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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
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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. 8</p>
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<p> THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
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<p> HOW MUSSOLINI'S INVINCIBLE LEGIONS WERE BLESSED</p>
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<p> by Joseph McCabe</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> I No Tears Over Albania .............. 1</p>
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<p> II The Stab in the Back ............... 7</p>
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<p> III Greece, Not Being Romanist, Fights ...... 13</p>
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<p> IV Catholics Hamstring Yugoslavia ......... 20</p>
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<p> V The Pipe-Dream of Mussolini and the Pope ...... 26</p>
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<p> Chapter I</p>
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<p> NO TEARS OVER ALBANIA</p>
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<p> Ten years ago that appalling greed which is the principal
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dynamo of the barbaric energy that is wrecking the world expressed
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itself in four plausible ambitions: those of Nazi Germany, Fascist
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Italy, Imperialistic Japan, and the (spiritually) Imperialistic
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Vatican. I say plausible because these ambitions were at that time
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still restricted within such limits that they could be decked in
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such pretexts (legitimate aspirations, racial unity,
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overpopulation, etc.) as would provide a moral evasion for the
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democracies whose real motive for inaction was the prospect of the
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destruction of Socialism. Japan, which already had and openly
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confessed an ambition to conquer and enslave all eastern Asia and
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the islands of the Pacific hardly fits into this formula, but in
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this series of booklets Japan occupies little space. We have only
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to point to the fact, which may be verified in any work of
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reference, that just when Japan began brazenly to exhibit its greed
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and its callousness, the Vatican entered into diplomatic relations
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with it which set the seal of a sacred cooperation upon its
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adventures, and that on the eve (March, 1941) of the final, most </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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.
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THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
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<p>bloody, and most comprehensive extension of the conspiracy against
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civilization the Pope gave a most cordial interview and a gold
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medal to Japan's most crafty agent, Matsuoka.</p>
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<p> Hitler ten years ago still kept his ambition within the frame-work of Mein Kampf. The noble German race could not tolerate that
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large bodies of its people should be in subjection to inferior
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nations (Poland, France, Denmark, Czecho-Slovakia, Switzerland,
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etc.) and must gather them into the Reich; and it was necessary for
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the full and free development of this Greater Germany that it
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should take the Ukraine from what the whole world then agreed with
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him to regard as the disreputable and incompetent Bolsheviks. We
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have seen how urgently the Vatican was moved by its own policy to
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link itself with the adventures of Nazism. The German Catholic
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Church was already the richest in the world, or tied for that
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position with the American Catholic Church. It faced destruction if
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it opposed the Nazis; it could expect an enormous increase of
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wealth and power in the Greater Germany if it did not. Moreover,
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the Nazis were bound to annihilate its deadly enemy, Socialism, in
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Germany and, if they succeeded, in France and Russia. So the
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present Pope, who knew Germany intimately and saw, as any schoolboy
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could, that its program meant war at least with France and Russia,
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and therefore also with Great Britain, helped the Nazis to attain
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power and clung to them through years of shame until their prospect
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of victory was dimmed by the heroic resistance of Russia and the
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help of America.</p>
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<p> All that, and how the Black International in Germany cheered
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and blessed every ghastly extension of Hitler's greed when he
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realized the incredible complacency of the western democracies, we
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have seen. In this book I propose to consider in detail the
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relation of the Vatican and the Italian Church to the Fascists: in
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particular to the miserable adventurer who dreamed that he would
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pass into history as the second Caesar and already finds his place
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in it under the particularly odious name of the Jackal -- the
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stinking, Blinking, cowardly beast that lets other beasts kill and
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fattens on the corpses of their victims. This is the Pope's closest
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ally and friend, the leader of the dreamed-of League of Catholic
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Fascist powers.</p>
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<p> In another booklet I have summarized the early career of this
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gross type of adventures, the beginning of the Vatican's sordid and
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venal alliance with him, and the way in which his first outrage,
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the rape of Abyssinia, coincided perfectly with the ambition of the
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Papacy to recover its control of the Ethiopian Church and was
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effusively blessed by the whole Italian hierarchy while the Pope
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remained tactically silent. From that time until 1939, the Jackal
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got no pickings and saw himself sinking into vassalage to the more
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powerful beast and his country despised throughout the world
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without the compensation of plunder. Every meeting at the Brenner
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or dash of his rabbit-brained son-in-law to Berlin was followed by
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a harvest of glory and loot for Hitler -- alone. The warning in
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Mein Kampf that Germany could never tolerate a second great power
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in Europe was lost on him; and, while he joined gaily and coarsely
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in every promise of clerical friendship which Hitler made to small
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nations, to keep them quiet until he was ready to rob them,
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Mussolini seems not to have reflected that Hitler's promises to
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himself might be equally cynical.</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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THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
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<p> During these years the Pope remained, we will not say on
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cordial terms but at least in alliance with the treacherous
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warmonger, and the Italian hierarchy and priesthood acclaimed every
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step he took and every crude boast he made as enthusiastically as
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the German bishops supported Hitler. Between the Mediterranean and
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the frontier of Holland several hundred Catholic bishops and
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quarter of a million priests, nuns, monks, and clerical agents did
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what the Catholic apologist calls the beneficent work of his Church
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in guiding the world, and almost without exception they were
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servile in their flattery of the two dictators who were rapidly
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dragging down Europe to the level of the savage. This chorus now
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includes the bishops and priests of France, Belgium, and Holland as
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well as those of Spain, Portugal, Italy, Austria, Czecho-Slovakia,
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Hungary, and Germany.</p>
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<p> In the face of this situation the American Catholic plea that
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we must relieve the Pope of responsibility for the action of local
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hierarchies is seen to be ludicrous. One local hierarchy might at
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some time be betrayed by its dread of offending its nation into a
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morally indefensible position, and we should then expect the Papacy
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to rebuke it as it rebuked the American bishops and archbishops in
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1899. But here we have ten of the most important local hierarchies
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of the Church united, under the eyes of the Vatican, for years in
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praise and support of the worst evil that has befallen civilization
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in modern times. Add the prelates and priests of the Latin-American
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Republics and those who supported Japan in that country and China
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and you have nine-tenths of the bishops and priests of the Catholic
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world blessing corruption; and even in the remaining tenth many
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speak very hesitatingly, if at all, for the cause of humanity and
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civilization.</p>
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<p> Let us distinctly understand that these priests and bishops,
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encouraged by the Pope's refusal to censure or to break relations
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with their brutal rulers, supported them in every step they took.
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I have shown elsewhere that the whole Italian Church rejoiced
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boisterously over the conquest of Abyssinia and that the Pope, who
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is now said by Cardinal Hinsley to have called it a "barbarous
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outrage", gave the supreme gift to womanhood of his Church, the
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Golden Rose, to the Queen of Italy in her character of Empress of
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Abyssinia. That easy piece of conquest had proved of great value to
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the Church, but of practically none to Italy. The chief motive of
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it had been the personal ambition of Mussolini to avenge a
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humiliating defeat that the Italians had earlier suffered in
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Abyssinia and to create something that he could call a Roman
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Empire. One would not be surprised if he thought the Italian people
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would in time put the purple mantle on his own shoulders.</p>
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<p> Since that time he had waited impatiently for his share in the
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Axis-loot, and at the beginning of 1939 he decided to add Albania
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to the glorious new Roman Empire. In the midst of his preparations
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the old Pope died and Pacelli became Pius XII. Partly in order to
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obscure his alliance with the dictators Catholic writers have said
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that Mussolini opposed the election of Pacelli. He wanted a
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"religious" Pope -- a man who would attend exclusively to Church
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matters and leave rulers and statesmen to act as they pleased --
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not a "political" Pope like Pacelli. If anybody can point to any
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act or word of Pacelli during the preceding ten year's as Secretary</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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THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
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<p>of State which challenged Mussolini we might entertain the story.
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There was no such act or word, except an occasional lament of
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breaches of the Concordat; and these things never troubled
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Mussolini or Hitler because they never weakened or disturbed the
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loyalty of their local Churches. Papal policy went on without a
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change. The man who had been the power behind the throne was now on
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the throne.</p>
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<p> As to the statement that the new Pope was greatly distressed
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at the invasion of Albania, it is just one of those anonymous
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extenuations of a Pope's blunders or crimes. Pius XII was crowned
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on March 12 (1939), and the Italian troops crossed to Albania on
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April 7. That date was Good Friday, and a pious churchman might be
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annoyed at the choice; and a further possible annoyance was that
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the Pope was busy preparing his beautiful Easter message on peace
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which in the circumstances jarred on the ears of many. But it would
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be sheer folly to suggest that the Pope did not know that Mussolini
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was going to annex Albania. Month's of preparation are required for
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an overseas expedition of half a million men with modern equipment.
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At the very time when the Pope was crowned the tanks must have been
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rumbling along the roads of Italy, and the men and material and
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ships must have been gathering at Brindisi long before the date of
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sailing. But to understand fully the relation of the Vatican to
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that piece of imperialist filibustering we must know something
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about the character of Albania.</p>
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<p> It was little more than a word even to thoughtful people
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before 1939 and was totally unknown to the millions. I confess that
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I was myself surprised when, a few years earlier, one of the
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pilgrims to my house, a cultivated and substantial young man who
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was taking a post-graduate course at London University, told me
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that he was an Albanian. An amazing illustration of the general
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ignorance and lack of interest is seen in the Catholic
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Encyclopedia, which was, of course, written many years before the
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invasion. It gives estimates of the number of Albanians varying
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from one to nearly two millions -- in a Supplement 20 years later
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the figure is given as 850000, which is not far wrong -- and says
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that "the best of the population is Catholic." I may be wrong but
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I doubt if the reader would understand from this that little more
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than one-tenth of the population were Catholics, and that these
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nearly all lived in a half-civilized condition in the mountains of
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the north. The Catholic writer praises their virtue and then admits
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that until recent time's they had a tradition of kidnapping
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handsome Turkish girls and carrying them off to the mountains; but
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I must add that they gave them the sacraments of (compulsory)
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baptism and marriage before sleeping with them. The violent
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passions that were displayed in their feuds were notorious
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throughout south-eastern Europe. It was through these densely
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illiterate and priest-ridden highlanders, the Mirdites and Shoshi,
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that Mussolini began to engineer the "invitation" to him to take
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over the country.</p>
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<p> As the "conquest" was almost entirely won by bribery of the
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Albanians and lying to their neighbors we should find the Vatican's
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share in the responsibility comparatively mild and will not linger
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over it. Briefly, Albania is an outlying fragment of the Turkish
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Empire which in the fifteenth century took over the lands of the </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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THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
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<p>old Greek Roman Empire. It lay on the very edge of the Greek world,
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separated by a wall of religious hatred from the Roman world, and,
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being in addition very mountainous, remained, like all countries
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(Ireland, etc.) in that geographical position, very backward. The
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Turks never quite subdued the primitive mountaineers of the north,
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and they kept their Catholic faith all through the Moslem days. In
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1939 there were about 700000 Moslem in the country, 200000
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Orthodox (non-Roman) Catholics, and 100000 Roman Catholics. The
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Pope, as in the case of Abyssinia, looked to Italian rule to bring
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under his control the 200000 dissident Catholics and as many of
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the Moslem as possible. One really finds it easier to believe that
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the Pope on that Good Priday prayed very fervently for the success
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of the Italian arms. And he had, as so often happens, a little
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friend at court. The pretty Queen Geraldine was a Catholic, and
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poor Zog little dreamed when he built a luxurious chapel for her a
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few years earlier and gave her a suite of chaplains that soon he
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would be flying over the hills with the crown jewels.</p>
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<p> Here again the interests of the imperialist adventurer and the
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spiritualistic imperialist neatly coincided. Mussolini, already
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conscious that the leading burglar had altered his plan of dividing
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the spoils -- Hitler to have Europe north of the Danube and
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Mussolini all to the south of it -- wanted at least to make sure of
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Greece and Yugo-glavia as a bastian of his Medeteiranean and
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African Empire. Some say that he surprised and annoyed Mussolini by
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his "conquest" -- it cost him the lives of 12 men of his invincible
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legions -- of Albania. Not likely. He knew of Mussolini's
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preparations, for Italy swarmed with his spies, and he says that
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when the time came to attack Greece and Yugo-Slavia the possession
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of Albania, a few hours' sail from Italy, would be a great
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advantage to both. To say that the Pope was not in their counsels
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seems, as I said, ridiculous. Within a week of his coronation the
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Pope had a visit from Clano and on the following day one from the
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Prince of Piedmont. A survey of some such summary of the world-news
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as that in Keesing's 'Contemporary Archives' will show that the
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relations of the Vatican with the Italian government were
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particularly good that year. In December Mussolini appointed a
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formal 'ambassador at the Papal Court, and the year ended with the
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sumptuous visit of the king and queen to the Vatican (December 21)
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and the rare event of the Pope taking his Christmas greeting in
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person to the palace, (28) as I have elsewhere described. Albania
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did not ruffle a hair of the Pope's head.</p>
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<p> We must, as I said, take into consideration that the conquest
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was practically bloodless, the way having been so thoroughly
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prepared with gold. In 1915 the Allied powers, looking for bits of
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territory with which to bribe possible supporters like Serbia and
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Greece, had decided to cut up Albania. Italy had saved it and in
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time made it a nominally independent kingdom. Mussolini's
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"patronage" became so onerous and ominous, however, that King Zog
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became restless and it was decided to evict him and open one of the
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gates to Greece. Everybody will remember how Mussolini's shrewish
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daughter and her popinjay of a husband, who fairly clearly fancied
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themselves as future empress and emperor, had white horses in
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reserve for their triumphal entry into Athens. Not less eagerly did
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the Pope look forward to that event as the beginning of his
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conquest of the Greek Church and other National Catholic Churches </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 POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
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<p>which scorned Rome's claim of supremacy. But it will be well to
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postpone to the last chapter a consideration of the grandiose plan
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of an oriental counterpoise to the influence which the wealth of
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the great democracies was giving them in the Church.</p>
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<p> We should, however, notice in conclusion that while the
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conquest of Albania was almost bloodless, it was won by such
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corruption and perfidy that the Pope's virtual blessing of it again
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puts him in the gang. It was by a lavish expenditure of money that
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Mussolini, the man who wrote that war alone enobles a man,
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prevented serious resistance and induced the "notables" of Albania
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to desert Zog and offer the crown to the king of Italy. This was
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sordid enough, but the deception of Greece and Yugo-Slavia, which
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were alarmed to get the Italian army at their frontiers, was
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revolting; if we can find any sympathy for any statesmen in Europe
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who believed a word that the dictators said after five years of
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lying and repudiation of agreements.</p>
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<p> Roosevelt had asked the pair of arch-criminals to sign an
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agreement to refrain from any aggressive movement for ten year's,
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and Mussolini had, with an air of pain and sorrow, refused to sign
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such a document on the ground that it was an insult to suggest that
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he might have any such intention. There was a more direct and
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brazen deception of Yugo-Slavia and Greece. Every statesman knew
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that Mussolini's imperialist program demanded, not Albania, which
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was of little value except as a route to Greece, but the Yugo-Slavian coast of the Adriatic, to the north of it, which had
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splendid harbors (in which the eastern coast of Italy is very
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deficient) and was part of the old Roman Empire. Italy gave a
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solemn assurance to Belgrade that the annexing of Albania need not
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give it the least concern. The Greeks knew that Italy coveted the
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island of Corfu, off the southern coast of Albania, and they and
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the British asked for assurances. They got them in profusion; --
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and it seems a mystery unless you keep in mind always that Italy
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and Germany were destroying Socialism for the capitalists of the
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world -- believed them. On December 10 the Grand Council of
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Fascism, Mussolini's chief mouthpiece, gravely announced to the
|
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world that it was "the desire of Italy to 'see order and peace
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maintained and consolidated in the Balkan and Danubian areas", and
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this would be better promoted by Hungary, Rumania, Yugo-Slavia, and
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Greece refraining from entering into Balkan defensive alliance
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which Britain and France urged them to form. They consented, and
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Hungary and Rumania -- both in close touch with the Vatican --
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began at once to drift into the German sphere of influence.</p>
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<p> Under shelter of this camouflage-screen of lies the two
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dictators, sure of peace on their eastern and southern frontiers,
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pushed on their preparations for the great spring offensive in the
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west. The Pope professed to believe the protests of Mussolini and
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his Grand Council. He ended the year, as I said, although it had
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witnessed the ruthless destruction of Catholic Poland, in a quite
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exceptional round of chaste Christmas festivities and issued his
|
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biennial essay on the beauty of peace. As Hitler had not yet
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approached the major clauses of his program -- war upon Russia for
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the Ukraine and upon France for the recovery of Alsace-Lorraine. --
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I leave to others the analysis of the Pope's mind. My own
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suggestions would be malicious. But one fact stands clear of all </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 POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
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<p>guesses and conjectures. He had never passed one word of censure on
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the gross deceptions and cynical breaches of the assurances given
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to the world by his allies in 1939. By that time the reassuring
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documents signed or issued by Japan, Germany, and Italy and
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brazenly repudiated by later action -- often a few months later --
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would have papered a commodious dining-room. Never has the Pope
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condemned that perfidy of his allies which was making international
|
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faith a lost quality of the wicked nineteenth century or one
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reserved to the "impious" Bolsheviks.</p>
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<p> Chapter II</p>
|
|
<p> THE STAB IN THE BACK</p>
|
|
<p> It will be part of the puzzle of our age to the future
|
|
historian to discover why anybody was ever taken by surprise by any
|
|
of the terrible outrages that, occurred every few months. The
|
|
program, of the great international bandits had been before the
|
|
world for years, and Hitler's program included, and emphasized in
|
|
many chapters of his book, a war of revenge on France, the recovery
|
|
of Alsace-Lorraine, and the truculent statement that France was so
|
|
degenerate, so debased with Negro blood, that it must be blotted
|
|
out forever from the company of European powers. To plead in
|
|
extenuation that Hitler never permitted a full foreign translation
|
|
of his book is childish. Every foreign office in the world and
|
|
large numbers of journalists knew its contents. For such follies as
|
|
Chamberlain accepting the word of Hitler that he had abandoned
|
|
those plans, or the French accepting a similar statement in an
|
|
interview which Hitler gave a French Fascist journalist, or almost
|
|
unanimous silence of the world-press there is, as I have repeatedly
|
|
said, only one explanation: so eager were they all for the
|
|
destruction of Socialism, which Hitler and Mussolini promised, that
|
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they mistook the knife of an assassin for the scalpel of a surgeon.
|
|
If that is difficult to believe think out, if you can, some other
|
|
explanation; and study the action of the bankers and industrialists
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of France today who are actually cooperating in a New Order that
|
|
merely postpones their annihilation.</p>
|
|
<p> Whether the Pope was surprised by the war in the west I have
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|
discussed in other booklets. I could at that time quote no
|
|
authority to support me in my suggestion that the Pope was fully
|
|
informed of the plot before even the invasion of Norway. I told,
|
|
from the Papal newspaper itself, how Ribbentrop was sent to see the
|
|
Pope a few days before Hitler met Mussolini at the Brenner to
|
|
arrange the date of his intervention and how the Osservatore
|
|
reflected the joyous expectation of the Vatican that a very
|
|
important agreement was to be signed. The only plausible theory of
|
|
this is that Hitler wanted the cooperation, which he got, of the
|
|
Catholics of Belgium and France, and that the Pope demanded so high
|
|
a price for his services that a month of hard bargaining followed.
|
|
But the Italian Church and the Vatican emphatically endorsed the
|
|
action of the Belgian and French Catholic traitors -- Leopold,
|
|
Petain, Laval, Weygand, and Darlan -- and the Church gained
|
|
mightily in France. Within the last week or two the 1940 volume of
|
|
the Annual Register has appeared and that weighty and quite
|
|
impartial authority says, drawing upon "Vatican sources", that </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
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|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
7
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THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>Ribbentrop told the Pope that "German soldiers would be in Paris by
|
|
June and in London by August". This was on March 11, 1940. Shirer
|
|
confirms that some hard bargaining between the Vatican and Germany
|
|
went on at this time. He says that Msgr Orsenigo, the Nuncio at
|
|
Berlin "had been quietly paying visits to the Wilhelmsstrasse for
|
|
weeks" (Berlin Diary, p. 234).</p>
|
|
<p> The Catholic has the consolation of knowing that the Pope
|
|
sacredly guarded the confidence that was made to him. At least I
|
|
assume the Catholic will regard that as a virtue. Britain and
|
|
France had declared war on Germany and must have expected attack.
|
|
The Pope alone knew, outside a narrow Nazi and Fascist circle, that
|
|
it was to be delivered at that time and in that fashion, so that it
|
|
would probably be fatal to France. But he virtuously kept the
|
|
secret to himself. Some folk, looking back on all the horrors that
|
|
followed and confronting all the horrors that may yet come as the
|
|
treachery of Vichy deepens, may even say that there are more
|
|
precious things than virtue; or that the Pope's firmness on this
|
|
one point while he virtually encouraged his three allies in years
|
|
of deceit, corruption, and savagery reminds them of an earlier
|
|
moralist who rebuked a man for straining at a gnat and swallowing
|
|
a camel.</p>
|
|
<p> We will not suppose that Pius XII knew all the methods which
|
|
Germany had used in preparing France for its baptism of blood and
|
|
transformation into a real Catholic country. There were even anti-Nazi folk who blamed me when I suggested that it used the sexual
|
|
attraction of women as well as the zeal of priest's and priest-ridden folk. But it is still doing this. I have before me an
|
|
article in which a man who has just come from Portugal describes
|
|
how that country is being prepared for bloodless conquest. Amongst
|
|
other things he says:</p>
|
|
<p> "A social layer has also been imported, including many-lingual
|
|
Aryan titled women whose morals are at the service of the Fuehrer.
|
|
The line is to attract the snub element among the Portuguese"
|
|
(London Evening Standard, November 4 -- the most conservative
|
|
evening paper in Britain).</p>
|
|
<p> One wonders if this new type of "vice-squad" includes some of
|
|
the dainty aristocratic ladies who did such good work for Hitler in
|
|
Paris before 1939. Even those of us who are not puritans find this
|
|
method of preparing the way for "glorious victories" revolting. No
|
|
trick is too dirty for the Pope's allies, On the same day comes the
|
|
news that Hitler's men are castrating bodies of the finest youths
|
|
of Czecho-Slovakia and that they have 10000 British uniforms ready
|
|
for treacherous use in the East. The priests follow up the Gestapo
|
|
to castrate what they call men's souls.</p>
|
|
<p> A second method in which the Vatican cooperated with Italy and
|
|
Germany in securing the success of the war in the West was by
|
|
continuing to denounce Soviet Russia. Whether or no Hitler really
|
|
feared that Russia would move in the Balkans while he was busy in
|
|
the west, it is a fact that he and Mussolini and the Vatican used
|
|
this suggestion to divert the attention of the Balkan powers from
|
|
their real danger and bind Hungary and Rumania closer to Germany.
|
|
All through the winter of 1939-1940, when preparations were being </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
8
|
|
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|
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THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>made for operations in the west, the conduct of the Fascists was as
|
|
crooked and deceptive as that of Germany and Japan. Mussolini
|
|
bellowed about the peace of Europe and the threat to it from
|
|
Russia. His people were solemnly assured, as they had been after
|
|
the annexation of Abyssinia, that unless Russia struck all that
|
|
they had to do was to make economic profit out of Germany's war
|
|
with France and Britain. It was said that Italy even offered to
|
|
sell planes to France but Hitler forbade it. On the other hand when
|
|
Britain held up German ships carrying coal to Italy the Italian
|
|
press was let loose in full fury upon it. Perfidious Albion was
|
|
said even to be at the back of the Russian menace and the Russian
|
|
seizure of part of Poland and Finland.</p>
|
|
<p> It is fortunate that we have not here to attempt to
|
|
disentangle the apparent confusion of the first quarter of 1940,
|
|
with Germany an ally of Russia on the one hand and with Mussolini,
|
|
its bitterest enemy, on the other. We know now, of course, that the
|
|
Russo-German agreement was a sham on both sides. The real tragedy
|
|
of it is that a just, and honest, not to say friendly, approach to
|
|
Russia on the part of Great Britain and France would have prevented
|
|
this postponement of Russia's intervention in the war and might
|
|
have averted terrible evils and sufferings from Europe. Russia, it
|
|
is true, did not consider itself ready for war in 1939, but neither
|
|
had Germany one-half the equipment which it would have in 1941,
|
|
with the forges of Europe pouring out steel and the fields growing
|
|
food for it from Poland to Belgium, from Scandinavia to Spain. A
|
|
crucial factor in the whole horrible development is that hatred of
|
|
Russia which the Papacy had done even more than the capitalists to
|
|
inflame in every part of the world.</p>
|
|
<p> In March, as we saw, the Pope was informed of the plan to
|
|
invade the West which had been maturing all through the winter. We
|
|
must assume that in the course of the heated argument in which
|
|
Ribbentrop assured the Pope that the German troops would be in
|
|
Paris by June he explained that the great barrier of the Maginot
|
|
Line, on which Britain and France relied to an amazing extent,
|
|
would be turned by an invasion of Holland and Belgium. Whether the
|
|
Pope was informed also of the coming intervention of Italy we do
|
|
not know. The story was put out, by one of the very useful
|
|
anonymous purveyors of information in the service of the Vatican
|
|
that when Mussolini at length approached a declaration of war on
|
|
France the Pope wrote him a letter begging him to refrain (New York
|
|
Times, June 5). Professor La Piana observes that "if this letter is
|
|
not another fiction like the mythical letter supposed to have been
|
|
written in 1914 by Pius X to the Emperor of Austria, the Duce must
|
|
have thrown it into the waste-paper basket, for on June 11 the
|
|
heroic gesture of striking the nation already defeated by Germany
|
|
was made", and the Vatican adopted "an attitude of complete
|
|
reserve". There has never been an official claim that such a letter
|
|
was written, and just one month earlier the Duce had shown how
|
|
little he respected the Pope's wishes by peremptorily and
|
|
successfully ordering him to discontinue publishing British war-news in his paper.</p>
|
|
<p> But Professor La Piana (of Harvard), writing in the Nation in
|
|
March, 1941, goes on to show how, whatever reserve the Pope
|
|
maintained -- for a week or two, let me add -- the Italian Church
|
|
supported the action of Mussolini with its usual enthusiasm. The </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
9
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>American paper's which reproduced Roosevelt's description of
|
|
Mussolini's action -- "the hand that held the dagger plunged it
|
|
into the back of its neighbor" -- did not speak of the joy of the
|
|
Italian Church. As if to excuse the Vatican in advance the Rome
|
|
correspondent of the New York Times (June 12) quoted from Vatican
|
|
sources -- "semiofficial" this time it seems -- that "the attitude
|
|
and responsibility of the Vatican are entirely separate from those
|
|
of the Italian clergy and the Italian Catholics". If there was one
|
|
national hierarchy in the world that was strictly controlled by the
|
|
Vatican it was surely that of Italy; and, in fact, the Italian
|
|
clergy were as strictly pledged as the Vatican never to take part
|
|
in polities, These agreements of the Church to avoid politics seem
|
|
always to have the unwritten clause "on the wrong side". The
|
|
Italian Church went beyond the bulk of the people of Italy, who
|
|
notoriously did not want war, in cheering Mussolini, but, since the
|
|
papers of France, Britain, and America could be relied upon not to
|
|
reproduce the words of the bishops, that was safe and profitable
|
|
interference in politics. But the Pope's words would probably be
|
|
reproduced in every country so he must keep "an attitude of
|
|
complete reserve".</p>
|
|
<p> On Catholic theory, and in any case, bishops and priests no
|
|
more approve injustice than Pope's do, but I need only quote one or
|
|
two instances from Professor La Piana's article. On June 16 the
|
|
Archbishop of Gorizia exhorted his people in a pastoral letter --
|
|
one of several issued at that time -- to "lift reverent thoughts to
|
|
the ever victorious King and Emperor and to the undefeated Duce:
|
|
may God bless and protect him." Cardinal Schuster, head of the
|
|
Italian Church, visited soldier's in the barracks at Milan and
|
|
"distributed blessed medals to bring luck to the Italian armies".
|
|
The Civilia Catholica, which is almost as much an organ of the
|
|
Vatican as the Osservatore, urged the soldiers to "shed their blood
|
|
for the cause blessed by their religion." On June 27th, when France
|
|
was prostrate in the dust, thirty Italian bishops gave away one of
|
|
the reasons for their joy, and one that must have been very active
|
|
in the Vatican. They urged the Duce to "crown the unfailing victory
|
|
of our army" by taking the Holy Land from French and British hands
|
|
and putting it, on the religious side, under the Pope. This, they
|
|
said, would fitly express "the harmony between the civilized people
|
|
of Imperial and Christian Rome". The shrines of the Holy Land are,
|
|
I need not recall, almost as profitable as Monte Carlo, which was
|
|
to have been, he thought, one of Mussolini's rewards, but we will
|
|
consider the oriental policy of the Vatican in the last chapter.</p>
|
|
<p> Note the reference in the letter of the Italian bishops to
|
|
"the civilized people of Imperial and Christian Rome". The rest of
|
|
the world used very different language about their enthusiasm for
|
|
Mussolini's action. We should, it is true, not regard the whole
|
|
Italian people as approving it, but the above quotations show that
|
|
the Catholics of Italy -- and of Spain, Portugal, Slovakia, Brazil,
|
|
etc. -- joyously supported it. In America and Britain the more
|
|
Papal Catholics followed the Pope's example of "complete reserve"
|
|
for every decent non-Catholic about them considered that this act
|
|
alone justifies us in calling Mussolini the Jackal. Some writers
|
|
say that he incurred the anger and contempt of Hitler by holding
|
|
off from intervention until France was mortally wounded. I prefer
|
|
to think that they were in agreement, but at Mussolini's </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
10
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>suggestion. As a member of the diplomatic corps in Rome said:
|
|
"Mussolini does not want to fight a sick man: he wants to gouge the
|
|
eyes out of a corpse." Some such language was used wherever tongues
|
|
and pens were free, and non-Catholic.</p>
|
|
<p> To the last moment Mussolini had maintained his policy of
|
|
craft and deceit. He continued to fool Britain with trade-talks.
|
|
When, in May, Roosevelt asked for a declaration of his intention,
|
|
he declared that he had no intention of entering the war. It is
|
|
true that as Germany bowled over country after country his press
|
|
began to complain of the "ring of steel" that the British command
|
|
of the Mediterranean drew round Italy and hymns of hate even for
|
|
children, began to be heard. But Ciano, the Jackal's pup, still
|
|
thought he was fooling the British representatives with trade-talks, though as Chamberlain had now given place to Churchill
|
|
probably no one was duped. At the beginning of June the World Fair,
|
|
which had until that date been announced to be held in Rome, was
|
|
"postponed", and the sailing of Italian liners was canceled. And on
|
|
June 10 Romans were summoned not by blare of trumpets but by cards,
|
|
to come to the Palazzo Venezia to listen to the final lie. He
|
|
declared that "Italy has done everything possible to arrest this
|
|
terrible war" -- which he had jubilantly arranged with Hitler at
|
|
the Brenner a few weeks earlier -- but must now face "the risks (!)
|
|
and sacrifices" which the wickedness of France and Britain forced
|
|
upon it. He added, as if he luxuriated in lying: "I do solemnly
|
|
declare that I do not intend to involve other nations in the
|
|
struggle" and expressly called upon Yugo-Slavia, Greece, and Turkey
|
|
to "take notice of these words of mine". Witnesses say that the
|
|
great body of the people who were in the square heard him and
|
|
departed in silence, and a gloom settled upon Italy. But the
|
|
church-bells rang, and the bishops hung their consecrated garlands
|
|
on the bull-neck of the brutal adventurer.</p>
|
|
<p> The Pope's "complete reserve" lasted until Petain sat firmly
|
|
-- I mean was held firmly by Darlan and Weygand -- in the saddle,
|
|
and Catholic papers all over the world, even in England (as I
|
|
quoted), rejoiced at the glorious state into which the "heroic soul
|
|
of France" had passed, if a little tarnished in the wings.
|
|
Socialism, Communism, Freemasonry, and Freethought, which for 60
|
|
years, to the deep concern of the Vatican, had kept four-fifths of
|
|
the French people out of the Church, were swept away by the German
|
|
flood. By a sudden change which any observer in Europe would have
|
|
pronounced forever impossible a year earlier the government was
|
|
solidly Catholic, and decrees which transformed the country on the
|
|
lines of the Papal encyclical poured out from Vichy. It looked as
|
|
if England was now surely doomed -- even in friendly America the
|
|
betting was against its chance of survival -- and the brutal
|
|
soldiers who had effected this marvelous recovery of the Church in
|
|
Spain, Czecho-Slovakia, Belgium, and France had made good their
|
|
boast that they would settle the map of Europe and Germany's
|
|
domination of it for a century.</p>
|
|
<p> With the recovery of France and Belgium the Vatican had, by a
|
|
swish of the German sabre, turned 40000000 "bad Catholics" into
|
|
"good Catholics -- into men and women who must hide the truth in
|
|
their hearts and lie (attending church, etc.) with their actions.
|
|
Think of Italy, Spain, Austria, Czecho-Slovakia and South America. </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
11
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>What a miracle of Church-growth Pacelli had witnessed since he had
|
|
taken office in the Secretariat of State in 1929! Or ought we to
|
|
say, what a stupendous recovery of Church-power he had effected by
|
|
his alliance with Mussolini and Hitler? Can anybody doubt, in view
|
|
of this outcome of the invasion of the West, that he had in fact
|
|
known in advance of the plan and approved, if not assisted, it?</p>
|
|
<p> Consider also the subsequent course of events in France. The
|
|
Germans used the armistice-conditions, to which Petain had
|
|
consented with an express, if childish, reliance on the "honor" of
|
|
the German commanders, with all the treachery and brutality which
|
|
were now a normal part of their behavior. "Armistice-commissions",
|
|
consisting of soldiers in mufti, gestapo men, engineers, looters,
|
|
etc., were sent to every part of the French empire to prepare the
|
|
way for the occupation which they had sworn they did not
|
|
contemplate. They plundered France, down to its door-knobs and
|
|
bath-taps, from Metz to Marseilles. With mocking courtesy they paid
|
|
useless paper for the silks and scents and wines of which they
|
|
stripped the stores of France to send to their wives and friends in
|
|
Germany. They appropriated half the food-supply, cattle, and
|
|
poultry and, while they gorged on them, told the half-starved women
|
|
and children to apply to America or draw upon French Africa, and
|
|
then took 60 percent, in addition of what was imported. They
|
|
brought vast numbers of their own women and children to feed on
|
|
France and to laugh at the humanity of British bombers who would
|
|
spare French civilian towns. They compelled the workers, under
|
|
threat of starvation, from Belgium to Bordeaux, to make munitions
|
|
for use against the only nation which was trying to deliver them.</p>
|
|
<p> But perhaps such matters cannot concern a Pope whose mind is
|
|
occupied with higher things; though we do seem to have heard of him
|
|
sending, when it suited the interest of the Church, Red Cross
|
|
supplies to the East. What else did the Germans do? They applied in
|
|
ten-fold force that brutal and immoral doctrine of Prussian
|
|
militarism, that ten innocent civilians must be murdered if one who
|
|
is guilty cannot be detected. The world was deeply stirred by these
|
|
batches of murder in fifties, but the Pope and the French bishops
|
|
were silent; and the priest-ridden Petitin was content to appeal to
|
|
the French people to "stop these criminal outrages against the
|
|
troops of occupation!" It is true that we get the usual
|
|
unauthorized report that the Pope protested through his Berlin
|
|
Nuncio, but we have grown a little cynical about these reports.</p>
|
|
<p> The Pope and the French bishops were still silent when Germany
|
|
pressed Petain to tear off the one rag of "honor" he had kept at
|
|
his surrender: his vow that he would never under any circumstances
|
|
hand over the French fleet or French ports in Africa for use
|
|
against Britain. Petain's Catholic colleagues are in favor of it,
|
|
and the prelates, the guardians of the honor of Catholic France,
|
|
are not interested. That is politic's. As I write the news comes
|
|
that a number of the common priests of France are stung to attack
|
|
their bishops for their cooperation with this corrupt and cowardly
|
|
gang at Vichy: a gang which, with German collaboration, uses every
|
|
device to spread hatred of England and may soon crown their infamy
|
|
by causing the ugliest and most revolting of all the evil
|
|
outgrowths of their policy: war between France and England. Already
|
|
Moslem writers in Turkey are commenting with cynical disgust on the</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
12
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>prospect, which seems to them to open, of the fleet of Christian
|
|
Britain and America at war with the fleet of Christian France in
|
|
the Mediterranean; the prospect of a Church-ruled France spending
|
|
its blood on behalf of the power which has always been its
|
|
bitterest foe and under its present rulers is sworn to annihilate
|
|
France! In view of Hitler's repeated words about France and what he
|
|
is actually doing in Poland and Czecho-Slovakia one would very
|
|
seriously expect the castration of Frenchmen on a ghastly scale
|
|
when the war is over. And the Pope keeps to his policy of "complete
|
|
reserve" and permits (or directs) his Black International in France
|
|
to support cordially, because they are useful to the Church, the
|
|
miserable or stupid Vichy gang who thus betray the high honor of
|
|
France and the first principles of civilization.</p>
|
|
<p> Chapter III</p>
|
|
<p> GREECE, NOT BEING ROMANIST, FIGHTS</p>
|
|
<p> Mussolini was troubled by the disgust with which the better
|
|
elements in Italy itself regarded his vile conduct in regard to
|
|
France. His servile press attempted to excuse it by a campaign of
|
|
lies about France and Britain, while thoughtful folk still had
|
|
fresh in their minds the treacherous negotiations which he had
|
|
Ciano conduct with Britain until the last moment. The Black
|
|
International of Italy applauded his act with their customary
|
|
fervor, but we have the assurance of one neutral visitor after
|
|
another that the urban and better-educated Italians loathe him and
|
|
his entanglement with Germany, which alone now saves him from
|
|
destruction. From the year in which, for a heavy bribe, he
|
|
sacrificed his convictions and the dearly-purchased liberties of
|
|
Italy to begin the destruction of Socialism for the Church, throne,
|
|
and capitalism he has brought misery upon the beautiful land.</p>
|
|
<p> That is not rhetoric. It is a cold summary of the statistics,
|
|
published by the Italian government itself year by year and found
|
|
in any good reference-book to which we look for a more reliable
|
|
estimate of a country's social and economic health than we are
|
|
likely to get from political partisans. They show that Italy is a
|
|
land of poverty staggering under a stupendous load of internal
|
|
debt.</p>
|
|
<p> Two things only, apart from debt and crime, can boast of
|
|
growth in Italy under Mussolini: the Church and the Army. The
|
|
Church has incalculably more power and much more wealth than it has
|
|
had at any time since 1870. Through its cooperation with Fascism it
|
|
has acquired a supremacy which any educated Italian before 1929
|
|
would pronounce, whether he was Catholic or not, absolutely
|
|
inconceivable in modern Italy. It's medieval Canon Law, which was
|
|
regarded as dead, is embodied in the civil law and it controls
|
|
education. It has seen the deadly enemies against whom it was
|
|
fighting a losing battle -- Liberalism, Socialism, Communism,
|
|
Freemasonry, and Freethought -- fall under the blood-dripping
|
|
fascist axe. Small wonder that it loyally carries out the contract
|
|
of service which it signed in 1929 -- to use all its influence to
|
|
keep the Italian people obedient to their Fascist masters.</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
13
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p> You may have noticed little indications of secrecy, of hidden
|
|
motivation, in those references to British or American intrigues to
|
|
get Italy out of the war that one sees occasionally in the papers.
|
|
This furtiveness does not mean only that international capital
|
|
wants to be sure that Socialism will not, as Cardinal Hinsley
|
|
predicted, succeed to the power of Mussolini. It means that
|
|
American and British Catholics fear still more the consequences to
|
|
the Church of such a revolution. In no other country in the world
|
|
can Socialists chant with deeper historical sincerity: "Our Flag is
|
|
red with martyrs' blood." Some day they may be so wicked as to
|
|
retaliate. You see, they are without "the restraints of religion".</p>
|
|
<p> Mussolini thought that he could disarm the anger of his
|
|
freethinking Fascist follower's at this restoration of the medieval
|
|
powers of the Church by making Italy a formidable military nation
|
|
and restoring the Roman Empire. The second line of his original
|
|
appeal to the country, after the proposal to destroy Socialism, was
|
|
that Italy had been scurvily treated at Versailles because the
|
|
other powers regarded it as too weak to give any trouble. In point
|
|
of fact it had been treated more generously than its services in
|
|
the last war merited, but Mussolini soon found that if you roar a
|
|
lie loud enough it has the accents of truth. He has spoken and
|
|
written in praise of war -- any war -- more crudely than Hitler and
|
|
has demanded floods of babies to make great armies. Not that he has
|
|
any military ability. He never led anything but a mob with cudgels
|
|
against a weaker mob. It is a fiction that he was wounded in the
|
|
last war, and, while Hitler can certainly boast that he led the
|
|
start of the Nazi march on Berlin -- even if he has to liquidate
|
|
any man who recalls that he ran like a hare at the first shot --
|
|
Mussolini remained 200 miles away from the Fascist march on Rome,
|
|
until he heard that there was no shooting. However, the army,
|
|
acting with the throne and capital, had put him in power, and he
|
|
set out to drain Italy of its scanty wealth to equip his invincible
|
|
legions.</p>
|
|
<p> It is one of the most pathetic chapters of his story. In the
|
|
old democratic days when we used to argue whether a strong man
|
|
would not rule the state, better than the many-headed some of us
|
|
were willing to entertain the idea that, at least, he would be more
|
|
effective in the military field. Italian soldiers are as brave as
|
|
any but somehow they have written a sorry page of military history.
|
|
They will hardly boast of the conquest of Abyssinia, which reminds
|
|
us of a squad of gunmen firing into kids on the streetwalk,
|
|
especially as the upshot was to present the half-starved people
|
|
with a desolation, and now they have lost even that. In Spain on a
|
|
famous occasion they fled like rabbits before the Spanish workers.
|
|
In Albania they were even worse humiliated, and on "Our Sea," the
|
|
Mediterranean, their ships scurry to port at sight of an enemy. It
|
|
has become a joke that the Italians excel in all speed-records.
|
|
They wait until France is in agony to declare war on it; and they
|
|
then learn, when they ask for their share of the loot, that even
|
|
the Germans have a contempt for the military machine that Mussolini
|
|
has created.</p>
|
|
<p> So Mussolini, seeing his demand of Corsica, Savoy, Malta,
|
|
Tunisia and the Suez as far as ever from being satisfied, seeing
|
|
his new empire of sand and rock slipping away, decided to start on
|
|
Greece. He proceeded loyally on the lines of the New Order, the New</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
14
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>Chivalry. We saw that when he attacked Albania he gave a most
|
|
solemn assurance to the Greeks that he did not covet and would not
|
|
try to get a single square mile of their territory. In September
|
|
(1939) he renewed this assurance in a diplomatic correspondence
|
|
with Athens. But after his cowardly attack on France and his
|
|
failure to get a single advantage from it he had to find some way
|
|
of restoring his prestige. Some writers suggest that he was jealous
|
|
of Hitler and wanted to show that he could win glorious victories
|
|
without Hitler's advice or help. Doubtless he had some such idea,
|
|
but he met Hitler at the Brenner on October 4 and quite certainly
|
|
discussed with him the war he was to begin only three weeks later.</p>
|
|
<p> In this age of "invincible might," when you want to smooth the
|
|
way for the legions as much as possible, you do not "declare war".
|
|
Some think that that is a practice of the Age of Chivalry, the
|
|
spirit of which has been suffocated by our modern skepticism and
|
|
materialism. Rubbish. The Middle Ages were a time of equal
|
|
treachery and brutality. It was in that dreadful 19th century that
|
|
nations used to give each other warning that they were going to
|
|
war, and it is precisely to the standards of the Age of Chivalry,
|
|
slightly adulterated with Nordic valor -- this may give three
|
|
hours' notice, during the night, that it is opening fire -- that
|
|
our Clerical-Fascist age has returned. It is true that since the
|
|
Italian people themselves had to be prepared, Mussolini got his
|
|
press to belch journalistic fire at the Greeks and writhe over the
|
|
"atrocities" the Greeks were committing; and as the Greeks had not
|
|
at that time any idea of the ease with which they could sweep the
|
|
Italians before them they nervously disproved the lies and tried to
|
|
disarm the wrath of Italy.</p>
|
|
<p> There was considerable strain but certainly no one thought of
|
|
war when the Italian minister at Athens sent out invitations for a
|
|
very festive reception of Greek ministers and foreign
|
|
representatives at the Italian Legation on the night of October 27.
|
|
If I here go into detail a little more than usual you will
|
|
understand what sort of thing it really was that the Italian
|
|
archbishops and bishops boisterously approved, as usual, and the
|
|
Pope did not recognize as deserving of censure. The dance was in
|
|
full swing when, at 2:30 a.m., the Italian minister politely
|
|
explained to his Greek guests that he must leave them for an hour.
|
|
All the Greek ministers were present except General Mataxas, the
|
|
Premier, and, as the Italian minister was absenting himself to
|
|
deliver a virtual declaration of immediate war on them one will
|
|
probably have to search long in recent history to find a parallel
|
|
to this infamy of the Pope's ally.</p>
|
|
<p> At 3 a.m. he presented himself at the house of General Metaxas
|
|
and handed him an ultimatum, of the kind Hitler had several times
|
|
delivered. It reaffirmed all the lies about atrocities and said
|
|
that unless the Greeks accepted this charge and handed over certain
|
|
strong strategic positions of theirs "to the Albanians" by 6 a.m.
|
|
(three hours later) they were at war with Italy! When Metaxas asked
|
|
what these strategic points were the Italian minister said that he
|
|
did not know. Thus do invincible legions, unlike effete
|
|
democracies, begin their wars. The invasion of Greece, which was
|
|
fully prepared, began at once; and the whole free world rejoiced
|
|
when, three weeks later, they heard that the Italians had been
|
|
swept out of Greece and were making for the sea.</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
15
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p> It sounds, perhaps, rather cheap to say: The Greeks, not being
|
|
Romanists, fight, I am, of course, thinking mainly of the contrast
|
|
with Belgium and France, not foolishly suggesting that Catholic
|
|
soldiers are less brave than others. But there is another aspect of
|
|
the matter, and it concerns us here. The treachery of Belgium and
|
|
France was, we saw, mainly due to a few highly-placed Roman
|
|
Catholics who are, to say the least, in very good odor at the
|
|
Vatican. In Greece there were no Roman Catholics in positions of
|
|
influence, and the support of the Vatican was entirely on the side
|
|
of the invaders. There was no Petain or Weygand to recommend the
|
|
abject surrender of the Greek army, no Level to corrupt the
|
|
politicians and induce them to listen to the traitors, no Darlan to
|
|
present the bitterest enemy of the country with its fleet, no
|
|
cardinal-archbishop to murmur to the people: God wills it. So the
|
|
Greeks fought, and with a heroism which surprised even those of us
|
|
who thought we knew them.</p>
|
|
<p> It will be convenient to reserve the Vatican's policy in the
|
|
East for adequate treatment in the last chapter of this book, but
|
|
a few words must be said here about its application to Greece. The
|
|
main Christian body in eastern Europe -- broadly, east of a line
|
|
drawn from the Adriatic to the Polish-Russian frontier -- and
|
|
nearer Asia calls itself "Orthodox Catholicism" and, whereas it
|
|
used to be ruled by the Patriarch of Constantinople, it has broken
|
|
into a number of national Churches (Serb, Bulgar, Rumanian,
|
|
Russian, and Greek). The name itself suggests that, as we shall see
|
|
later, the Churches differ from the Roman only in trifling points
|
|
of doctrine and, in fact, consider themselves more orthodox than
|
|
the Roman. When I say "trifling" I speak of course, as an Ishmael.
|
|
The chief point of difference, which stirs passions to white heat
|
|
and has led to the shedding of much blood, is whether Jesus (who
|
|
foresaw the 1700 years of bitter conflict) did or did not mean the
|
|
Roman bishops, when such a thing came into existence, to rule the
|
|
whole Church. The Greeks repudiated the claim as soon as it was
|
|
raised in the second century and have repudiated it, on every note
|
|
of scorn, anger, and disdain, ever since. And during the whole
|
|
period there was a corresponding eagerness at Rome to bring them
|
|
into subjection. By centuries of experience the Vatican knows that
|
|
argument is useless, since its claim rests on a tissue of lies, and
|
|
it has at all times looked to national disasters to compel the
|
|
orientals to compromise with their faith.</p>
|
|
<p> We moderns are inclined to regard these things as lingering
|
|
follies of the Middle Ages, like astrology or occultism, and
|
|
impatiently ignore them, but they are vitally relevant to the
|
|
question of the Black International and the War. As I will show
|
|
later, Rome has looked to the East more covetously than ever during
|
|
the last half century when the growth of the democratic element in
|
|
the Church owing to its position in the United States, the British
|
|
Empire, France, and pre-nazi Germany disturbed the essentially
|
|
oriental mind of the Vatican. I travelled extensively in Greece
|
|
about Seventeen years ago and noticed that the French, who were
|
|
then cooperating closely with the Vatican, were surprisingly busy
|
|
with indirect proselytism. Even in very backward Crete French nuns
|
|
had opened schools. The kind of education they gave was, of course,
|
|
ludicrous. There is in Candida a museum of quite exceptional
|
|
interest but when I ask one of these French-educated young women </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
16
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>where it was, she said: "What is a museum?" It is a pure Greek
|
|
word, and she had lived within half a mile of this famous museum
|
|
all her life! The whole purpose of the education was to inspire
|
|
respect for France and the Roman Church.</p>
|
|
<p> How the French, under the direction of the Vatican, lost all
|
|
the ground they had gained, turned the respect of the Greeks into
|
|
hatred, and made way for the Germans, by helping the Turks to
|
|
defeat the Greeks I have explained elsewhere. Constantinople was at
|
|
that time under an International Commission. The Turkish troops
|
|
were fenced off a score of miles away, and Constantinople, without
|
|
any sort of real force or authority in it, lay open to the large
|
|
Greek army which I saw preparing to march upon it from Adrianople.
|
|
But the Vatican was very strongly opposed to the Greeks taking over
|
|
the ancient metropolis of oriental Christendom, as this would have
|
|
given the heads of the Greek Church a commanding position, in the
|
|
Orthodox world. At this time, we must remember, the Orthodox Church
|
|
was in ruins both in Russia and Turkey, and the heads of the Greek
|
|
Church were as eager to reorganize and control them as the Vatican
|
|
was.</p>
|
|
<p> Such was the situation in Greece before the war. The Vatican-French treachery had made the Greeks more bitter than ever against
|
|
Rome, and in 1940 there were only about 35000 Roman Catholics in
|
|
the entire population of 6300000. The Vatican now looked to Italy
|
|
to promote its ambition to secure religious control of the East,
|
|
and its interests so closely coincide with the greed of the
|
|
Fascists that we are not surprised that in this case we do not get
|
|
even one of those unauthorized claims that the Pope sent a letter
|
|
of protest to the King of Italy about the repulsive treachery of
|
|
the attack on Greece. He very studiously said nothing.</p>
|
|
<p> I am not in these booklets trying to drag in the Vatican at
|
|
every step. There is no need for straining the evidence or starting
|
|
suspicions. When we tell all the facts, as so very few papers or
|
|
writers do, we find that there is not a section of the world-battlefield in which the interests of the Papacy do not coincide
|
|
with the aim of the brutal aggressions of the Axis. That is a
|
|
simple issue and easily proved. The recklessness of procedure is on
|
|
the part of Catholics who ask us to believe that, while there is in
|
|
fact this coincidence, the Pope is far too austere and mindful of
|
|
the interests of civilization to take advantage of it. We have seen
|
|
the opposite in every chapter.</p>
|
|
<p> But the hope of Mussolini and the Pope that Greece and the
|
|
route to Egypt and the East could be secured without the
|
|
intervention of the Nazis, who would as usual take nine-tenths of
|
|
the spoils, broke against the splendid spirit of the Greeks. On
|
|
November 18 Mussolini again summoned the Roman people to the
|
|
Palazzo Venezia and roared to them that his legions were marching
|
|
to victory. They were, as all the rest of the world knew, marching
|
|
-- and very smartly -- in the opposite direction and were beginning
|
|
to lose even Albania. One wonders what would have happened, and how
|
|
much the world-tragedy might have been shortened, if the Yugo-Slavs
|
|
had joined the Greeks at that time and the British had moved more </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
17
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>swiftly and generously to their aid. A splendid barrier of
|
|
mountains stretched from the Adriatic to the Aegean, and what the
|
|
Greeks, Serbs, and British did with comparatively weak forces in
|
|
1941 shows what might have been done while the Greeks were still
|
|
fresh in 1940.</p>
|
|
<p> Am I going to drag in the Vatican here also? There is no need.
|
|
It is impossible to ignore its work when you consider all the
|
|
facts. It was the Vatican, acting, through the Catholic Croats and
|
|
in the closest association with Mussolini, that prevented, or
|
|
played a very important part in preventing, the unity of Yugo-Slavia, which, after the expulsion of the pro-German Regent, was
|
|
effected too late to save the country. That we shall see in the
|
|
next chapter, but a few words must be said about the base conduct
|
|
of Hungary and Rumania -- and with certain reserves we must add
|
|
Bulgaria -- which enabled Hitler to move gigantic forces to the
|
|
very frontier of Greece and Yugo-Slavia while still protesting that
|
|
he sought only to maintain peace in south-eastern Europe.</p>
|
|
<p> Hungary, which has saddened it's admirers, of whom I count
|
|
myself one, by licking the jack-boots of Germany and lying down to
|
|
be trodden on by its troops in their treacherous march eastward, is
|
|
in effect a Catholic country, and its Catholic hierarchy has been
|
|
for some years in the closest touch with the Vatican. It therefore
|
|
lays no strain upon our judgment to find evidence of Roman
|
|
influence on its rulers.</p>
|
|
<p> The Magyars, a very estimable people and superior to the
|
|
Rumanians, Serbs, and Bulgarians by their long absorption of
|
|
Austrian culture, are, as everybody knows, of Asiatic origin, but
|
|
their subjection to Austria during centuries enabled the Roman
|
|
Church to capture most of them. Catholics are, it is true, only 65
|
|
percent of the population, but Protestants are only 35 percent, so
|
|
that the Catholic hierarchy has almost a monopoly of ecclesiastical
|
|
power, and this is significant in a land that is still
|
|
overwhelmingly religious. In the year 1937 the Church held its
|
|
great international festival at Budapest, and Cardinal Pacelli went
|
|
in person to preside, The fact that it is an unusual honor for the
|
|
Papal Secretary of State to make much a journey shows what interest
|
|
Pacelli had in the Church's policy in that country, and not even a
|
|
more solidly Catholic country ever received the Pope's
|
|
representative more ceremoniously. The dictator, the fleetless
|
|
admiral, Horthy, is a Protestant, but he lodged Pacelli in the
|
|
royal palace, and the foreign correspondents commented on the
|
|
cordial friendship that ensued.</p>
|
|
<p> It was the time when the simple-minded Mussolini's belief that
|
|
Hitler was leaving to him the control of Austria, Hungary, the
|
|
Balkan countries, and the Near East was being rudely disturbed.
|
|
Hungary, which had followed his model of dictatorship, had for
|
|
years looked to him. Now that Hitler had annexed Austria it had
|
|
reconsidered its interests and drawn nearer to Germany; and with
|
|
Germany Pacelli was, we saw, pressing hard at that time for an
|
|
ever-closer alliance. Horthy dragged his country into an
|
|
enthusiastic cooperation with Germany in the destruction of Czecho-Slovakia; and the Vatican, we also saw, was equally interested in
|
|
that shameless outrage.</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
18
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p> For historical reasons into which I cannot enter here the
|
|
Magyars hated the Czechs as much as they hated the Russians, and
|
|
they would need little persuasion from Pacelli to throw open their
|
|
roads, rails, and river to the men who were going to crush
|
|
Bolshevism in Russia, which was the ostensible aim at that time of
|
|
Germany's thrust eastward. They hated also the Serbs, and in this
|
|
case no one who has travelled from Budapest to Belgrade over the
|
|
immense fertile country they lost to Serbia can fail to sympathize
|
|
with them; though the chief guilt must be allotted to the
|
|
Versailles Conference. When, therefore, Mussolini so pitifully
|
|
failed in his campaign to win Greece for Italy and the Vatican and
|
|
Hitler proposed to shift his victorious armies from France -- no
|
|
foreigners had hailed the miserable Vichy group more loudly than
|
|
the Catholic Magyars -- they strewed his route with flowers. The
|
|
first stage in the Papal crusade for the extinction of Bolshevism
|
|
in Russia was opening. We will, of course, not forget that Horthy
|
|
and his sleek supporters were just as anxious for political reasons
|
|
to see the central shrine of Socialism destroyed and that they have
|
|
made great profit by their alliance with Germany. Yet the
|
|
coincidence of the interest of the Church of Rome and its paramount
|
|
position in Hungary must be equally recognized. A few years after
|
|
the close of the last war, travelling through Hungary, I found the
|
|
Magyars looking to the British more than to any other country in
|
|
Europe. German gold and ecclesiastical intrigue have changed all
|
|
that.</p>
|
|
<p> Bulgaria and Rumania have, like Greece, very small and
|
|
powerless Roman Catholic minorities: 45000 in 6500000 in
|
|
Bulgaria and about one million out of 15000000 in Rumania. More
|
|
than 80 percent of the inhabitants of each country belong to
|
|
national branches of the Orthodox Church which broke away from the
|
|
Greek Patriarchate at Constantinople in the nineteenth century.
|
|
Their interest from our present viewpoint is that they are sections
|
|
of that vast world of anti-Papal Catholicism which the Papacy hopes
|
|
to control through the victories of Hitler and Mussolini. I could
|
|
quote evidence from the Osservatore that there was much activity of
|
|
Rumanian and Hungarian bishops at the Vatican, but we will not be
|
|
tempted to exaggerate their influence.</p>
|
|
<p> It may not be without interest to the reader to point out that
|
|
the Black (Orthodox) International in Rumania and Bulgaria is quite
|
|
as bad as its Roman counterpart. In both, countries the priests
|
|
have been silent while, in the last ten years, the freedom which
|
|
the people had won by their revolt against Turkish rule has been
|
|
strangled by Fascism, and in both the great body of the clergy are
|
|
as gross as they were in Russia before the Revolution. I liked the
|
|
Bulgars better than the Serbs when I moved amongst them, but the
|
|
face's of the peasants in a crowd in which I was packed one holiday
|
|
are still vivid to me in their sheer animality. We hear of no
|
|
clerical protests against the appalling outrages these Bulgar
|
|
peasants have committed in the villages they have taken from the
|
|
defeated Serbs and Greeks. For decades they have given, unrebuked,
|
|
free rein to the most violent inter-racial passions and religious
|
|
hatreds.</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
19
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p> The leading authority on religion in this part of the world,
|
|
Stephen Graham, himself a devout member of the Church of England,
|
|
which has tried for years to outstrip Rome in getting reunion with
|
|
them, assures us (Stephen Graham's News-Letter, July, 1941) that
|
|
the Rumanian priests are as gross as those of Russia were in
|
|
Tsarist days, yet that they and their people were disgusted with
|
|
the political -- I would almost say Romanist -- subservience of the
|
|
higher ecclesiastical authorities. The picturesque Carol adopted
|
|
Fascism on Italian lines in 1939 and Nazism of the German type or
|
|
an iron tyranny, in 1940. He demanded and got the support of the
|
|
bishops. Graham says:</p>
|
|
<p> "Both clergy and laity were angered and disillusioned by the
|
|
subservient attitude of the higher ecclesiastical administration to
|
|
the misdeeds of the government, which, indeed, reached such a point
|
|
that the Church approved from the pulpit terrible murders and
|
|
horrors which had been unknown hitherto in the political history of
|
|
Rumania" (p. 3).</p>
|
|
<p> The Rumanian Church had so strongly supported the murderous
|
|
Iron Guard that the blackguards actually pressed it to canonize the
|
|
notorious Codreanu! This passage is taken from a religious news
|
|
sheet, the chief aim of which is to win an admiring interest in the
|
|
Orthodox Churches.</p>
|
|
<p> The Balkan problem -- the Balkan Cauldron experts have called
|
|
it for years -- is very complicated, and Versailles made it far
|
|
worse by its transfers of territory from one to another. All the
|
|
Balkan and Danubian countries feared Germany, but the fate of
|
|
Poland, and later Norway, Denmark, Holland, and Belgium warned them
|
|
what to expect. They preferred the unheroic virtue of the Swiss and
|
|
Swedes who boast that they have kept out of the war. "Why should we
|
|
disturb you", a German recently said to one o these Swiss boasters,
|
|
"when you provide us with 4000000 slaves who feed themselves?"
|
|
Ingloriously their capitalists put on fat from war and food
|
|
supplies to Germany and close their eyes to what would happen if
|
|
Germany won. One thing only could have saved the Balkans: a loyal
|
|
and determined League. But the languid efforts of France and
|
|
Britain to secure it were mocked by the customary vigor, ability,
|
|
and unscrupulousness of the German effort to prevent it. Until 1940
|
|
this job had in the main been left to the Italians, and I have
|
|
shown how the Black International worked with them. This was most
|
|
notable of all in Yugo-Slavia upon which, and Greece, the armored
|
|
divisions of Germany now converged along the friendly route
|
|
provided by Hungary, Rumania, and Bulgaria.</p>
|
|
<p> Chapter IV</p>
|
|
<p> CATHOLICS HAMSTRING YUGOSLAVIA</p>
|
|
<p> The uncouth name Yugo-Slavia -- the land of the "Southern
|
|
Slavs" -- had to be coined by Versailles for the state, the bundle
|
|
of very varied and conflicting Slav provinces, which it created as
|
|
a reward for Serbia for its loyalty in the last war. It is true
|
|
that the overwhelming majority of the 14000000 people are Slavs,
|
|
but when you remember that the bitterly antagonistic Poles and </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
20
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>Russians are both Slavs you smile at the idea that this slender
|
|
racial bond must make for brotherhood. Blood may be thicker than
|
|
water but it has no priests to chant its virtues. It is far feebler
|
|
than the influence of a creed in an illiterate and priest-ridden
|
|
population.</p>
|
|
<p> And Yugo-Slavia might be called a natural battle-ground of
|
|
creeds. The Serbs -- they dislike the common practice of calling
|
|
them Servians as the word is derived from the Latin for "slaves" --
|
|
the main body of the population and the highest (or least backward)
|
|
in culture, belong to a Serb Orthodox Church, a national branch of
|
|
the oriental Christianity which spread over Europe from
|
|
Constantinople to Russia and the Balkans. They form about half (48
|
|
percent) of the population but are the ruling class and have
|
|
certainly been autocratic in their treatment of the provinces which
|
|
were annexed to their kingdom by Versailles on the specious ground
|
|
that they were once part of the ancient kingdom of Serbia and their
|
|
people are of the same race as the Serbs. The real reason was, as
|
|
I said, that during the last war the Allied statesmen had made
|
|
lavish promises of territory to keep Serbia and Greece from
|
|
submitting to Germany. The Germans and Italians now, naturally,
|
|
posed as the redeemers of oppressed national fragments from "the
|
|
injustices of Versailles", and the Italians have inflamed the
|
|
rebellious feelings of the minorities (whose territory they wanted
|
|
for Italy) almost from the date of Mussolini assuming power.</p>
|
|
<p> But what concerns us here is that to the racial subdivision
|
|
there was added the far fiercer flame of religious hatred, the feud
|
|
of the Orthodox and the Roman Churches. On this the Italians
|
|
relied, and they had the very zealous assistance of the local and
|
|
the Italian hierarchy and the Pope. I have described the historic
|
|
line of separation of the Latin and Greek Churches as running,
|
|
broadly, from the Adriatic to the Russo-Polish frontier, which is
|
|
the general line, in the south, of division of the Latin and Greek
|
|
halves of the old Roman Empire. But the Latins always claimed the
|
|
land (Dalmatia) to the east of this which is now a province of
|
|
Yugo-Slavia and is as resolutely sought, on account of its good
|
|
harbors by the Italians. East of this again are the non-Serb
|
|
provinces of Monte-negro, Bosnia, Herzegovina, and Slovenia. These
|
|
became part of the Turkish Empire in Europe, and the population of
|
|
Bosnia is still mainly Moslem. But at the break-up of the Turkish
|
|
Empire in Europe they passed to Austria-Hungary, and, though they
|
|
hated it, its priests "converted" large numbers to the Roman faith.
|
|
It is in this northern fringe of Yugo-Slavia, from the sea to
|
|
Slovenia, that the 5000000 Roman Catholics, as against the
|
|
7000000 Orthodox Catholics of Serbia, live. You have a useful
|
|
analogy in the case of Irish Catholics being controlled by English
|
|
Protestants, but in Yugo-Slavia the Romanists were much nearer in
|
|
number to the Orthodox, and their next-door neighbor, Italy, was a
|
|
great power that had every interest in inflaming the religious
|
|
quarrel with the Serbs. Of late years the next neighbor, Hungary,
|
|
has also intrigued to recover control of the provinces, and its
|
|
Catholic clergy have been just as interested as the politicians.</p>
|
|
<p> The situation is, as will now be understood, very complicated,
|
|
and the kingdom of Yugo-Slavia has been so unstable since 1919 that
|
|
many experts predicted that the next European war would originate
|
|
there. It will be remembered that it was the assassination of an </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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|
21
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>Austrian Archduke in that region which gave the Kaiser the pretext
|
|
for starting the war of 1914. What the experts and the papers
|
|
always hesitate to point out, however, from fear of Catholic
|
|
reprisals, is that the Roman Church was just as much interested is
|
|
Mussolini in detaching these Catholic regions from the rule of the
|
|
Orthodox clergy and bringing them under Catholic Italy and Hungary.</p>
|
|
<p> This intrigue naturally became more active as the Vatican
|
|
enlarged its ambition and began to dream of taking over the various
|
|
sections of the Orthodox Church itself. As we shall see, the only
|
|
difference in point of doctrine, the manner of the "procession" of
|
|
the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son, is one of which these
|
|
illiterate masses cannot have even the glimmer of an understanding.
|
|
I doubt if you would get even one in 10000 educated American
|
|
Catholic's to give you an intelligible idea of the dogma. The hard
|
|
core of resistance is to the Pope's claim of authority, and this is
|
|
not a matter of argument. Count Sforza tells us in one of his works
|
|
that when he spoke to the Serb Patriarch about the Roman attempt's
|
|
to effect a union that prelate replied: "There is only one obstacle
|
|
-- the vanity of the Bishop of Rome". In such cases Rome has always
|
|
found political power much more effective than persuasion.</p>
|
|
<p> Mussolini was put in power by the army and the capitalists of
|
|
Italy in 1924, and it was part of the program by which he had won
|
|
a large and empty-headed following of ex-soldiers that he would win
|
|
that part of Yugo-Slavia of which, he said, the Versailles
|
|
Conference, had cheated Italy. Very widespread unemployment had
|
|
followed the demobilization of the army, and the unscrupulous Duce
|
|
easily traced this to the evil conduct of Versailles. Italian
|
|
intrigues on the other side of the Adriatic was doubled after the
|
|
infamous bargain of the Vatican with the Fascists in 1929. By 1932
|
|
there were bloody riots against the pro-Italians in Yugo-Slavia,
|
|
and the religious element in the intrigue was so obvious that in
|
|
1933 the Jesuits and certain congregations of nuns were suppressed.
|
|
For the last ten years, in fact, the bitter quarrel of Croats and
|
|
Serbs which did more than anything to weaken the defence of the
|
|
country has been so patently religious as well as political that
|
|
the leading authority, Stephen Graham, an Anglo-Catholic, says
|
|
(Stephen Graham's News-Letter, March, 1940) of the struggle of the
|
|
Croats: "This is a Catholic movement and has to some extent
|
|
affinity to Rome and Budapest." He later explains this "affinity"
|
|
to mean that the movement was subsidized by Roman and Hungarian
|
|
gold, and he declares that half the bitterness is due to the feud
|
|
of the Roman Catholics and Orthodox Catholics: in other words, to
|
|
the greed of the rival branches of the Black International for
|
|
wealth and power.</p>
|
|
<p> Into the maze of Yugo-Slav politics which arose from this
|
|
situation I must not enter. Suffice it to say that the Serb
|
|
government, which was more than half-Fascist, relying on electoral
|
|
corruption and a muzzled press, was violently assailed by a
|
|
combination of Serb radicals and agrarians with the Catholic
|
|
Croats. This gave the Vatican an opportunity for one of those
|
|
underhand interferences in politics which, though heatedly denied
|
|
by Catholics at the time, transpire by the dozen in later history.
|
|
Just as the Church had offered to sell -- to procure in return for
|
|
advantages to itself -- the docility of Irish Catholics to England </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
22
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>and of Polish Catholics to Germany, as we read in the official life
|
|
of Leo XIII, or as it offered to keep the Alsace-Lorrainers docile
|
|
to France, so it would use its Black International in Croatia to
|
|
damp the fires of the agitation if the Serb government would grant
|
|
its requirements. Pacelli was now Secretary of State and the
|
|
characteristic author of this proposal.</p>
|
|
<p> All through history the Papacy has made these secret
|
|
agreements with monarchs, while its local priest's posed as ardent
|
|
supporters of the people's patriotism. It makes a mockery of the,
|
|
parrot-cry that the Pope never interferes in politics. Political
|
|
activity is turned into a pure moral duty by recalling to the
|
|
people, when it is in the interest of the Church, such texts as
|
|
"Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's" or "Be ye subject
|
|
to the higher powers." It is the duty of the Church to enforce the
|
|
words of Jesus and Paul.</p>
|
|
<p> The Concordat was secretly signed by Pacelli and the heads of
|
|
the Serb government in 1935. It gave the Roman Church a number of
|
|
new bishoprics and raised some bishops to the rank of arch-bishops.
|
|
It authorized priests to give Roman Catholic instruction to their
|
|
children in the public schools and undertook to enforce legally the
|
|
promise of an Orthodox partner to a mixed marriage that all
|
|
children of the marriage should be Roman Catholics even if the
|
|
Orthodox parent repented of having given the promise. It even
|
|
embodied in the civil law the provision of the Canon Law that a
|
|
Catholic priest could not be condemned in the ordinary civil court
|
|
for certain grave offenses. It was a monstrous price to pay for a
|
|
promise that the Croat and Slovene and Dalmatian priests would be
|
|
ordered to drop their political encouragement of the rebels and use
|
|
their influence to cheek the agitation. When, in fact, the terms
|
|
leaked out there was such widespread indignation that the Serb
|
|
government dared not present the Concordat to Congress for
|
|
ratification. The Croats themselves realized that it was an attempt
|
|
to sell their patriotism and resented it. When at length, in 1937,
|
|
the government, seeing the gathering gloom in Europe and the need
|
|
for political unity, presented to Congress a Bill based upon the
|
|
agreement with the Vatican, there was a procession of bishops and
|
|
priests through the streets of Belgrade, and the Holy Synod
|
|
excommunicated the Premier and all who voted for the Bill.</p>
|
|
<p> The Concordat was never ratified but these facts will be
|
|
enough to convince any man of the justice of the title of this
|
|
chapter. Even when autonomy was granted to the Croats in 1939 the
|
|
religious feud continued. The situation of the country gave the
|
|
greatest concern in spite of the soothing assurance's of the pro-German Regent. Austria had gone and the fatal wound been inflicted
|
|
on Czecho-Slovakia in 1938. The black shadow of German militarism
|
|
crept nearer, and the statesmen of the western democracies hugged
|
|
their policy of appeasement like little girls hugging a pretty
|
|
doll. Mussolini struck in Albania, and Hitler completed the
|
|
destruction of Czecho-Slovakia and began to talk about Dantzig.
|
|
Schacht, Germany's economic wizard, came to Yugo-Slavia and bound
|
|
it to Germany by arranging a monopoly of half its trade. Yet, in
|
|
spite of the reiterated statements of Italy and Germany that Yugo-Slovia was not in the least danger the wiser of its statesmen saw
|
|
through the trickery and tried in vain to unite with Hungary, </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
23
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>Rumania, Bulgaria, and Greece for self-protection. There were
|
|
nominal adhesions, but signed and sealed international compacts
|
|
were by this time a dollar a dozen in Europe. German penetration
|
|
increased. The invasion of "tourists" went on, and the Fascist
|
|
Regent Paul advised the formation of a complete Corporative State.</p>
|
|
<p> I must confine myself here to the share of the Black
|
|
International in prolonging the period of discussion and weakness
|
|
until it was too late to save Yugo-Slavia. The leader of the
|
|
Catholic Slovenes was, like the leader of the Catholic Slovaks in
|
|
Czecho-Slovakla, a political priest, Father Koroshits, and he was
|
|
so open a Fascist that he got himself appointed Minister of
|
|
Education in the Serb government. The Croats continued throughout
|
|
1940 to agitate for independence and began to look to the Germans
|
|
as deliverers from the tyranny of the Serbs. When, in April, the
|
|
Germans occupied the Croat provinces and they declared themselves
|
|
independent of Serbia, the declaration was followed by a band
|
|
playing "Deutschland Uber Alle's" (Annual Register).</p>
|
|
<p> The war was as repulsive in its beginning as all other
|
|
enterprises of the leaders of that New Order with which the Church
|
|
co-operates everywhere. Too late the Serbs realized the treachery
|
|
of the Regent and dismissed him (March 29, 1941). Germany and Italy
|
|
(which had been effusive in its professions of friendship
|
|
throughout 1940) fabricated the usual atrocity stories and posed as
|
|
the saviors of the poor down-trodden minorities. Historians will
|
|
one day raise a question of the sanity of this age of ours. Who,
|
|
they will ask, could be deceived by this trickery after four or
|
|
five un-scrupulous uses of it? Why make any excuse at all if you
|
|
mean to violate international law by deceiving your opponent until
|
|
the last hour? What can be the mentality of men who think that
|
|
neutrals must not say a word about the vile and unprecedented
|
|
outrages they commit because they blandly describe it as "total
|
|
war"? And what shall we say of bodies of Christian clergy and their
|
|
bishops who will not even whisper that their "total war" is just a
|
|
reintroduction of savagery into warfare and who excuse their own
|
|
cowardice or self-interest on the plea that they are prevented by
|
|
their sacred office from interfering in politics?</p>
|
|
<p> The blow was launched on April 12. There are military expert's
|
|
today who wonder whether Hitler did not make a fatal blunder in
|
|
engaging in the very costly campaigns in Yugo-Slavia and Greece
|
|
instead of advancing upon Russia in the spring: which is equivalent
|
|
to saying that he had not even the shadow of a military excuse for
|
|
his ghastly treatment of the two small countries. Certainly they
|
|
would not have deserted their neutrality if he had pushed on to
|
|
Russia through Hungary, Rumania, and Bulgaria. If the plan was to
|
|
level a route to Turkey and the East it has obviously miscarried.
|
|
However, we are here concerned with the share of the Black
|
|
International.</p>
|
|
<p> There have been men and women of honor in all ages who have
|
|
refused to accept any profit or advantage from a dishonorable act.
|
|
The Papacy and the Black International never did. They at once
|
|
consolidated their gain in respect of the first of their aims: the
|
|
detachment of the Catholics of Croatia, Dalmatia, and Slovenia.
|
|
Croatia was relinquished to the Italians who created a kingdom for </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
24
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>one of their princes and let the Roman Church get busy everywhere.
|
|
So brutally was the work done that the highest authority was
|
|
conferred on a man, Anton Pavelitsch, who was notoriously a leader
|
|
of a gang that specialized in the kind of murder that is politely
|
|
called assassination. A French court had found him guilty of
|
|
implication in the murder of King Alexander and had sentenced him
|
|
to death. He had escaped and lived under the protection of Italy
|
|
until the day of his usefulness to Italy and the Church arrived.</p>
|
|
<p> Under this Catholic ruffian the Romanist priests at once
|
|
entered upon the same kind of brutal coercion of members of the
|
|
Orthodox Church as the Polish priests had conducted in the Galician
|
|
Ukraine. In November a British paper that is usually careful not to
|
|
offend Catholics, the News Chronicle, reported as follows:</p>
|
|
<p> "Four bishops and 100 priests of the Orthodox Church at
|
|
Noshia, Croatia, have been murdered, it is stated. The Patriarch
|
|
Gavrilo has been ill-treated and imprisoned in a monastery at
|
|
Belgrade, and the Archbishop of Zagreb has been whipped and
|
|
banished to Belgrade. The Serbian priests have been replaced by
|
|
Bulgarians. The Hungarians also are stated to have hanged a number
|
|
of priest."</p>
|
|
<p> This news gets through because not a word in it suggests to
|
|
the general reader that the Church of Rome is responsible for these
|
|
murders. In the light of the explanations I have given my readers
|
|
will have no difficulty. They will readily understand that the
|
|
Bulgarian priests who were substituted for the murdered Orthodox
|
|
priests were certainly not priests of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church
|
|
which is as hateful to the Vatican as the Serb Orthodox Church.
|
|
They were Bulgar Roman priests who had to be brought in because the
|
|
Croats are bitterly opposed to Italians. Notice also the reference
|
|
to the Catholic Hungarians. Only a few months before Hungary had
|
|
signed a pact of lasting peace and eternal friendship with Yugo-Slavia. Now its priest-ridden peasant soldiers behave like savages
|
|
to the Slavs who belong to the wrong Church.</p>
|
|
<p> I, as, I said, do not drag in the Church. You cannot lift a
|
|
corner of this veil of tragedy that lies upon Europe without
|
|
finding its ministers there, and always on the side of the Axis and
|
|
its Catholic satellites. The Church, Catholic papers and orators
|
|
tell you, is, and must be, neutral. Isn't it a singular thing that
|
|
wherever we turn we find it supporting the forces of barbarity and
|
|
drawing profit from their victories? A strange neutrality! The
|
|
plain truth is that it is neutral, and very scrupulously neutral,
|
|
only as regards the support of the forces that in the name of
|
|
civilization are trying to cheek the hordes of savagery. But we
|
|
shall see this more plainly if we devote a chapter to the
|
|
coincidence of the aims of the Church and those of its White
|
|
Knight, the Italian Jackal.</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
25
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p> Chapter V</p>
|
|
<p> THE PIPE-DREAM OF MUSSOLINI AND THE POPE</p>
|
|
<p> My experience in lecturing to skeptical audiences in Britain,
|
|
especially when questions are invited after the lecture, is that no
|
|
part of my message to them is so apt to be challenged as my
|
|
indictment of the Roman Church. I very commonly find myself
|
|
contradicted by Freethinkers, sometimes lecturers or writers on
|
|
Freethought, who try to persuade the audience that from the
|
|
circumstances of my earlier life my knowledge is less broad than
|
|
theirs or that I have a "complex" in regards to the Papacy. They
|
|
are apt to protest, with an air of superior knowledge or
|
|
liberality, that "one Church is just as bad as another." How any
|
|
man can say anything so stupid when, as even school-children know,
|
|
the Church of Rome adds a score of absurd doctrines (confession,
|
|
indulgences, transubstantiation, etc.) to those doctrines which are
|
|
common to all the main branches of the Christian Church and most of
|
|
these doctrines are notoriously medieval fabrications for the sole
|
|
purpose of enhancing the power of the priests it is difficult to
|
|
understand. But the man who protests that he means that all
|
|
Churches are equally bad in practice or in their mischievous
|
|
influence on life betrays how scanty and superficial is his
|
|
knowledge of history and his analysis of contemporary life,</p>
|
|
<p> The general public, relying for most of its information upon
|
|
a press which is compelled by Catholic influence to suppress large
|
|
numbers of facts of vital importance, can be excused for ignorance
|
|
of the particular mischievousness of the Black International. That
|
|
religion is of great importance in maintaining the standard of our
|
|
civilization is a cliche of modern editorials and is unfortunately
|
|
stated too often in recent sociological manuals; and to this is
|
|
very often added a special tribute to "the venerable Church of
|
|
Rome", its "august head", and its international organization of (on
|
|
the latest claim I find in a Catholic Directory) 360000000
|
|
Catholics. Hence such charges as I here bring against the Black
|
|
International seem to a member of the general public strange and
|
|
strained. He had understood that it was just a question whether the
|
|
Pope could or could not be expected to censure Hitler or Mussolini,
|
|
and, in fact, that the Pope had frequently censured the former. I
|
|
have shown that in ten years of increasing menace to civilization
|
|
the Church has never censured either of the master-bandits except
|
|
when they refused to carry out their promises to itself, but it is
|
|
far more important to realize yet almost totally hidden from the
|
|
general public that the ambition of the Papal Church coincides in
|
|
a remarkable manner with the ambition of the arch-murderers and
|
|
fully explain its cooperation with them.</p>
|
|
<p> This has appeared at each step we have taken in the present
|
|
booklet, and it will be well in conclusion to make it our direct
|
|
theme for a few pages. The ambition of the Black International
|
|
coincides in two directions with that of the gangsters who
|
|
terrorize half the world today. The first point is that the Papacy
|
|
deeply desires that, extinction of Socialism which Fascists and
|
|
Nazis have accomplished in a score of countries and promise, if
|
|
their armies are victorious, to accomplish everywhere. I have shown
|
|
this, and will further enlarge on it in a booklet on Russia. But I </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
26
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>would remind the reader how this consistent and essential policy of
|
|
the Vatican is only a continuation of the policy of violence it has
|
|
sustained since it acquired power in the fourth century. From the
|
|
reawakening of Europe in the twelfth century to the French
|
|
Revolution it has had millions of victims; and of the half-million
|
|
unarmed men and women who have been put to death for demanding
|
|
democracy in the state and freedom of discussion in religion
|
|
between the French and the Russian Revolutions all but a few
|
|
thousand were done to death by Catholic authorities cooperating
|
|
with and instigated by their priests. That fact alone makes a
|
|
mockery of the foolish cry that "one Church is as bad as another".
|
|
And if the leader will recall the facts I gave in the first and
|
|
second books of this series -- that Catholic countries almost alone
|
|
support the enemies of the human race today, that they are
|
|
themselves on the Pope's recommendation or approval practically all
|
|
Fascist, and so on -- he will have a much clearer understanding of
|
|
the world-situation. But I have space only to deal with the common
|
|
aim of Mussolini (and now of Hitler) and the Pope, and this again
|
|
is to a great extent rooted in Rome's real hatred and dread of
|
|
democracy.</p>
|
|
<p> In their survey of the conflicts of national aims during the
|
|
last hundred years historians very commonly use a German phrase
|
|
(Drang nach Osten), to express a fundamental cause of clashes. It
|
|
means "the drive to the East" and, since what we call the Far East
|
|
is shut out from the horizon of European powers by the vast
|
|
wilderness of eastern and central Asia, it means an urge to expand
|
|
south-eastward in Europe: the lure of the sun, the blue sea, and
|
|
the warm fertile lands that the Greeks felt 3000 years ago, that
|
|
led even Napoleon into a rash adventure, and that has been an
|
|
important factor in European polities ever since. Germany at the
|
|
close of the last century impelled Russia to adventures in the Far
|
|
East (and its first clash with Japan) so as to divert its ambition
|
|
from Greece, Turkey, and the Near East, which Germany itself
|
|
coveted.</p>
|
|
<p> Mussolini's dream of restoring the Roman Empire necessarily
|
|
included this expansion. He began, we saw, by dangling before the
|
|
eyes of the more thoughtless Italians a promise that he would get,
|
|
by war a few provinces (Dalmatia, Corsica, Malta, etc.) that ought
|
|
to belong to Italy. When he saw how supinely the western world
|
|
tolerated the growth of his army and his ambition he dreamed of
|
|
becoming an Augustus or a Diocletian. The Roman Empire once spread
|
|
over the Balkans, Egypt, and Asia Minor as far as Persia. The new
|
|
eagles of the new invincible legions would advance along the same
|
|
routes.</p>
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|
<p> What concerns us is that the Papacy even more cordially
|
|
supported him in his larger and more mischievous ambition than in
|
|
the earlier. The Vatican was little interested in the transfer of
|
|
Dalmatia, Savoy, and Corsica, which were already Catholic, but the
|
|
dream of an Italian Empire such as Mussolini now imagined was a
|
|
very different matter. Just such a dream had fascinated the Vatican
|
|
itself for nearly a century. It was called the reunion of the
|
|
Churches, but the Vatican knew from painful experience of the
|
|
futility of its missionaries that it would accomplish nothing
|
|
without compulsion. It had in recent years an emphatic assurance of</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
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|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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|
27
|
|
.
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|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>this. The Poles, as I explained elsewhere, took over several
|
|
million Orthodox Catholics in the provinces which Versailles took
|
|
from Russia for them, but argument about the supreme position of
|
|
the Pope was found to be entirely useless and the most savage
|
|
persecution had to be employed to persuade some of them that the
|
|
Pope is the real Father of All Christians.</p>
|
|
<p> Greek and other oriental Catholics had, as I said, for the
|
|
most part repudiated the Pope's claim ever since it was fabricated
|
|
in the second century, but Rome had never despaired of securing
|
|
their submission. By the Middle Ages these easterners were so
|
|
hardened in their anti-Roman faith that argument was useless, and
|
|
the Popes had to look out for political opportunities. Thus
|
|
Innocent III, the greatest of the Popes, promised to overlook the
|
|
appalling behavior of his Crusaders in the thirteenth century --
|
|
instead of going to "the Holy Land" they took Christian
|
|
Constantinople and robbed and desecrated its churches -- if they
|
|
would secure the submission of the Greek Church to him. When the,
|
|
Turks in the fifteenth century swept over the Greek Empire and the
|
|
Greeks appealed to the Pope to rouse Christendom to a new Crusade
|
|
he tried to make it a condition that the Greek Church should first
|
|
submit to him. The Turks mastered the whole of the Greek empire and
|
|
for several centuries suspended communication between East and
|
|
West, but when, in the second half of the nineteenth century, the
|
|
Turks had degenerated -- that is to say, their Sultans and ruling
|
|
class degenerated, for the Turkish people were as robust and decent
|
|
as ever -- while the peoples of Europe got modern armaments and
|
|
detached province after province from the Turkish Empire, the
|
|
ambition of the Papacy revived.</p>
|
|
<p> It was then that Greece, Rumania, Bulgaria, and Serbia won
|
|
their independence of the Turks and the higher clergy in each
|
|
decided, in harmony with the patriotic movement, to declare their
|
|
independence of the Patriarch at Constantinople (the Greek Pope)
|
|
and set up the national Greek (and Russian), Rumanian, Bulgar, and
|
|
Serb Orthodox Churches. Since no such thing as a Church, much less
|
|
a supreme head of the Church, is contemplated in the New Testament
|
|
-- the text about Peter and the Church is, of course, a late and
|
|
ridiculous interpolation -- they had the right to do so, but we
|
|
should understand that it is just these rival ambitions of the
|
|
higher clergy in each country that prevent union. The Roman Church
|
|
likes to call it "reunion" but the Churches were united on the
|
|
basis of Papal supremacy which Rome declares essential. The
|
|
statement on the subject in the Catholic Encyclopedia, that in the
|
|
early ages all churches in East and West acknowledged the supremacy
|
|
of the Roman bishops is the high-water mark of "Catholic Truth",
|
|
for it is exactly the reverse of the truth. In doctrine there is
|
|
only one major point that divides the Latin and oriental Catholics,
|
|
and no one but a trained theologian can understand the verbiage in
|
|
which the difference is expressed. According to the Latins the Holy
|
|
Ghost "proceed's" from (but is co-eternal with) the Father and the
|
|
Son, but according to the Greeks from the Father only. Ask the most
|
|
cultivated or most zealous of your Catholic friends what that means
|
|
and, if you do not give him time to consult his Encyclopedia -- ten
|
|
to one his priest cannot explain it -- yon will be entertained.</p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
28
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p> This break-up of the Turkish empire and of the spiritual
|
|
kingdom of the Greek Pope stirred the Vatican to a new hope. Leo
|
|
XIII began 70 years ago to make preparations for the conquest of
|
|
the eastern Churches, of which only small fragments here and there,
|
|
called Uniates, were subject to Rome. Benedict XV resumed the work
|
|
in 1917, when the Turks were hard pressed by the Allies, and the
|
|
late Pope Pius XI took a most ardent interest in the work. Special
|
|
colleges and sections of the Congregation of Propaganda at Rome
|
|
prepare priests for the great work of taking over. But the Vatican
|
|
is aware that there is not the least prospect of winning the
|
|
easterners by argument and it, as in all previous ages and as in
|
|
the "reunion" of its tens of millions of apostates in Italy, Spain,
|
|
France, and Spanish America, bases its entire hope of a spiritual
|
|
conquest upon a political or military conquest of the Balkan
|
|
countries and the Near East by some power with which it has an
|
|
understanding. There are in these countries, apart from Russia, to
|
|
which I will devote a special book, about 50000000 Catholics and
|
|
only about 7000000 of them acknowledge the Pope. It is, surely,
|
|
now as plain why the Pope never condemned the brutal invasion of
|
|
Greece and Yugo-Slavia as why he never condemned the treatment of
|
|
France.</p>
|
|
<p> The British Catholic writer W. Teeting (The Pope in Politics)
|
|
gives another reason, and it is sound, though American Catholics do
|
|
all in their power to suppress it. He says of the late Pope (whose
|
|
policy the present Pope inspired and continues):</p>
|
|
<p> "The Pope is himself temperamentally more interested in the
|
|
question of Reunion with the Eastern Churches and with conversions
|
|
in the mission field. He had hoped during his Papacy to arrange
|
|
such a Reunion with the Orthodox Churches so that the growth of
|
|
democratic Catholicism in the New World would be counterbalanced"
|
|
(P. 3).</p>
|
|
<p> It is not a question of the temperament of any Pope -- for
|
|
that matter Pius XII is far more aristocratic than Pius XI was --
|
|
but of the permanent policy of the Black International, and it is
|
|
misleading to place so much stress on the New World. Teeling points
|
|
out that the New World or America has come in the course of modern
|
|
developments to have 400 Catholic bishops against 650 in Europe and
|
|
says that the Vatican fears that this democratic New World may come
|
|
to have the majority. That is misleading because the great majority
|
|
of the 400 American bishops are in the Latin Republics -- there are
|
|
only 140 in the United States -- and they dread democracy and
|
|
loathe Socialism (its inevitable offspring in Vatican eyes) as much
|
|
as the Pope does. At the very time when Teeling wrote his book they
|
|
were cooperating with the secular authorities in a truculent
|
|
suppression of democracy in nearly every Republic of South and
|
|
Central America, and we know how they loathe it in Mexico.</p>
|
|
<p> Look at it this way. There are still about 280 bishops in Ital
|
|
and more than 150 in France, Spain, and Portugal, and they, like
|
|
the Spanish-American bishops, have cooperated in the complete
|
|
destruction of democracy in their countries. The Catholic bishops
|
|
of Germany and Belgium have done the same. But the Vatican has no
|
|
hope of seeing an anti-democratic attitude in the 320 archbishops
|
|
and bishops of the United States and (except Quebec) the British </p>
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
29
|
|
.
|
|
THE POPE AND THE ITALIAN JACKAL</p>
|
|
<p>Empire, for it would ruin the prospects of the Church in those
|
|
countries if they let it be known that it is anti-democratic. They
|
|
must even toll the grotesque lie -- since the Church obviously
|
|
supports Fascism in every country where it has power -- that the
|
|
Pope loves democracy and Catholic principles are in perfect harmony
|
|
with it; What the Church loves is the gold of democracy -- of
|
|
America and Britain -- but he and the miserable brood of Italian
|
|
bishops who fatten on it fear that, as they must continue to create
|
|
new bishops and cardinal's in these profitable, but poisonous
|
|
(democratic) sections of the Church the Italian monopoly of power
|
|
and wealth is in danger and the essentially authoritarian teaching
|
|
of the Church is menaced. For a time they saw the danger increase
|
|
as the Church in France, Germany, and Italy had to meet the needs
|
|
of the new age by starting Christian Socialist or Catholic
|
|
Democratic movements, as I have elsewhere described. That danger is
|
|
happily (from the Papal viewpoint) removed by the truculent
|
|
establishment of Fascism, but the future is uncertain. Hence the
|
|
need of a counter-balance by bringing in the Greek and other
|
|
eastern Churches with their innumerable bishops and archbishops.</p>
|
|
<p> In this the Vatican betrays once more how false is that
|
|
reputation for psychology and "insight" which its propagandists
|
|
have won for it. It is building upon a theory of the psychology of
|
|
the Slav and of the oriental which has long been discredited. It
|
|
was common in the last century to say, and it is still far too
|
|
often said by literary men, that the Slav and the oriental mind is
|
|
docile, passive, and naturally submissive to authority. Not only
|
|
does the modern science of psychology reject these old superficial
|
|
theories of racial psychology but recent developments in Russia,
|
|
China, and India ought to have taught every man how nonsensical
|
|
they are. It is just as absurd to credit the Vatican with broad
|
|
outlook and penetrating insight. These Italian parasites are a
|
|
bunch of Chinese mandarins who are an anachronism in the modern
|
|
world.</p>
|
|
<p> It, at all events, explains the coincidence of the policy of
|
|
the Vatican with that of the Italian jackal. The Pope refuses to
|
|
condemn he rape of Abyssinia -- a monstrous moral outrage -- though
|
|
British and American Catholics clamor for a condemnation, and, at
|
|
the very time when Cardinal Hinsley assures them that he heard the
|
|
Pope call it a "barbarous outrage", the Pope bestows the Golden
|
|
Rose on the Queen of Italy as Empress of Abyssinia. He get's his
|
|
"unauthorized" agents to say how he was disturbed by Mussolini
|
|
forcing the gates to the East (Albania) and does not say a word
|
|
about Yugo-Slavia and Greece, but his whole Italian hierarchy
|
|
boosts the campaign, and his priests and nuns follow in the wake of
|
|
the barbarized soldiers. He is following the whole Drive to the
|
|
East with the liveliest hope and expectation. He is not a Man of
|
|
Blood like Mussolini or Hitler. In the time-honored fashion of the
|
|
Roman Church he gets "the secular arm" to shed the blood for him.</p>
|
|
<p> Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.</p>
|
|
<p> **** ****
|
|
|
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
30
|
|
</p>
|
|
</div>
|