knew the facts
|
|
reflected, sadly, that the democracies could hardly choose a weaker
|
|
case to champion than that of the synthetic Poland they had set up
|
|
at Versailles, the Fascist state which had bludgeoned its
|
|
minorities for twenty years. It was all the worse that, as was soon
|
|
proved, they could give no help to Poland and were not even able to
|
|
help themselves.</p>
|
|
<p> The very difficult and still obscure question of France
|
|
require's a separate book but I can speak for England. About mid-day on that fateful Sunday the news was broadcast that Chamberlain
|
|
had declared war on Germany. By an extraordinary blunder the sirens
|
|
wailed within half an hour and, to make matters worse in my own
|
|
street, a stupid warden gave the signal to prepare for gas. I will
|
|
not describe the panic -- which does not detract from the fine
|
|
courage of most Londoners when the blow fell later -- but it
|
|
reminded us of one thing: we had no armament whatever for the war
|
|
we had declared. It has since transpired that England then had only
|
|
18 good fighter planes. Germany had thousands. Nine months
|
|
preparation had done little more than give most of us gas-masks --
|
|
I had none -- accommodations for a million or so in the hospitals
|
|
and coffins for hundreds of thousands. Yet for once Englishmen
|
|
might be proud of the folly of their government. It cried a halt to
|
|
brutality and criminal greed.</p>
|
|
<p> And the Pope had nothing to say. Someone ought to collect a
|
|
bouquet, or encyclopedia, of all the impressive assurances of
|
|
American Catholic apologists that their Pope is the ideal
|
|
inflexible, international and irrepressible arbiter of right and
|
|
wrong, justice and injustice. Of all the excuses that they bleat </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
16
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>today the funniest -- and even bishop's mumble it -- is that he is
|
|
the Father of All Peoples and must not take sides! We had been told
|
|
that it was just that position of cosmopolitan and international
|
|
judge which made him a unique and incorruptible tribunal. Was there
|
|
some doubt from the moral point of view on which side the guilt
|
|
lay? Can one even imagine Britain and France, with their miserable
|
|
armament, having any other aim than to cheek a brutal
|
|
aggressiveness? In plain English, and in the light of the Pope's
|
|
own words, this plea means that he would not denounce a wrong if
|
|
his interests and those of his Black International were to suffer
|
|
for it in any country. And that is the gist of our accusation. The
|
|
Black International pursues its own interests though it be through
|
|
the ruin of civilization and of all human idealism.</p>
|
|
<p> As I have repeatedly pointed out, it is rather this Black
|
|
International than the Pope that interests us. We must not allow
|
|
ourselves to be distracted when the end comes by Catholic or any
|
|
other criticisms of Eugenio Pacelli. Any Pope would have acted as
|
|
he did. No Pope ever acted otherwise. The great French scholar, A.
|
|
Loisy, scourged the Pope during the last war for exactly the same
|
|
conduct. And the apologist has not simply to explain way his
|
|
"neutrality," though that is a vice in a moralist in face of a
|
|
grave crime. He had helped bring on the war. He had made it easy
|
|
for Hitler the annexation of Austria. He had cooperated with him
|
|
still more closely in the destruction of Czecho-Slovakia. He had
|
|
turned a blind eye to his vile conduct in Germany and helped to
|
|
protect his intervention in Spain. He had been in large part
|
|
responsible for the weakness and incoherence of the world-opposition to him by his preaching of hatred of Russia -- and --
|
|
not to speak of matters which will be discussed in later booklets
|
|
-- he had encouraged his monstrous plans by allying himself with
|
|
the two other powers which had similar plans.</p>
|
|
<p> But when we say that the Pope was silent we mean only that no
|
|
clear messages were printed in the Osservatore or broadcast from
|
|
the Vatican Radio or sent out to the world in encyclicals. His one
|
|
encyclical at this time, when the flames of war were lit from
|
|
Poland to England, was, as we saw, a plea that the world, not one
|
|
or two nations, was evil because it was losing religion, and
|
|
Catholic Action must come to the rescue. Catholic Action! It had
|
|
been busy in the Polish Ukraine for twenty years, in Spain for
|
|
Several years, in Hungary and Portugal, in Austria and South
|
|
America. No one took any notice.</p>
|
|
<p> Was the Pope acting through the German hierarchy? We do not
|
|
care two pins whether this can or cannot be proved. One thing we do
|
|
know as we have already seen. The summer had seen "feverish
|
|
activity" at the Vatican, and an outstanding part of this was
|
|
correspondence with the Nuncios at Berlin, Warsaw, and Paris and
|
|
the reception of German and Polish bishops. As the whole world was
|
|
now discussing the chances of preparing for an invasion of Poland
|
|
and a general war we shall hardly be accused of undue
|
|
suspiciousness's if we suggest that this was the chief topic of the
|
|
very busy correspondence and interviews. What was decided we do not
|
|
know. The most sensible theory in view of the facts is that Hitler
|
|
informed the Vatican that he was taking over Poland, peacefully, as</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
27
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
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|
<p>the first step in a campaign against Russia, promised to turn over
|
|
a new leaf in Germany, and wanted the Pope to keep France out of
|
|
it; and that the Poles, not being as trustful as the Pope rejected
|
|
his advice to submit.</p>
|
|
<p> However that may be, he must have had an understanding with
|
|
the German hierarchy, and we know how it behaved. lt was as
|
|
Hitlerite as the Hitler youth. Edith Moore quotes a number of the
|
|
pronouncements of the German bishops in her No Friend of Democracy
|
|
(1941). The very sound and impartial Manchester Guardian (May 24,
|
|
1940) thus stated the position:</p>
|
|
<p> "Among the higher ranks of the Catholic clergy a decisive
|
|
majority desire to see the victory of the Reich or at least a peace
|
|
that will leave Germany's political and military strength
|
|
unimpaired. At the same time they still look to an eventual
|
|
Catholic-Conservative restoration. The National Socialist State
|
|
has, it seems, been able to reach an understanding with the
|
|
Catholic leaders. Assurances have been given as to the status of
|
|
the Church in the Bohemian-Moravian Protectorate and in Germany
|
|
itself. The special position of the Catholic Church in Poland is
|
|
also to receive due recognition. In spite of the persecution of
|
|
laymen and priests by the Nazis, in spite of all the attacks upon
|
|
the Christian religion now hopes have been raised among the German
|
|
Catholics as a result of these negotiations."</p>
|
|
<p> As I suggested, the hierarchy -- and the references to Bohemia
|
|
and Poland seem to bring in the Vatican -- was soothed with
|
|
promises of greater advantages to the Church and in view of these
|
|
saw nothing of the enormity of the annexation of Norway, Denmark,
|
|
and Holland which had then taken place. On August 22 the bishops
|
|
held their annual meeting at Fulda, a national shrine from which
|
|
they were accustomed to give guidance to their Church. Usually only
|
|
a score of bishops attended, but this year the whole 45 were
|
|
present, and, according to the German press, the advice they gave
|
|
to the faithful was a very emphatic "Heil Hitler." By this time, I
|
|
may recall, the German army had swept over Holland, Belgium, and
|
|
France and, exasperated by the opposition of those countries, had
|
|
stooped to outrages and infamies which shocked the world. Yet the
|
|
German papers revealed that the bishops decided that "after the
|
|
completion of the final German victory special ceremonies of
|
|
gratitude to the German troops and of loyalty to Hitler will be
|
|
announced." It was said that the bishops submitted their proposals
|
|
to the Vatican and that the Pope who was at the time bargaining
|
|
once more with Hitler (Catholic Herald, August 9, 1940, and
|
|
Catholic Tablet, September 21, 1940), forbade them to publish their
|
|
resolutions: clearly to avoid scandal in Britain and America.</p>
|
|
<p> The Tablet found a significance in the fact the final address
|
|
at the Fulda Conference was given by the bishop of Osnabruck, who
|
|
was appointed by Goering the representative of the Catholic Church
|
|
in the Prussian State Council, and the New York Times reported that
|
|
"the leaders of the Catholics in Germany . . . exhort their
|
|
believer's in and outside the Reich to do their utmost in the
|
|
righteous cause of the German nation under the leadership of
|
|
Chancellor Hitler." The hierarchy, in other words, did not merely
|
|
urge Catholics to support Hitler, but went out of their way to </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
28
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>affirm that the miserable bandit had "a righteous cause." A British
|
|
Catholic paper, the Herald (October 18, 1940) quoted a passage from
|
|
a Pastoral Letter which the chief Catholic chaplain, Bishop
|
|
Garkowsky, addressed to all Catholics in the Army, Navy, and Air
|
|
Force. He said:</p>
|
|
<p> "The German people have a clear conscience and are aware which
|
|
people will have to bear the responsibility before God and history
|
|
for the gigantic struggle that is now going on. The German people
|
|
know who primarily started this war. Just as certainly as God is
|
|
the Father of all Peoples, He is also the judge of right and wrong,
|
|
of honor and deceit."</p>
|
|
<p> Those who find it possible to imagine that these German
|
|
bishops honestly blamed Britain and France for the war because,
|
|
after a reiterated solemn warning, they had declared that they
|
|
would oppose further aggression may do so. I would not argue the
|
|
matter. Most of us can see nothing but nauseous hypocrisy in German
|
|
prelates who invoke God as a witness to the righteousness of the
|
|
Nazi cause and program.</p>
|
|
<p> We have already seen that the new Pope had, a year before,
|
|
issued an Encyclical, Summi Potitificatus, on the state of the
|
|
world it was very wicked because the nations had lost the Christian
|
|
sense of brotherhood -- so conspicuous, of course, in the
|
|
nineteenth century and earlier -- and had adopted theories of
|
|
racial superiority. Even Catholics in England and France were very
|
|
uneasy in commenting on this. Could the Pope possibly mean that the
|
|
democracies were at least so close to the dictatorships in these
|
|
respects that he was not called upon to draw any distinction? And
|
|
why did he not say that he meant Germany, Italy, and Japan? One
|
|
French Catholic writer evaded the difficulty by saying that "in
|
|
time of war the Church of Rome has to observe an impartial
|
|
reserve." The same writer said, incidently, that in no other war in
|
|
history was good so clearly on one side and evil on the other. The
|
|
Pope was just a moral coward, and a consequence of his cowardice is
|
|
seen in these quotations from the German bishops. Their stern
|
|
inexorable moral guide left them free to tell people that the
|
|
vilest campaign in modern history, both in its aim and in its
|
|
procedure, had the full approval of the Black International and
|
|
their God.</p>
|
|
<p> But the cordiality between the butchers and the black-cassocks
|
|
was never long maintained in its purity. Hitler, who seems to have
|
|
regarded the complaisance of the hierarchy and the Vatican with
|
|
complete cynicism, threatened a new blow at the Church in the
|
|
Spring of 1941. He returned to the ideas of Mein Kampf and said
|
|
that both Protestant and Catholic Churches must be blended in one
|
|
Christian body which must be strictly "national" or independent of
|
|
Roman authority and adapted in its moral teaching to Nazi ideas.
|
|
The Pope's spokesman on the Vatican Radio now discovered some moral
|
|
courage -- not in excess, it is true -- and summoned German
|
|
Catholics to "wake up and see clearly the pagan tendencies which
|
|
were spreading everywhere." The sordid behavior of the Gestapo and
|
|
the soldiers in half of Europe -- in the concentration camp's of
|
|
Germany itself, in Austria and Bohemia, and now in Norway, Holland,
|
|
Belgium, and Occupied France must not be censured except where </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
29
|
|
.
|
|
THE WAR AND PAPAL INTRIGUE</p>
|
|
<p>Russia can be made to bear the greater part of the censure. The
|
|
bloody ruling of this intoxicated blonde beast over Europe must be
|
|
viewed with "impartial reserve." But to tamper with the Church and
|
|
the interest of the Vatican . . . And still the hierarchy supported
|
|
the war. The Archbishop of Freiburg, who had denounced the plot to
|
|
the Vatican, added:</p>
|
|
<p> "Far be it from me in this terrible struggle to say anything
|
|
that would turn aside the energies of the people or prejudice their
|
|
devotion to their country. Everyone who thinks as a German desires
|
|
to secure for his country a lasting peace with honor."</p>
|
|
<p> With honor! There's the rub. It was left to Hitler, Goering,
|
|
Goebbel's, Ribbentrop, and Himmler to interpret the phrase. They
|
|
smiled and pushed ahead, and we shall later find them again
|
|
courting the Vatican.</p>
|
|
<p> When Eugenio Pacelli became Pope in 1939 he had to choose a
|
|
coat of arms and a motto. He chose a dove with an olive-branch in
|
|
its beak and the words "Peace in Justice"! He had by his ten years
|
|
of inflaming passion against and libelling Russia, to his unctious
|
|
benediction of corruption in Spain and Austria, by his intrigues in
|
|
Czecho-Slovakia, and especially by standing out before the world as
|
|
the friend of Germany, Italy, and Japan, helped to make the world
|
|
war inevitable. He dare not, even when the raw greed of Hitler and
|
|
Mussolini was flaunted before his eyes, say one word in
|
|
condemnation of it; and the local regiments of the Black
|
|
International which he controlled sanctified every outrage and
|
|
egged on the German people in the most criminal aggression and most
|
|
savage behavior that the world had seen for many centuries. And his
|
|
supreme word of guidance was that the world was very wicked because
|
|
it would not listen to religious oracles.</p>
|
|
<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>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
30
|
|
</p>
|
|
</div>
|
|
</xml>
|