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1880 lines
99 KiB
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<xml><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. 14</p>
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<p> THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
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<p> ROME IS THE NATURAL ALLY OF ALL EXPLOITERS</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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<div> **** ****</div>
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<p> CHAPTER
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I A Picture of Life in a Catholic Country ....... 1</p>
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<p> II Those Beautiful Papal Encyclicals ....... 7</p>
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<p> III The Action Record of the Black International ....... 14</p>
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<p> IV The Comedy of Christian Socialism ...... 20</p>
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<p> V The Churches and Radical Injustice ........... 26</p>
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<div> **** ****</div>
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<p> Chapter I</p>
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<p> A PICTURE OF LIFE IN A CATHOLIC COUNTRY</p>
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<p> A few weeks ago there came to me, by a subterranean route, a
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poignant letter from a man who has lived, in intimacy with the
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people, for many years in a Catholic country of Europe. The press
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always refers to this country as a happy little land of democratic
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sympathies and entirely Roman Catholic. Its virtual ruler is
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described as a particularly enlightened, upright, and humane
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statesman. You have probably seen films of groups of its workers
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singing, laughing, and dancing merrily in a sunny world; though if
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you had not been misled by press-references you would have detected
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signs of extreme poverty and would have seen that the gaiety is
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that of illiterate, densely ignorant men and women at, culturally,
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the lowest level of civilized life. In spite of disease,
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exploitation, and poverty they are "happy," in a sub-human way --
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until they begin to question the justice of the joint tyranny of
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Church and Dictator. But the bold bad man is quickly removed to a
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jail in which the vilest medieval torture is used today -- one
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American writer who is not anti-Catholic has described these
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tortures -- or to the purgatory of a penal colony.</p>
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<p> Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
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<p> The first letter I received told me that the land is entirely
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Fascist, which I knew; that all the priests belong to the Fascist
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party, which is also called Catholic Action and holds its meetings
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in the Churches, and that every boy or youth works in it. The local
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newspapers praise the Germans every day as well as the Italians. In
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the course of a recent editorial one said: "If God so wills it we
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must substitute the cross of the Swastika for the cross of Christ."
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The British and American papers which were then assuring us that
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"the brave little people" would resist the German pressure which
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was being exerted on them did not quote this. A priest, praising
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Hitler in a sermon said that he was "appointed by God to punish the
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world for its irreligion." But my informant added a concrete little
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picture which stimulated my appetite for further news.</p>
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<p> On the outskirts of the city a man -- not a poor working man
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but an educated and comfortable man -- had a farm. His most
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valuable pig fell ill, and my friend suggested sending for a vet.
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Oh, no, what could a vet do against the Evil Eye? Next morning a
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solemn procession made its way from the church to the sty. The
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priest wore over his cassock and surplice a richly embroidered
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shawl that is used in dealing with the devil. Altar-boys, one
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swinging a censer, walked on either side of him, and the people,
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mumbling on their beads, walked behind. They fell on their knees
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round the sty while the priest waved the fumes of incense at the
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pig and recited his incantations. The pungent smoke got up the
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pig's nose, and it staggered to its feet; and the people cried "A
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miracle." The priest received his 100 eggs and 2 hens, but the pig
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died next day. Seeing that it was going to die, the owner had sold
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it to the local butcher to be turned into food for the people. He
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then quietly substituted another pig for it, and this wallowed in
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the same poisonous filth as its predecessor; but there was now a
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bottle of holy water hanging from the roof of the sty to protect
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it.</p>
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<p> I naturally wanted more of this for my readers, and I got it.
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Before I quote it let me explain. My informant would be ruined and
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punished if he were traced, so I make certain details not as
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convenient as they might be for the Catholic detective. He is not
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a working man but a well-educated middle-class man of high
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character. The place from which he writes is not a rural district
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but an old city of 30000 people, well known to thousands of
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Americans and Britons, but they are either Catholics or they prefer
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to keep their mouths closed. The country will doubtless be
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identified by some of my reader's, but I will say only that it is
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not at all considered the most backward in Europe, though the great
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majority of the workers are illiterate. It is solidly Catholic. The
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writer is absolutely reliable both in regard to first-hand
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knowledge and on conscientiousness, and I omit from the long
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account only a few passages that are relevant to my purpose:</p>
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<p> "A few year's ago this country made a Pact with the Vatican,
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and one notices more and more the growing power of the Church. At
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government ceremonies, which are often held out of doors here, the
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bishop (who by the way has eight illegitimate children) leads the
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procession in full regalia and gives the Fascist salute. A new law
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has been passed by which all schools must be of one sex, with the
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subtle idea of putting the secular schools out of action. This law
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applies even to infants' schools.</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 CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
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<p> "I know the wife of a chemist whose husband is being
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threatened by the priests with boycott as she refuses to attend
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mass. A man can have as many mistresses as he likes but it is a
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crime for a couple to set up home together unless they are married.
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It is forbidden to let them a house. Civil marriage is done away
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with, and one can only marry in the church. There is much
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emigration to South America, and if a person takes a letter from a
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priest Saying that he is a good Catholic he can get a good job. Of
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courage, an offering for masses will always secure a good letter
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though one never goes to mass. ... A Spanish friend of mine
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described the national system in a nutshell. He said it was as if
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the head of a family had a large box of gold heavily guarded and
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refused to part with a penny of it though all the family were dying
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of hunger. A writer described this country as a huge prison kept
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down by force. There is a state of misery here that you never could
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imagine. I happened to know well a skilled workman who has two
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weeks off work and two weeks on, and he earns 85 cents a day when
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working. But when he has paid his dues to the Syndicate [the form
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of Trade Union imposed on Catholics by the Papal Encyclical and
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counts his two weeks idle his pay works out at 35 cents a day, and
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on this seven people must live. ... The cruel joke is that there is
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a law that no man must get less than 50 cents a day but the
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government themselves pay 20 cents. The usual wage of a workman is
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25 cents. So, being unable to live on that as he invariably has a
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big family he must send his children on the streets to beg. The
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streets are thronged with starving whining beggars, with little
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children with their stomachs swollen, and dropping blood in the
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streets in the last stages of starvation.</p>
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<p> "Property rights are very severe, and a man may 'Shoot on
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sight any who enters his property. Lately on the property of the
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richest Englishman here two men were found speared to death. One
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was a poor old man of 72 who was collecting a few sticks for his
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fire, and one a young fellow who had the audacity to use the
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property as a short cut. No one took any notice. I just happened to
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hear of the incident as I lived near. All relations between the
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people are vicious, and there is none of that kindly feeling or
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sympathy that one gets among the poor in England. The rich have
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their houses barred and bolted and scarcely ever help. Their
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surplus money goes to building private chapels or at least
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enriching them; as there is one in every rich or middle-class
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house, or else the money goes directly to the Church. ... For every
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one who finds comfort there are 99 who only find terror and worry.
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My life as a R.C. was a horror. I lived in terror of sin, terror of
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confession, terror of sex, and the supreme terror was of death and
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hell. How often I lay shivering in bed thinking that this night I
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would surely die and be weighed in the scales of God, so
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graphically described to me by the Catholic teachers. Other nights
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I lay listening, listening for the devil's cart, driven by headless
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horsemen and horses and conveying the children who did not say
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their prayers, and I pictured with what glee the devil would throw
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them into hell. As a farmer's cart passed rattling over the cobble
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stone's in my imagination I could hear the devil's chains rattling
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and thought it would stop at our door and collect me. When day came
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I was braver and followed all the funerals to the cemetery to make
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the sign of the Cross over the Catholic graves and spit on the
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Protestant ones. I waited, trembling, for the serpent to jump out
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of my mouth after making what I thought was a bad communion.</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 CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
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<p> "All hospitals are in the hands of religious [monks and nuns]
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with no qualifications whatever and more often than not illiterate.
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I had occasion to go to the Red Cross the other day. The doctor was
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absent, and not one of the three nuns in charge could write a note
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for him. A trained nurse offered her services free to the hospital
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but they refused as she was not a nun. A young girl whom I know,
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living with a man, was forced to have an operation without an
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anaesthetic in punishment for her sin. She has been a nervous wreck
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ever since. I saw a sweet little girl of four die the other day.
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The priest had advised them not to have a doctor as God had need of
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another little angel in heaven. A man was dying with T.B. and a
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foreign nurse begged to be allowed to give him a drug but the
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priest forbade it, as it would be against the will of God. Man must
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suffer.</p>
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<p> "To me child labor is the most terrible crime here. They have
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little children from the age of seven onward as servants, and they
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sometimes pay them nothing. The parents are glad to get rid of them
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for their keep. They usually sleep on the floor in the coal-bin and
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are often beaten. Someone once recommended to me a woman to do
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washing, and a well-dressed woman, armed with a stick, came along
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with a little boy of about ten. She was going to superintend while
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he did the washing. One never sees a child playing on the streets,
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nor are there any parks or playgrounds for them. The schools are
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free, but the parents must provide books, etc. and children without
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books are not allowed to enter: an order which excludes. all the
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poor. The teachers are unqualified. The soldiers get about half a
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cent a day and two meals of meat, but one can get exemption by
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paying, so the army is composed of the poor and under-nourished.</p>
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<p> "I expect you read in the papers how our government was
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unanimously elected. It was such a farce. A notice appeared in the
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papers saying: "Go and vote. Your vote won't count, but go and vote
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and show the world you are all with the government." They forgot to
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add: "If you don't vote you will lose your job." The government is
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putting up a lot of show buildings while there is a terrible dearth
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of houses for the people. Rents are high in comparison with wages.
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The houses at $8 a month are one or two-roomed and usually without
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windows. I have seen a Seven-roomed house without windows. The
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houses are close together and no sun enters. It is usual after a
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rainy day -- and it often rains here -- to see all the bedding out
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on the street drying."</p>
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<p> The rest of the letter is too personal and might give more
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away than the writer supposes. I will note only that revolt against
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this brutal system flickers up here and there but the spread of the
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fire is truculently prevented. There is actually a small
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Freethought Society in the town, but it meets in such secrecy that
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my informant has never been able to get in touch with it. The eyes,
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and ears of the priests are everywhere, and if the economic weapon
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does not intimidate the incipient rebel there is always the jail or
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the penal settlement. Ironically, some fled there from the triumph
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of clerical Fascism elsewhere, and now they writhe in the shadow of
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an equal tyranny.</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 CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
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<p> But the above extracts, referring to many sides of life in a
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strictly Catholic city, will suffice for my purpose. I do not
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suppose that in America the apologist explains the defects of his
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church, as he does in Britain, as due entirely to its Protestant
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environment. You should see Catholic life in a Catholic country, he
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is fond of saying. It must be difficult to use that piece of pious
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deception in the United States. Folk down south are too near to
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Mexico and up north too near to Quebec; while engineers and others
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who have lived in Columbia, Bolivia, or Brazil tell funny stories.
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Most people, however, know these foreign lands only from films
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which conceal more than they show, and this little sketch of life
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in a really Catholic city -- it is 90 percent Catholic and 70
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percent illiterate -- heavily rebukes the apologist.</p>
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<p> I should like to follow it up with a sketch of life in Russia
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before the Beasts of Berlin broke unto it. Sociologists generally
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agree that one of the best tests of a civilization is the way it
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treats its children; one ought to say, how it treats the children
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of workers. Whatever faults some find in Russia or the Soviet Union
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it is agreed by all experts on this side of its life that it gives
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a better time to the children than any other country in the world.
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Before the Revolution or the last war the children had as miserable
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a time as in this Catholic country. One of the toughest problems
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the Soviet authorities had to solve was the reduction of juvenile
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crime, and travelers in Tsarist Russia used to tell of child
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prostitutes of 13 soliciting openly near the baths. Now Russia, and
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especially Moscow, treat children as honored guests. They neither
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beg nor work and they are poles removed from the cruelly-treated
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starvelings, dripping blood on the streets, of this Catholic city.
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Instead of being excluded from schools because they have no shoes
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-- which in Russia happens only in summer in the country -- the
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poorest have the same teaching and the same holidays and
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entertainments as the children of the best paid.</p>
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<p> But I am concerned here with the workers not with the
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children, though the fact that vast numbers of them cannot feed the
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large families which the priests compel them to have is a
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significant detail. A Catholic writer will tell you only, and
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proudly, that there is a minimum wage fixed by law. Here, from one
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who has moved intimately among them for years -- I can vouch for
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that -- is the truth. They are "the stinkers" as the Tsarist
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aristocrats used to call the workers, the "clods" as rich folk
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called them in medieval England. They may be killed for gathering
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a little fallen wood on or taking a short cut through your estate.
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It is a picture of comprehensive injustice and exploitation.</p>
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<p> But how far is this representative of the condition of the
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workers in Catholic countries generally? Let us try to ascertain
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this on strict sociological lines. In which countries of the world
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have the great majority of the workers, by general agreement, the
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highest standard of living? I confine the comparison to the great
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majority, the regular worker's, because the poorest are at much the
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same level of life in all countries. If there is any difference
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their condition is exceptionally bad in such Catholic countries as
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Poland (before the war), Spain, Portugal, and Brazil. In any case
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we reach a sound verdict only if we compare the great mass of the
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people in different countries.</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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THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
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<p> It will surely be admitted that the highest standard of living
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for the largest majority of the workers is enjoyed in the United
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States, Soviet Russia, Great Britain, Denmark, Norway, Sweden,
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Switzerland, prewar Germany, and prewar France. I would put them in
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that order but there is no need to go into that question. The point
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is that these are all countries in which the Church of Rome has no
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influence on the status of the workers. The one-eighth Catholic
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minority in America and France and the one-twenty-fifth minority in
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Britain may help to sour certain aspects of public life by Sunday
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Laws, Blue Laws, Marriage Laws, etc., but we should smile if they,
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claimed to have any responsibility for the economic basis of the
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standard of life of the workers. If this were the place to go more
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fully into the question we might make a stronger case. While for
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instance, the workers of the United States will be put by most
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students -- some, who know the vast range of free services in
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Russia might prefer the Soviet workers -- at the head of the list
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it is very doubtful if we should find as high a proportion of
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Catholic workers -- Poles, Irish, Italians, Mexicans, etc. -- in
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the higher as in the lower class of workers.</p>
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<p> But we must take it here on broad lines. The countries in
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which the workers are best-off are those in which Catholicism is
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not among the factors which determine the standard of living. At
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the next level we should, still looking only to economic and social
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well-being, put Holland -- many might put this at the higher level
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-- Belgium, Hungary, Austria, Italy, Jugo-Slavia, Rumania, and
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Bulgaria. The proportion of Catholic influence rises and the
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standard of living falls. And at the lowest of three levels few
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would hesitate to put Spain, Portugal, Poland, and the Latin-American Republics generally. I have omitted Czecho-Slovakia only
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because of its composite nature, but everybody knows that the
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status of the workers was highest in Bohemia, lower in more
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Catholic Moravia, and lowest in entirely Catholic Slovakia. Asia we
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naturally leave out of comparison.</p>
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<p> We might go further and cheek our conclusion by asking in
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which countries and under what condition the status of the workers
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has risen most rapidly in recent times and in which it has advanced
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little or not at all. Russia takes first place, and the character
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of the uplifting factors is well known. The least Catholic part of
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Czecho-Slovakia and Denmark probably come next. If we distinguish
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periods of betterment and periods of reaction we have to assign a
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notable advance to the Spaniards and the Austrians under Socialism
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and a notable reaction to the Italian workers during the last
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twelve years and to those of Austria, Spain, Portugal, and Latin
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America generally since they passed under the Papal-Fascist flag.
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If the present Fascist-Catholic rulers (under Germany) of Belgium
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and France were to survive and carry out their declared plans the
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status of the workers there also would deteriorate.</p>
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<p> In fact, we come in the end to a very interesting and
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significant contrast. The democracies -- the United States,
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Britain, Czecho-Slovakia, Holland, Switzerland, Denmark, Norway,
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and Sweden (all non-Catholic) -- will, when Nazism is destroyed,
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resume their character and progress. The Vatican, on the other hand
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seeks, whatever the issue of the war is, to retain control of
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Belgium, France, Slovakia, Croatia, Italy, Spain, Portugal, and the</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 CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
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<p>Spanish-American Republics and combine them in a Catholic League,
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and it has prescribed their economic form in the solemn language of
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a Papal Encyclical. What will that mean for the workers? Well, the
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country of which I have given a description in this chapter
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declares that it has, in its loyalty to Rome. adopted precisely
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this economic structure urged by the Popes. This fact is so
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flagrantly opposed to what Catholic apologists in America say about
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the Popes and the workers that we must examine the matter
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carefully.</p>
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<p> Chapter II</p>
|
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<p> THOSE BEAUTIFUL PAPAL ENCYCLICALS</p>
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<p> A learned professor of religious views scribbled a marginal
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note on a page of one of my books in which I had summed up vile
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social condition of Europe in the last century, after 1500 year of
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Papal power. With the usual air of superiority he wrote: "But the
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Churches only took up social work at the end of the 19th Century."
|
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Which was precisely my complaint. For nearly 15 centuries the Roman
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clergy had contemplated without any serious interference with it,
|
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a social order in which, apart from it other vices, the great mass
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of the people, the workers, were treated with grave injustice and,
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during most of the time with contempt and cruelty.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> If an apologist were to plead that the clergy had so much to
|
|
do in looking after the immortal souls of men that you could not
|
|
expect them to study social conditions you would smile, if you know
|
|
the moral history of Europe, but you might grant the plea a certain
|
|
amount of logic. But the Catholic apologist does not, and dare not,
|
|
put forward that very frail excuse. He says, on the contrary, that
|
|
the Church is, and always was, the friend, the very best friend, of
|
|
the workers. I hardly need to quote Catholic literature on that. It
|
|
is the supreme champion of justice and has always stood with its
|
|
flaming sword between the helpless workers and the greedy. In a
|
|
moment we shall find the Pope saying that very emphatically.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> As far as the past is concerned we will briefly run over the
|
|
record in the next chapter, but two reflection's at once occur to
|
|
us. Must not this championship of the cause of the workers have
|
|
been extraordinarily ineffective seeing that the workers themselves
|
|
had to ware a prodigious fight in the last century against
|
|
injustices which had lasted for centuries? And is it not a Singular
|
|
thing that the pronouncements of Popes on the subject which
|
|
Catholic apologists quote all belong to the last 50 years? With
|
|
great audacity they quote, when they call the Church the friend of
|
|
freedom and democracy, writers of nearly seven centuries ago like
|
|
Thomas Aquinas (who defended slavery), but they do not seem to get
|
|
further back than Pope Leo XIII when they seek proof of the
|
|
Church's interest in the workers. Everybody who knows anything
|
|
about socio-economic history knows that the great fight, the heroic
|
|
and bloody fight, the fight in which you hazarded your life or
|
|
liberty, for justice to the workers was, broadly, from about 1780
|
|
to 1880, yet the first favorable Papal declaration they quote is of
|
|
the year 1891.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
7
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Why dig up so much history, Catholics peevishly ask me? The
|
|
value of the Church today lies in its teaching today, and Catholic
|
|
writers fill books with the bold and sound declarations of the
|
|
Popes from 1891 onward. The fight was still on, and the "great
|
|
Pope" ranged himself on the side of the workers with such
|
|
utterances that he was called the Pope of the Workers, even the
|
|
Socialist Pope, the author of the Magria Charta of Labor. I
|
|
remember the fuss well, having just then been appointed professor
|
|
in a Catholic seminary. Radical papers were lyrical; reactionary
|
|
papers were annoyed. But before you rush to a library for a
|
|
Catholic book to tell you all about this "Charter of Labor's
|
|
Rights" read the biographical notice of Leo XIII in the
|
|
Encyclopedia Britannica; and it is so sound that the Catholic
|
|
revisers -- to be polite -- of the latest edition of that work have
|
|
not ventured to alter it. The writer, Dr. Bryant, tell's how Leo
|
|
startled the world with his radicalism in 1891 but adds that he
|
|
fell back into sheer reaction before he died. He says:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> In 1902 the Sacred Congregation of Extraordinary
|
|
Ecclesiastical Affairs issued instructions concerning
|
|
Christian democracy in Italy, directing that the popular
|
|
Christian movement which embraced in its program a number of
|
|
social reforms such as factory laws for children, old-age
|
|
pensions, a minimum wage in agricultural industries, an eight
|
|
hour day, the revival of trade gilds, and the encouragement of
|
|
Sunday rest, should divert its attention from all such things
|
|
as savored of novelty and devote its energies to the
|
|
restoration of the Temporal Power.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Did you ever find your attention called to that miserable
|
|
change of the Pope's social creed in any one of the very numerous
|
|
books and pamphlets written in America on the grand and inspiring
|
|
call for justice of Leo XIII? You certainly did not. Catholic Truth
|
|
does not do such things. In science a man who made much of a
|
|
passage from an earlier great scientist and did not mention that it
|
|
was retracted in his later years would be discredited. In the field
|
|
of sacred literature he is just clever.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> However, what was this bold and "magnificent" declaration of
|
|
Pope Leo XIII? It is contained in the encyclical (or to-all-the-world) letter Rerum novarum -- these encyclicals are named from the
|
|
first two words of the latin text -- of the year 1891. You will
|
|
find it useful to consider the historical background. Some ten
|
|
years earlier the Pope had struck a bargain with Bismarck. The
|
|
Catholic Church in Germany would enlist all its power in Bismarck's
|
|
fight against Socialism and for militarism if he would quit his
|
|
campaign against the Church itself. It did not make an atom of
|
|
difference to Social Democracy. At the German election of 1887 the
|
|
Socialists polled 763128 votes: at the election of 1890 their vote
|
|
rose to 1427298. In 1890 the Socialist vote in Austria was
|
|
750000, and it was about half a million in France. In other words,
|
|
the policy of sheer opposition to Socialism had dismally failed.
|
|
Catholic workers were leaving the Church in millions because it
|
|
opposed justice to the workers.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
8
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> So Leo, or his advisers -- he knew nothing about economic
|
|
matters, or indeed any other matters except Church stuff and the
|
|
Latin classics -- had the brilliant idea of taking the wind out of
|
|
the Socialist sails by a solemn statement of the attitude of the
|
|
Church to Labor questions which would displease the employers and
|
|
presumably win the admiration of the workers. The Encyclical was
|
|
translated into most languages, and even the secular press hailed
|
|
it as a revolutionary pronouncement. It still shines in American
|
|
apologetic literature. The Catholic will tell you that the Church
|
|
has formulated the Charter of the Rights of Labor in two great
|
|
encyclicals, the Rerum Novarum of Leo XIII and the Quadragesimo
|
|
anno of the later (and the present) Pope. When you inquire,
|
|
however, you will find that the latter has not been translated into
|
|
English -- for reasons which you will understand presently -- but
|
|
the message of Leo XIII is (if you conceal his retraction of it)
|
|
written in letters of bronze on a block of granite.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Surely, you think, it must be really good. You shall judge for
|
|
yourself. I have just read it carefully through once more and made
|
|
a synopsis of it, and, as a cheap translation is still available,
|
|
you can check my precis of it.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It opens with the reflection that something must be done to
|
|
improve the condition of the workers. The gilds, which under the
|
|
lead of the Church so long protected them, were, the Pope says,
|
|
"destroyed in the last century." As every student of such matters
|
|
knows that they died a natural death, or were (if there is question
|
|
of destruction) destroyed by the workers themselves in the 15th
|
|
Century, this is not a promising beginning. It gets worse. Owing to
|
|
the spread of irreligion the callous world of the 19th Century put
|
|
nothing in the place of these beneficent Catholic gilds, and the
|
|
workers were left to be exploited by "a small number of very rich
|
|
men," while "crafty agitators" led the workers by the nose in the
|
|
wrong direction. Socialism cannot be accepted as a remedy because
|
|
it is itself unjust and futile. It denies the right of private
|
|
property -- the Pope seems to think that under Socialism you cannot
|
|
have your own books, carpets, or etchings -- and in this it is
|
|
immoral. It preaches a class-war, which is wicked, wasteful,
|
|
whereas if employers and workers were all religious (Catholics)
|
|
they would live in a beautiful atmosphere of brotherhood, and the
|
|
rich would give generous alms to the poor. That is the Pope's idea
|
|
of the Middle Ages.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> About half the encyclical is taken up with moral platitudes
|
|
and factual inaccuracies of this sort. The idea that the workers of
|
|
Europe were protected by gilds until the French Revolution and that
|
|
from then until 1890 nothing was done for them would bring the
|
|
wrath of a teacher upon a sophomore. Unions of any kind were
|
|
truculently forbidden in all countries, Catholic and Protestant,
|
|
from the 16th Century until the 19th, but at least there was in
|
|
England, and not in Catholic lands, the crude and costly machinery
|
|
of Poor Relief. In England, moreover, the workers won the right of
|
|
union before 1830, and under Place and Owen (Atheists both) there
|
|
was a great development of Trade Unions. There was also a long
|
|
series of Factory Acts for the reduction of hours and the </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
9
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>protection of the workers, and by 1891 the leading States were
|
|
considering or inaugurating schemes of old-age pensions, widows'
|
|
pensions, sick and unemployment insurance, etc. The Kaiser
|
|
formulated this program for Germany and at once started work on it
|
|
in 1890.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> However, let us come to the "constructive" part of the great
|
|
Charter. If the workers realize that it is "no disgrace" to work if
|
|
you do not happen to "possess the gifts of fortune," and if the
|
|
employers "do not tax the workers beyond his strength" and "give
|
|
every one that which is just" this "thorny problem of capital and
|
|
labor is well on the way to settlement. It takes a Pope to discover
|
|
things like that. For a moment the capitalists get a jolt when the
|
|
Pope says that "it is only by the labor of the working man that
|
|
States grow rich" but, needless to say, he does not pass on to
|
|
Marx's theory of surplus value, of which he had probably never
|
|
heard. It is just a clumsy way of saying that capital cannot
|
|
dispense with labor. Then, after an excursus on the divine origin
|
|
of authority and the duty of the State to check employers who
|
|
impose conditions which injure the morals, religion, or health --
|
|
as I said, Britain already had a whole code of laws checking such
|
|
employers -- of the workers, the Pope gets to concrete proposals.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The "revolution" is supposed to be here. The Pope mentions the
|
|
strike as a weapon of the workers and does not condemn it. He is
|
|
content to say that if the State were guided by religion it would
|
|
see that the grounds of strikes did not exist. Then we get the
|
|
"rights" of the workers. They must have a day's rest on Sunday (and
|
|
go to church), they must not be compelled to work such hours that
|
|
it "stupefies their minds and wears out their bodies," and the
|
|
wages must be "sufficient to support a frugal and well-behaved
|
|
working man." All this had been a platitude of Radical (and much
|
|
Liberal) as well as Socialist literature for several decades, and
|
|
the astonishment of the world that a Pope should indorse the claim
|
|
of one day's rest in seven (which had been normal in Protestant
|
|
countries for three centuries) and that men should not be
|
|
overworked is really a proof of its insincerity in its new
|
|
admiration of the Church of Rome. If there was any "revolution" it
|
|
was in the fact that the Roman Church had comprehensively and
|
|
officially opposed the rights of the workers for more than 100
|
|
years, or since they had been clearly formulated on the eve of the
|
|
French Revolution, and now that it saw the workers deserting it in
|
|
millions it admitted the most elementary of those rights.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The American Catholic apologists on the social side Completely
|
|
ignore these aspects of the Pope's deliverance. They surely know
|
|
that what he calls "crafty agitators" had been demanding these
|
|
rights for the workers for 100 years yet they represent the Pope as
|
|
putting some profound new social wisdom before the world. They lay
|
|
no stress on the really revolutionary -- if it were clearly and
|
|
sincerely meant -- statement that "it is only by the labor of the
|
|
working man that States grow rich." Catholic social writers would
|
|
not dare to say that themselves in America today. It is the
|
|
essential basis of Bolshevism, the essential meaning of the hammer
|
|
and sickle. But I agree with them here that the Pope meant no more
|
|
than that the miner produces coal and the agricultural worker corn.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
10
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Any other meaning is quite inconsistent with the Pope's -- indeed
|
|
all Popes -- settled social ethic that the division of the race
|
|
into masters (private employers) and wage-earners is in accordance
|
|
with the divine will.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> As to the Sunday rest -- which, by the way, Britain, America,
|
|
Germany, etc., not only granted but sternly insisted on for
|
|
religious reasons -- the profit of the Church itself is here too
|
|
clear for us to consider it disinterested. Of the Pope's protest
|
|
against overwork also we take no notice. At the time when he wrote
|
|
this there had been a mighty and successful struggle for the
|
|
reduction of hours and the curtailment of the work of women and
|
|
children in Great Britain for 70 years and for a generation in
|
|
America, France, and Germany. It was Catholic countries like Italy,
|
|
Spain, and Portugal that needed the moralist, and neither then nor
|
|
at any, later date until Socialism became a power did they carry
|
|
out any serious reform. In fact, the worst condition of labor,
|
|
especially child labor, continued to be found in Catholic South
|
|
Italy, Spain (except 1932-6), Portugal, and Poland right down to
|
|
the outbreak of the war.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The gem of the encyclical is said by the apologists to be the
|
|
demand for "a living wage." It is the minimum demand that any
|
|
reformer ever drew up because, obviously, the far greater question
|
|
is: What is a living wage? The Pope, in any case, did not use that
|
|
very familiar phrase, and how any Catholic employer in the world
|
|
could object to what he did say is incomprehensible. In two
|
|
passages the Pope goes beyond the hoary old Church-platitude that
|
|
in rewarding labor employers must be "just" -- leaving it to them
|
|
to say what is just. The first short passage is said in one
|
|
"official" translation to be that the wage must provide "the means
|
|
of living a tolerable and happy life." The word "happy" is here
|
|
arbitrarily inserted. The Latin text has no such word. The other
|
|
official translation is that the wage must suffice "to support the
|
|
wage-earner in reasonable and frugal comfort," The word
|
|
"reasonable" again is a trick. The correct translation is: "The
|
|
wage must be enough to feed a frugal and well-behaved worker." What
|
|
a revolutionary sentiment in the year 1891!</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> In the next paragraph the Pope remembers that workers have
|
|
families to support. He say's: "If the worker receives a wage on
|
|
which he can support himself, his wife, and his children
|
|
becomingly, he will be able to save and to have a small capital."
|
|
He is to buy land (as that will keep him out of Socialism). I have
|
|
emphasized the significant word in this passage, as the Catholic
|
|
translators again play tricks with it. And if the reader finds my
|
|
translation of it ambiguous I reply that it is deliberately
|
|
ambiguous in the original. The Latin here is poor and unusual --
|
|
just for the sake of vagueness. As a matter of fact the official
|
|
clerical biographer of Leo XIII, Msgr. T'Serelaes, says that the
|
|
Pope's references to a living wage led everywhere to stormy
|
|
disputes as to what precisely he meant, and a Belgian archbishop
|
|
wrote to Rome for a clarification of them. He got none. So we may
|
|
dismiss the gems of social wisdom of Leo XIII and the dishonest
|
|
comments of American apologists who tamper with the text and
|
|
conceal the fact that through one of the Congregations of
|
|
Cardinals, of which the Pope is the head, Leo XIII in 1902 recanted
|
|
his "Charter," and ordered Catholic workers to quit talking about
|
|
the rights of Labor!
|
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
11
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> According to these apologists Leo's "Immortal" utterance
|
|
remained the Roman standard on such matters until 1931, when Pius
|
|
XI, in the encyclical Quadragestme anno re-affirmed and developed
|
|
its teaching; and these two declarations are the wisest and
|
|
soundest of all counsels on the great issue of Capital and Labor.
|
|
But, as I have already said, while these apologists talk very
|
|
fulsomely about the encyclical of 1931 they, as far as I can
|
|
discover never translate it. There is certainly no translation
|
|
issued by the British Catholic authorities and I cannot trace any
|
|
in America, though the essential meaning of an "encyclical" letter
|
|
is that it is addressed to the whole Catholic world, and the
|
|
hierarchy in each country is to publish a translation of it. Dr.
|
|
Ryan, the Catholic oracle on social questions, translated all the
|
|
earlier encyclicals of Pius XI but did not touch this one.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I explained in an earlier booklet why this "great" encyclical
|
|
is so scurvily treated by Catholics and was almost ignored by the
|
|
press. It tells Catholics that the corporative state -- Fascism, in
|
|
plain English -- is the true model in economic matters and must be
|
|
enforced when the authorities are Catholics! I will again give a
|
|
faithful summary of it, but first let us get the true historical
|
|
framework.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> There was not, as the apologist's claim, a continuity of Papal
|
|
policy. There was exactly the opposite. Not only did Rome, as I
|
|
have said, formally reverse its policy, but that policy had so
|
|
palpably failed that the three Popes who followed Leo XIII never
|
|
endorsed it. I have shown elsewhere that the Church of Rome
|
|
continued to lose to the Socialists. In Germany the Socialist vote,
|
|
which had risen to 1427298 in 1890 had increased to 2107076 by
|
|
1898; and it was chiefly in Germany that the Pope had expected good
|
|
results from his encyclical. In France the number of Socialists
|
|
doubled between 1893 and 1900. In Austria the vote rose from
|
|
750000 in 1890 to 1041948 in 1907. And Socialism began to spread
|
|
in Italy itself. The vote rose from 27000 in 1892 to 175000 in
|
|
1900. The Church, losing heavily, continued to denounce Socialism
|
|
and to permit local churches to experiment in Christian Socialism,
|
|
as we shall see later. Then came the war, the Russian Revolution,
|
|
and the rapid spread of Atheistic Communism as well as Socialism,</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The desperate officials at the Vatican learned, however, as
|
|
time went on that the modern world was not necessarily committed to
|
|
radical and democratic principles. A very large proportion of the
|
|
middle class as well as the wealthy were alarmed at the threat to
|
|
"private enterprise," or the chance of making a fortune, and, while
|
|
these men had in the 19th Century provided the backbone of the
|
|
anti-clerical party everywhere, they now sought clerical as well as
|
|
conservative allies against Bolshevism. To win a good support in
|
|
the working class they joined in the cry that Bolshevism set out to
|
|
destroy religion, and therefore threatened civilization, and their
|
|
press echoed the libels against and grossly misrepresented Russia.
|
|
So there was formed the grand anti-Bolshevik alliance of ministers
|
|
and morons, bankers and bandits, journalists, and Jesuits all over
|
|
the world. The Vatican dropped its coquetting with Russia and, as
|
|
we saw in the first series, entered into a brazen alliance with the
|
|
gangs of criminals who were the nucleus groups of the next
|
|
movement.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
12
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> So you know what to expect of an encyclical on the workers
|
|
composed by the present aristocratic Pope, who was then Secretary
|
|
of State, in 1931. "Quadragesimo anno" means "in the fortieth year"
|
|
(since Leo's encyclical), and is really an amazing, suggestion of
|
|
continuity of policy. The Pope recalls the work of Leo. There was
|
|
vast and increasing misery amongst the workers -- in the leading
|
|
countries they had, as a matter of fact, had their real wage
|
|
doubled or trebled in half a century -- and "the eyes of all were
|
|
turned to the Chair of Peter." Leo issued his marvelous encyclical,
|
|
which "owed nothing to either Liberalism or Socialism" -- its best
|
|
points were, we saw, platitudes of benevolent Liberalism -- but was
|
|
inspired by the genius of the Pope and Catholic teaching. The world
|
|
was "stupefied at the novelty of his teaching," which "overthrew
|
|
all the idols of Liberalism," and the message produced the most
|
|
salutary fruits everywhere. These Liberals had done a little for
|
|
the workers, It is true, but it was the Pope's encyclical that the
|
|
workers had to thank for all the social legislation that was passed
|
|
after 1891 and for the full establishment of Trade Unions, which
|
|
the Liberals had opposed.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> After devoting a quarter of the long letter to this childish
|
|
theme the Pope says that he is going to develop Leo's principles.
|
|
He does not even hint at the retraction. At great length he proves
|
|
that the right of private ownership is based on moral principles,
|
|
so Socialism is immoral. "No good Catholic can be a good
|
|
Socialist." As to Communism it is beneath discussion. Capital and
|
|
Labor are equally indispensable, and the product must be "justly"
|
|
divided; but he does not go a step beyond Leo in defining what a
|
|
"just wage" is. The workers must have unions, but there must be no
|
|
class-war, and in view of the need for harmonious cooperation a new
|
|
type of union or "syndicate" which has lately appeared deserves
|
|
attention. There must be unions of both workers and employers and
|
|
conferences of delegates from each side. The worker is quite free
|
|
to belong or not belong to the syndicate, but he has to pay the
|
|
fees in any case. The Pope, who has the Italian model before him,
|
|
omits to say that if a worker does not join the union he will get
|
|
no labor-ticket. Strikes are forbidden, and if the two sides cannot
|
|
agree the government must intervene. But if they will all join the
|
|
Catholic Church and reform their morals the machine will march on
|
|
oiled wheels.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> In other words, Mussolini's Corporative State is the ideal,
|
|
and from Slovakia to Peru the new Catholic countries are adopting
|
|
it and expressly quoting this encyclical as the reason. Did or did
|
|
not the Pope know that Mussolini devised this economic structure
|
|
simply in order to have both industrialists and workers in his
|
|
power when the time came for war-industries and forced loans?
|
|
Obtuse as the Vatican is in such matters the clergy must have knows
|
|
this, and must have known also that, while the industrialists
|
|
really suffered in the matter of forced loans to the government the
|
|
workers were enslaved and impoverished. So now you know why, though
|
|
Catholic apologists in America insist that the papal encyclicals
|
|
are the grand Charters of Labor they are so very reticent about
|
|
this latest official utterance on the workers' rights.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
13
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Chapter III</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> THE ACTUAL RECORD OF THE BLACK INTERNATIONAL</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Leo XIII, we saw, opened his solemn pronouncement to the world
|
|
with a summary of social history which was as near to the truth as
|
|
Cape Cod is to Tierra del Fuego. I do not for a moment suggest that
|
|
he knew this but felt it quite safe to give his fantastic version
|
|
of European history to Catholics who are not allowed to read the
|
|
truth. Do not misunderstand me. Apologists and missionaries of the
|
|
Black International -- lots of them -- do lie. Many of them in
|
|
America who repeat the Pope's words are compelled by their task to
|
|
read, and give in their writings sufficient proof that they have
|
|
read, ordinary expert works on the history of the struggle of the
|
|
workers in modern times. But you would not expect a Pope to have
|
|
leisure for that sort of thing. In fact if he knew the historical
|
|
truth he might not be able to write those sonorous and vapid
|
|
generalizations which Catholics mistake for deep or inspired
|
|
thought. In the next book we shall see some of these highly-poisoned gems of historical fiction from an earlier encyclical of
|
|
Leo XIII. He writes history (and economics) like a devout nun. The
|
|
workers, we found him saying, were happy and prosperous under the
|
|
gilds, which the Church had inspired, until the French Revolution.
|
|
Then "irreligion" made the world of employers callous and brutal.
|
|
Nothing was substituted for the protection of the gilds, and. ...
|
|
Well there you are. That is why the workers of the last century
|
|
were so exploited. You have only to bring back the employers to the
|
|
true Church (as in that country which I described in the first
|
|
chapter) and the world of Labor will take on the brightness and
|
|
warmth of a garden in spring.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Except for the howler about the gilds this is really what
|
|
Catholic apologists commonly say on the subject. The Church "broke
|
|
the fetters of the slave" and brought light and justice to the
|
|
workers of the pagan world. In due time -- five or six centuries
|
|
later -- it created the gilds which spread a rich religious mantle
|
|
of protection over the workers of Europe. Protestantism destroyed
|
|
the protection -- the little difficulty about what happened in the
|
|
Catholic half of Europe may (and had better be) disregarded -- and
|
|
so the arrival of the Industrial Era found them the helpless prey
|
|
of the exploiters. The world must return to the principles of the
|
|
Middle Ages when the workers were so happy.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The real record of the Church in relation to the workers can
|
|
be summed up even more shortly than that, for it is much nearer to
|
|
the truth to say that the Church was comprehensively indifferent to
|
|
the condition of the workers from the time it won power until Leo
|
|
wrote his "great" Charter of their Rights. That condition varied
|
|
with the economic development of Europe but until at least the
|
|
French Revolution it was one of galling subjection and
|
|
exploitation, and the Church never condemned this. It is a long
|
|
story for a short chapter, but I may point out the fallacy or the
|
|
untruth of the chief statements on which the claim of the apologist
|
|
is based. And if I have here to be very brief and rather dogmatic
|
|
it may be advisable to explain to some of my readers that I have
|
|
dealt with these points and given the proper authorities in several
|
|
of my Little Blue Books and in my True Story of the Roman Catholic
|
|
Church.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
14
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Catholic writers used to boast how the Church was communistic
|
|
and anti-rich from its infancy, but they have done their best
|
|
recently to make the word Communism stink in folk's nostrils so
|
|
they drop this argument. It would be as bad as boasting how
|
|
Catholic commercial travelers, or their medieval equivalent, used
|
|
to lock their wives in "girdles of chastity" when they set out on
|
|
their rounds. In any case it is false. The theory is based upon a
|
|
statement about one particular church in Acts, which even many
|
|
theologians consider a pious romance. Paul's letters are the
|
|
earliest documents, and they reflect a division of classes, with
|
|
rich slave-owners and even imperial officials. In fact Catholic
|
|
literature includes wealthy relatives of the Emperor Vespasian in
|
|
the Roman Church.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> More important is the claim about slavery; and let me say at
|
|
once that it is one of the most blatantly untruthful claims the
|
|
apologists make. No Pope, no Father of the Church, no body of
|
|
churchmen ever condemned slavery until the 18th Century. St.
|
|
Augustine, the dominant oracle of western or Roman Christendom,
|
|
expressly defended it as of divine appointment (City of God, Book
|
|
XIX, eh. XV), and Thomas Aquinas and all the other Schoolmen
|
|
followed Augustine. There is not an expert work on the subject that
|
|
does not explain that the old type of slavery was destroyed by the
|
|
economic collapse of the Roman Empire, and that before that time
|
|
Roman moralists and Emperors had done a great deal for the slave.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> After the year 500 the workers of Europe are called in our
|
|
modern literature "serfs," but the reader is rarely warned that
|
|
still for centuries all literature was Latin, and there are not
|
|
different words in Latin for "slave" and "serf." The workers were
|
|
-- and the Popes from 600 onward owned vast numbers of them -- just
|
|
servi as they had been under paganism, and Vinogradov, one of the
|
|
best historical sociologists of recent times, says that they were
|
|
in law and fact, "slaves." They were bought and sold like cattle,
|
|
and no law protected them from cruelty. So the only real change
|
|
when the Roman Church came to dominate Europe in the 5th Century
|
|
was that, whereas in the Roman Empire, two workers out of three had
|
|
been free (See Darrow's Slavery in the Roman Empire), literate, and
|
|
almost pampered, in the new Europe not one worker in ten was free
|
|
or literate or had a life of elementary comfort and decency.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> This "era of the serfs" lasted until the 12th or 13th Century,
|
|
when the majority were emancipated. Again there is no modern expert
|
|
who does not trace this emancipation to what we may broadly call
|
|
economic causes. The nobles sold freedom to immense bodies of serfs
|
|
so that they could go on the looting expeditions of the Crusaders
|
|
or enjoy the more luxurious life which Arabs had taught Europe.
|
|
Kings emancipated bodies of serfs to help fight their rebellious
|
|
nobles: nobles emancipated them to fight the kings or other nobles.
|
|
Abbeys and bishops were, says the Catholic historian Muratori, the
|
|
last to emancipate them, saying that they must not "alienate Church
|
|
property." At the same time Europe was rapidly recovering
|
|
economically and far larger bodies of craftsman were required in
|
|
the towns (which, for the same reasons, now got charters of
|
|
liberty).</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
15
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The famous gilds had begun long before this, and the Church,
|
|
instead of having inspired them, tried for more than a century to
|
|
suppress them. They seem to have been formed by the workers on the
|
|
model of the unions (colleges) of the old Greek and Roman workers,
|
|
traces of which survived. I have elsewhere quoted decrees from the
|
|
Capitularies of Charlemagne and later Church Councils showing how
|
|
drastically the Church condemned them. It could not suppress so it
|
|
appropriated them, and for several centuries they certainly helped
|
|
the workers. That is to say, the skilled workers. Writers on the
|
|
gilds (Gross, Walford, etc.) do not remind the reader that while in
|
|
the towns even the prostitutes had gilds and walked in the sacred
|
|
processions (of course, the writers I have named do not tell this),
|
|
the agricultural workers, who were at least four-fifths of the
|
|
workers of Europe, had none or any other kind of protection.
|
|
Further, every single real expert on any country in Europe during
|
|
this period, the so-called Age of Chivalry, the best part of the
|
|
Middle Ages (1100 to 1400), agrees that the lords and landowners
|
|
regarded the workers as dirt under their feet, robbing and
|
|
torturing them barbarously. It was an age of wild license, of
|
|
fiendish cruelty, and you can imagine -- or read Eccardus for
|
|
Germany, Brissot for France, and Thorold Rogers or Traile for
|
|
England, the chief authorities on the workers -- how the unarmed
|
|
mass of the people fared.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> All the leading historical experts on the period use the same
|
|
language as professor A. Luchaire, the highest authority on France
|
|
in the 13th Century. He says (Social France at the Time of Philippe
|
|
Auguste) that "feudalism seemed to take a ferocious delight in
|
|
seeing flames consume burgher's house's and the villains [workers]
|
|
who lived in them" (p. 5); that the knight or noble "was almost
|
|
everywhere a brutal and pillaging soldier" (p. 249); and that "the
|
|
noble had an untameable antipathy to and a profound contempt of the
|
|
villain: that is, for the serf, peasant, laborer, citizen, or
|
|
burgher" (p. 271). Such was France, the most advanced country in
|
|
Europe, in what Catholics call the most beautiful part of the
|
|
Middle Ages; and every leading authority on Italy, England, or
|
|
Germany at the time gives exactly the same picture. Pope Leo XIII
|
|
had as naive an idea of the time as has the schoolma'am who talks
|
|
to her class about the beautiful Age of Chivalry and the Knights
|
|
Errant. And in our age of historical scholarship this sort of thing
|
|
is solemnly made the basis of a social argument by the spiritual
|
|
leaders of 200000000 folk and is most respectfully treated by
|
|
editorial writers and essayists.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It would be pertinent to show that while the workers who were
|
|
subject to the Pope were thus as unprotected from the brutality of
|
|
their "betters" as the slaves of old -- indeed less than the slaves
|
|
of Rome from the time of the Emperor Hadrian -- and lived for the
|
|
most part (on the land) in sordid and brutalizing conditions, the
|
|
workers of Arab Spain, who cannot have been far short in number of
|
|
the workers of the whole of Christian Europe, were relatively happy
|
|
and prosperous and generally educated. But I cannot enlarge on that
|
|
in this little sketch. Let me just say, on the strength of the
|
|
research and the general consensus of authorities in ancient Rome,
|
|
medieval Europe, and Arab Spain which I give in a dozen works, that
|
|
the period which the Pope and his apologists choose as the Golden
|
|
Age of the workers was for them the blackest age, apart from Spain,</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
16
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>between their good condition in the Roman Empire and the
|
|
improvements they have won in modern times. None but Catholic
|
|
apologists and a few American teachers of history who play up to
|
|
them now write such trash about the Middle Ages. The period had
|
|
great art, but four-fifth's of the workers, scattered outside the
|
|
cities, never even saw this.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It is true that the condition of the growing body of
|
|
industrial workers became harder in some respects after the
|
|
Reformation. The apologists make a ridiculous attempt to connect
|
|
this with (at least in England) the suppression of the monasteries,
|
|
the chief effect of which for the workers was that crowds of men
|
|
and women who had idly hung about the fat monasteries for food
|
|
instead of working for it had now the choice of working or
|
|
starving. In point of fact Protestant England set up a system of
|
|
Poor Relief which, crude as it was -- like most government measures
|
|
300 years ago -- did discriminate to some extent between "sturdy
|
|
beggars" and the real needy.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> But the answer to any Catholic attempt to make capital out of
|
|
the fact that, as trade and industry expanded, the lawyers, in the
|
|
interest of the rich, made the law harsher against the workers,
|
|
especially in regard to unions, is easily found when we compare
|
|
Catholic and Protestant countries. The three countries of Europe
|
|
which sank most notably from the best level of the Middle Ages
|
|
after the Reformation were beyond any question Catholic Italy,
|
|
Spain, and Portugal. There the lot of the worker fell to the level
|
|
at which we found it in the first chapter and remained at that
|
|
level until our time. The exceptions only strengthen my point. When
|
|
anti-Papal statesmen took over Italy from the Pope and his puppets
|
|
at Naples the status of the workers began to rise -- until
|
|
Mussolini shared his power with the Pope. In Spain and Portugal
|
|
also there were periods of anti-clerical Liberalism or (1932-6)
|
|
Socialism during which the condition of the workers was improved
|
|
and schools for their children were opened. Under the present
|
|
Papal-Fascist regime they have fallen back toward a condition of
|
|
ill-paid illiterate serfdom. These are platitude's of socio-political history.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I have not spokes of France because it did not, like Italy,
|
|
Spain, and Portugal, build round itself a Chinese Wall to protect
|
|
its Catholic population from the taint of non-Catholic influences.
|
|
It was open to receive ideas from England, Holland, and Germany,
|
|
and it saw a considerable growth of skepticism. Even its clergy
|
|
were remarkably independent of Rome. Yet it remained predominantly
|
|
Catholic, and it retained medieval vices (torture's, etc.) in
|
|
proportion to its Catholicism. Here I have to notice only the
|
|
condition of the workers. There is no dispute about it. Apologists
|
|
find a second Catholic Golden Age in the days of Louis XIV: a
|
|
vicious, selfish, scandalous monarch who regarded the people only
|
|
as a source of wealth for his corrupt court, if you read French try
|
|
to see the documents in Martin's authoritative history relating to
|
|
the appalling condition of the agricultural workers when Louis was
|
|
building his palaces. Brissot, the chief French authority on the
|
|
history of the workers, shows that the wage even of the skilled
|
|
workers fell under Louis XIV to about 38 cents a day (of 12 to 14
|
|
hours) and the price of food rose.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
17
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> But their condition on the eve of the Revolution is well
|
|
known, and it is equally well known -- in fact eagerly claimed by
|
|
apologists who know as little about the French Revolution as they
|
|
do about the Russian -- that anti-clericals educated the people up
|
|
to and inspired that inauguration of the first attempt in
|
|
Christendom to redeem and uplift the workers. People will not
|
|
understand our own time unless they see that we still live in the
|
|
new age, an age of struggle against privilege for freedom,
|
|
democracy, enlightenment, and justice to the workers, which opened
|
|
at the French Revolution; in a sense you might say the American
|
|
Revolution, since it was in some respects more than political
|
|
though in just these respects its roots were in French anti-Papal
|
|
literature.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I hope some day to write a worthy history of this period.
|
|
Already for 150 years men and women, touched by the vision of a
|
|
wiser and juster social order, have fought for freedom, justice,
|
|
and enlightenment. A million of them have lost their lives in the
|
|
struggle, yet but for the rousing of Russia the race in most
|
|
countries would have lost all that it had won in those 150 years of
|
|
sweat and blood. Even now that victory is certain in the sense that
|
|
the nests of pirates in Berlin, Rome, and Tokyo will be destroyed
|
|
the race makes no totalitarian war against them because so few
|
|
people understand the struggle in all its range. The coalition of
|
|
the Roman Church with the bandits is concealed from the majority --
|
|
I just received a letter from a distinguished clergyman, no lover
|
|
of Rome, who writes that I will startle England if I can prove that
|
|
connection! -- whereas, if you know the whole period, it is the
|
|
logical and almost inevitable policy of the Papacy. And with so
|
|
much hidden and the perspective distorted some of the leaders in
|
|
the present fight, men who mouth about freedom and democracy, hope
|
|
to save the Roman Church from chastisement or loss of power because
|
|
it will help to put kings back on their thrones, restore privilege,
|
|
and cheek the aspirations of the workers.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I have tried in all my works for the past ten years to get
|
|
people to see the events of contemporary life in this historical
|
|
perspective, but I must here confine myself to the question of the
|
|
workers. The French Revolution proved a false dawn of the new age,
|
|
and when it and the compromise of the Napoleonic regime were
|
|
destroyed the fight had to begin again, under a dense cloud of
|
|
reaction. Let us say that the period from about 1830 to 1930 was
|
|
one of increasing victory for the worker's. The real wage in the
|
|
larger lndustrialized states was trebled. Universal free education
|
|
was won, and this meant at all events the erection of a ladder by
|
|
which the abler workers might ascend to a higher level. Immense
|
|
social services -- hygienic, medical, recreational, educative, and
|
|
financial -- were provided. The right to unions was almost
|
|
completely established. It all fell far short of the ideal, but let
|
|
us be just. That age which the Pope blandly blames for all that is
|
|
wrong, which he represents as undoing the justice won for the
|
|
workers in earlier Catholic ages was one of the most progressive
|
|
that the world had yet seen; for the workers of imperial Rome had
|
|
not had to fight for such privileges as they had.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
18
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Well, what share has the Church of Rome had in the victorious
|
|
struggle? Should we be far away from the historical truth if we
|
|
said, None? Apologists search the darker lanes of recent history
|
|
for some obscure priest or layman -- generally in bad odor in his
|
|
Church at the time -- who dared to say a word for the improvement
|
|
of the condition of the workers, for the emancipation of the
|
|
Slaves, for justice to women, and so on. That neither the Vatican
|
|
nor any national branch of the Church joined in the great word
|
|
until the last decade of the 19th Century, when wholesale apostasy
|
|
of the workers alarmed the Black International, they have to grant.
|
|
But this thimble-rigging game of claiming the credit for "the
|
|
Church" when one man is honest and asking us to blame "not the
|
|
Church but the individual" when a hundred are dishonest begins to
|
|
be resented even by the Catholic laity.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I made a broad examination of the mighty campaign for reform
|
|
-- which means to rid the world finally of medievalism -- during
|
|
the last 150 years in my recent 'How Freethinkers made Notable
|
|
Contributions to Civilization' (1938). I showed that in periods
|
|
when Catholics regarded Freethinkers as an insignificant and
|
|
negligible minority they provided the great majority of the leaders
|
|
in every branch of the reform-movement. A Catholic survey of that
|
|
magnificent fight for man, the grandest of all epics, naming all
|
|
Catholics in Europe or America who made any such notable
|
|
contribution would be a farce, yet all the time the Church was
|
|
boasting that it ruled a third of the white race. Even the men who
|
|
are claimed, like the Chartist leader in England Bronterre O'Brien,
|
|
were apostates in most cases.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Or take, as we have done before, the contrast of Catholic and
|
|
Protestant lands. In the first chapter I distributed countries, as
|
|
they were before the war threw everything into confusion, into
|
|
three groups. I do not imagine that any student of social matters
|
|
will question the general distribution, and quarrels about the
|
|
exact position of this or that country do not affect the
|
|
conclusion. The workers enjoy the best conditions where Catholicism
|
|
has no influence on public life and the worst conditions where it
|
|
has its greatest influence. They are worst paid and least protected
|
|
by law, and have the feeblest social services in the lands where
|
|
the ruling class profess docility to the Pope. In Russia, where
|
|
Catholicism simply does not exist, the workers have the finest
|
|
position they ever had in history, and they were rapidly advancing,
|
|
when the Pope's war against them broke out, to a level higher than
|
|
is or ever was, found in any other civilization. Whether you agree
|
|
to that or no the broad truth remains; the position of the workers
|
|
rose in proportion as Papal influence fell. I wonder if there is
|
|
any normally-minded Catholic worker in America who will question my
|
|
distribution of the leading countries of the world according to the
|
|
status of the workers and the Catholic element in the country, or
|
|
will claim that his Church has anything to do with the high
|
|
position, from material and historical reasons, of the workers of
|
|
America. Yet these Catholic workers cannot open one of their books
|
|
on social questions without reading that the two encyclicals I
|
|
analyzed show the Popes as the beat friends of Labor.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
19
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> In other words, we have in this controversy, as in so many
|
|
others that concern the Church, all the facts on one side and all
|
|
the rhetoric on the other. The Papal encyclicals are not merely
|
|
rhetoric but platitudinous rhetoric. That of Leo XIII in those
|
|
passages of it which won most attention just took up and, with a
|
|
certain amount of vagueness, repeated demands which had for decades
|
|
been considered elementary in serious discussions of such matters.
|
|
Was there, in fact, on the capitalist side any responsible writer
|
|
who said that "overwork was just as long as you did not specify the
|
|
hours for any industry" -- at that time the burning question, which
|
|
the Pope carefully avoided, was the eight-hour day -- or who
|
|
questioned that the worker had a right to a decent wage as long as
|
|
you refused to say what in any industry a decent wage was? And the
|
|
second Encyclical officially took back the slight concessions --
|
|
already quietly withdrawn -- of the first because it put the
|
|
workers under a Corporative State, in which any demands of theirs
|
|
are finally settled by the employer's or the government. Both
|
|
encyclicals, moreover, lay heavy stress on something which is
|
|
anathema to every social student. They say that the rich justify
|
|
the larger share they take of the wealth produced if they give
|
|
generously in charity to the poor.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> If the apologist falls back, as he usually does, upon the fact
|
|
that the Church has always sternly insisted on justice his case is
|
|
worse than ever. Such preaching is, and always was, barren. There
|
|
is a Catholic church in New York which the Tammany leaders have
|
|
attended for the last 100 years, and the services and sermons have
|
|
spoken of justice as often as they did in other chapels. Under the
|
|
Pope's nose, in Italy, Catholic employers made the vilest use, in
|
|
the sulphur mines, of child labor that you would find anywhere in
|
|
Europe. Almost as sordid a use of child labor was made in the
|
|
tailoring business in Poland, and in agriculture and various
|
|
industries in Spain, Portugal, and South America. So it has been
|
|
for ages, though the employers listened Sunday after Sunday to the
|
|
Catholic gospel of justice. The ethic has been the same in all
|
|
ages; the practice has varied considerably, and the facts I have
|
|
given even in this short sketch show that the actual treatment of
|
|
the workers was always nearest to the ideal of justice where public
|
|
life was influenced by those whom the Church denounced.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Chapter IV</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> THE COMEDY OF CHRISTIAN SOCIALISM</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I have found it necessary at this point to make a few
|
|
excursions into older history because it was impossible to ignore
|
|
the Pope's amazing statement that the workers enjoyed happier
|
|
conditions when the world was Catholic and that their modern
|
|
grievances are due to the collapse of Papal authority over a large
|
|
part of the earth. How Catholics tolerate such howlers and then
|
|
respectfully read articles in their press about the profound wisdom
|
|
and sagacity of the Popes is the one problem of Church life I have
|
|
never mastered. But let me remind the reader that this discussion
|
|
of the status of the workers is part of a broader study of the
|
|
Roman Church which we are making. The starting-point of it was:
|
|
What is the real nature of the Church of Rome, of the Black
|
|
International in particular, that it should enter into alliance </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
20
|
|
. THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>with the vilest forces of modern times? One of the difficulties of
|
|
the general public in entertaining this is that for 40 years
|
|
Catholic apologetic works in America have loudly boasted that their
|
|
Church has always been, and especially in Papal declarations during
|
|
the last half-century, the champion of Labor against greed. We have
|
|
seen that it was, on the contrary, always in alliance with wealth
|
|
and greed and is in its present alliances merely pursuing its
|
|
normal policy.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I imagine that after the war, when Socialism and Communism
|
|
spread once more, what is left of the Catholic Church will to a
|
|
great extent turn to what is called Christian Socialism, and we may
|
|
glance at it. The movement was, of course, never Socialistic, and
|
|
in so far as it was adopted in Catholic countries, it never used
|
|
the word Socialism. It was called Christian or Catholic Democracy
|
|
or Social Party, and its express purpose was to divert the workers
|
|
from Socialism, which Leo XIII condemned as emphatically in 1891 as
|
|
Pius XI did in 1931. The movement began in England in 1849 when
|
|
people still distinguished between the state Socialism of Marx,
|
|
which then had few adherents in Britain, and other varieties such
|
|
as Robert Owen's voluntary Socialism.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> This British movement, founded by two clergymen of the Church
|
|
of England, Charles Kingsley and F.D. Maurice, assisted by the
|
|
barrister (of the same Church) Ludlow, which borrowed the title
|
|
Socialism as it was loosely used by the Owenites, never had a large
|
|
body of adherents and did not last long. Ludlow admitted that its
|
|
chief aim was "to Christianize Socialism," or to show the workers
|
|
that they need not leave the Church because they demanded a
|
|
betterment of their condition. But it was a group of men and women
|
|
who very sincerely felt that something must be done for the workers
|
|
when the Chartist movement so sensationally collapsed in 1848 and
|
|
it did render material services in education and in helping Trade
|
|
Unions and Cooperative Societies. It was continued in the Guild of
|
|
St. Matthew, which was closely associated with the "High" or
|
|
Ritualist branch of the Church, and there was a less advanced
|
|
Christian Social Union.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I once took the chair for a lecture by the Rev. Stewart
|
|
Headlam head of the Guild of St. Matthew, and the audience numbered
|
|
30 or 40. When we sipped a whisky and soda together afterwards he
|
|
said that he had given this eloquent lecture on "The Brotherhood of
|
|
Men under the Fatherhood of God" a score of times and got almost no
|
|
response. Why? I discreetly reminded him that the Church had taught
|
|
the Fatherhood of God just as dogmatically in the long ages of
|
|
tyranny and exploitation and suggested that perhaps the employers
|
|
reflected that since the Father condemned his children to an
|
|
eternal hell the little hell they gave their workers sometimes did
|
|
not matter much.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I need not trace the echoes of this movement in the religious
|
|
world of America -- the Christian Labor Union of 1872, the Knights
|
|
of Labor, the Christian Social Union, etc. -- as Catholics were not
|
|
involved in them. It was in Germany, after 1870, that the movement
|
|
which we generally call Christian Socialism spread amongst the
|
|
Catholic worker's. It was, of course, not merely not Socialism but
|
|
the very opposite of it, since the sole aim was to prevent Catholic</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
21
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>workers from joining the Social Democrats. The whole movement, in
|
|
Britain, America, and Germany, rather reminds us of the clergymen
|
|
who try to keep their young men and girls from wicked dance-halls
|
|
by arranging chaste dances or ping-pong games, with non-alcoholic
|
|
refreshments, in the parish hall.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It was more serious and more resolutely Catholic when it
|
|
spread to Austria. Its appropriation of the name Socialism was in
|
|
this case peculiarly ironical. Not only had it no sincere program
|
|
of improvement of the condition of the workers but it at first
|
|
consisted of violently anti-Socialist middle-class men, and it soon
|
|
absorbed the Conservative body of Catholics. The urban workers,
|
|
especially at Vienna, were too well read in social history to be
|
|
duped by the romantic version of the Church's attitude to Labor
|
|
that the priests offered them and, as is well known, they passed
|
|
bodily to Socialism and in free elections won complete power over
|
|
Vienna and a few other towns year after year. It was particularly
|
|
exasperating for the Church because the Austrian workers were so
|
|
well behaved that it was in this case impossible to fabricate
|
|
stories of "Red atrocities." I spent a week amongst them at the
|
|
time when the depression and the mutilation of the country by
|
|
Versailles had brought upon Vienna such economic stringency that,
|
|
police-officials assured me, the patience of the workers was
|
|
strained to breaking point. I saw 10000 armed police drawn across
|
|
a short section of the Ring between the rich inner city and an
|
|
industrial suburb. But not a clash occurred, though I verified that
|
|
half the workers suffered grave privation.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It was therefore the policy of the church to hold the ignorant
|
|
and priest-ridden agricultural workers, which would ensure its
|
|
control of the national government and so give it, in case of need,
|
|
power over the Socialist municipal governments. The title
|
|
"Socialist" became farcical when the Catholic nobles and land-owners were enlisted in the party and their influence over the
|
|
rural population secured, so we need not pay any attention to the
|
|
few ameliorative measures, such as agricultural cooperatives, which
|
|
they passed. But the story, as it developed, is so characteristic
|
|
of Vatican strategy that it is vitally relevant to the point we
|
|
are. considering.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> In the stress of the terrible experiences of 1918 and 1919 the
|
|
so-called Christian Socialists cooperated amiably with the Social
|
|
Democrats in reconstituting the beggared Austrian state on a
|
|
democratic basis, and then for a time they became, with this
|
|
immense rural backing, the chief party in the country. It was led
|
|
by a clerical professor, Seipel, whose position was much the same
|
|
as that of Dr. Ryan in the American Church. But with the capture of
|
|
the national government by the party it suited the Vatican to
|
|
forget that churchmen must not interfere in polities -- as a matter
|
|
of fact the Church never sacrifices a single opportunity to put a
|
|
priest at the head of a political party -- and Selpel became
|
|
Chancellor of the Austrian Republic and brought his party back to
|
|
the old bitter hostility to the Social Democrats.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The situation that immediately ensued was falsely represented,
|
|
as all Socialist constructive work was in the world-press and by
|
|
the Church, but historians of the period have made it clear. While
|
|
the Popes were blandly explaining that they opposed Socialism </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
22
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>because it mould not work and they therefore acted in the interest
|
|
of the race Austria presented the spectacle of a bankrupt and
|
|
totally inefficient national Catholic government, under a priest,
|
|
kept alive by loans from the League of Nations -- or subsidies from
|
|
the power which equally dreaded the success of the Socialists --
|
|
while Vienna, under its Socialist administration and refused any
|
|
share in the international loans to the country, did such splendid
|
|
work for the people (especially in education and re-housing) that
|
|
an editorial in a Liberal London paper, the News-Chronicle
|
|
(February 12. 1935) pronounced it "as close to the ideal Platonic
|
|
Republic as the world has ever seen." I may recall that the present
|
|
Pope, who represented the Vatican in Germany for 12 years, was
|
|
familiar with all this, yet in the encyclical Quadragesimo anno,
|
|
which he issued in the name of the late Pope, he dwelt on the
|
|
futility and danger to civilization of Socialism in the usual
|
|
Catholic manner.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Rome has only one effective answer in such cases, violence,
|
|
and in an earlier booklet of the past series I told what happened.
|
|
The Christian Socialist government, led by the priest-ridden and
|
|
piously unscrupulous Dollfuss, allied itself with the Fascists and
|
|
destroyed Social Democracy. It was the time when Hitler was
|
|
supposed to leave Austria in Mussolini's sphere of influence, and
|
|
the Papal encyclical of 1931 ordered Catholics, in effect, to adopt
|
|
the corporative state. As Hitler made public his real plans and his
|
|
growing power the Austrian Catholics split, many joining the Nazi
|
|
Greater Germany movement; and, when the triumph of the Nazis was
|
|
put beyond question the head of the Austrian Church, Cardinal
|
|
Innitzer, threw off the mask and delivered the country to the Beast
|
|
of Berchtesgaden. The long, and heroic struggle of the Austrian
|
|
workers was over. They passed under the vile tyranny of the Pope's
|
|
ideal corporative state and the Gestapo.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Not less instructive is the development in Italy. Socialism
|
|
began to grow rapidly in that country in the last decade of the
|
|
19th Century. The situation here was peculiar because the Popes
|
|
had, since the Italian government had taken over the Papal States,
|
|
forbidden Catholics to take any part in national politicks. Leo
|
|
XIII had permitted them to enter municipal Polities and in 1905 the
|
|
sagacious Vatican was forced to acknowledge its blunder and remove
|
|
the ban altogether. Leo had, we saw, sourly ordered Italian
|
|
Catholics in 1902 to drop all concern about the living wage and
|
|
industrial betterment and concentrate on the recovery of the
|
|
Temporal Power. The removal of the political ban reopened the
|
|
question of social activity, and a People's Party, a variant of
|
|
Christian Socialism, was established. Led by the priest Murri, it
|
|
was violently anti-Socialist -- see his work Battaglie d'Oggi --
|
|
but it appealed to the people against a middle class which Murri
|
|
not unfairly represented as solidly opposed to the Church and had
|
|
to make increasing concessions to the demands for justice to the
|
|
workers. But Murri, though secretary to a cardinal, went on to
|
|
write in scathing terms about the higher Roman clergy themselves
|
|
and was excommunicated.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The rapid advance of Socialism and Communism after the war
|
|
compelled the Vatican to reconsider its attitude and permit a new
|
|
extension of the Popular Party, or the Catholic Union of the People
|
|
of Italy. Women now had the franchise in Italy, and with their aid </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
23
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>the union might provide a political counterpoise to Socialism, It
|
|
could do this only by making concessions to the reform-program, and
|
|
under a new priest-leader, Luigi Sturzo, it became less and less
|
|
ecclesiastical and more exigent in its demands for the workers.
|
|
Then came the rise of Fascism and the spirited fight of the
|
|
Fascists against the Socialists and Communists. Large numbers of
|
|
the Catholic party joined the Fascists -- one of them was in
|
|
Mussolini's first cabinet -- since they understood that the
|
|
Church's primary object was the destruction of Socialism, and
|
|
helped to put the Duce on the throne. The Vatican followed its
|
|
usual policy of having representatives in both camps as long as the
|
|
issue was doubtful.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Seldes describes the situation in his work 'The Vatican,'
|
|
which is so lenient to Rome that I at first mistook its author for
|
|
a Catholic. In 1922 and 1923 the Catholic peasants of the Union
|
|
cracked Fascist skulls even more than the Socialists and Communists
|
|
did in the daily fights. The struggle continued as fiercely as ever
|
|
although Mussolini seized power in 1922. We are again reminded of
|
|
the real usurpation of power by Mussolini and Hitler who never won
|
|
more than a minority of the people in free elections. Fascism in
|
|
Italy was far outnumbered by the Catholic, Liberal, Socialist, and
|
|
Communist opposition. And we are equally reminded of the evil
|
|
wrought by the Vatican, Mussolini sent envoys to it with a promise
|
|
to make concessions to the Church if the Pope would condemn the
|
|
Popular Party. Alternatively he threatened Church property if the
|
|
Pope did not. So in June 1923 the Pope acted. Sturzo resigned his
|
|
leadership of the Party on the ground that priests must not
|
|
interfere in politics and retired to a monastery. The Party lost
|
|
ground, and at the final reconciliation of Mussolini with the
|
|
Church and his rich reward of it for its services it was entirely
|
|
sacrificed. The workers of Italy, who had fought for their rights
|
|
for 140 years and sacrificed hundreds of thousands of lives passed,
|
|
with the Pope's solemn blessing, into the ignoble slavery of the
|
|
Corporative State.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It will now be apparent why, in spite of the tragic features
|
|
of the story, I speak of the Comedy of Christian Socialism. or
|
|
prevent its growth by luring workers to stay at a half-way house in
|
|
that direction, and in most forms it was bitterly opposed to
|
|
Socialism. This is so far acknowledged that in most forms it
|
|
avoided the title Socialist and preferred Social Union or Christian
|
|
Democracy; but if any reader is inclined to suggest on that account
|
|
that I have no right to include these Catholic and Protestant
|
|
movements under the title Christian Socialism let him consult, for
|
|
instance, so authoritative a work as The Encyclopedia of the Social
|
|
Sciences.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> In speaking of comedy, however, I am thinking of the policy of
|
|
the Vatican in its occasional use of the movement. Pope Leo XIII
|
|
discovers in the twentieth year of his pontificate that Liberalism
|
|
has ruined the excellent status of the workers which his Church had
|
|
secured. That is comic enough, as I explained it is still more
|
|
ridiculous in the eye of any serious student of such matters
|
|
because he knows that as long as the mass of the workers were
|
|
uneducated it was mainly left to middle-class Liberals to win the
|
|
first installments of justice for them. Even Socialist writers </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
24
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>often call the middle half of the 19th Century the Age of the
|
|
Benevolent Bourgeois. Irony apart, not only were great Socialist
|
|
pioneers like Marx, Engels, and Lasalle, middle-class men but there
|
|
is a very honorable list of Liberals in the fight -- the fight
|
|
against the Conservatives and the Churches -- to liberate the
|
|
workers from their medieval bondage. In England for instance, it
|
|
was middle-class Liberals like Owen, Place, Bentham, Brougham, etc.
|
|
-- who won education, shorter hours, and less ghastly working
|
|
conditions for them.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> It was the rise of Socialism and the threat to private
|
|
enterprise which caused the Liberals to raise the cry (as
|
|
shibboleth) that we must have "evolution not revolution" and
|
|
propose reform by installments. In other words, they invented the
|
|
program of moderate industrial reforms -- a living wage, shorter
|
|
hours, factory and workshop inspection, weekly rest and occasional
|
|
holidays, etc. -- which the Christian Socialists took over. What is
|
|
more amusing is that it was just this program which the Pope took
|
|
over from the Liberals, whom he heavily censured for their
|
|
wickedness to the workers, in 1891. The three points of his Charter
|
|
were commonplaces of Liberal literature by that time, and the
|
|
better Liberals had got beyond them and were demanding or favoring
|
|
schemes of insurance, pensions, and so on.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> But the ignorance of the literature of the subject displayed
|
|
in these Papal Encyclicals is well known to students of these
|
|
matters. What is of more interest here is that American Catholic
|
|
apologists are still substantially in the stage of Leo XIII and
|
|
still quote his encyclical as a grand revolutionary utterance. The
|
|
whole "social welfare" movement of the American Papal Church has
|
|
the same aim as Leo had, to distract men from Socialism or to keep
|
|
up the working-class membership of the Church, and, though some of
|
|
its writers go farther than others, if there is anything like an
|
|
agreed body of teaching endorsed by the bishops it certainly does
|
|
not go beyond advanced Liberalism. It is now quite common for
|
|
writers who are Liberals even in the political sense to say that
|
|
the age of Lassez-faire is over and the state must interfere in the
|
|
interest of the workers, but Popes and American Catholic writers on
|
|
social questions talk as if they had not noticed the developments
|
|
of the last quarter of a century.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The broad plea of the apologists, when they are confronting
|
|
the workers and not preaching to their richer congregations, is
|
|
that the Church in its wisdom has established the truth midway,
|
|
between Liberalism and Socialism. I need not speak here of
|
|
Coughlin, who does not represent the Church and will be disowned
|
|
whenever it becomes expedient. The general position is that
|
|
Liberalism does not go far enough while Socialism goes too far. It
|
|
enhances the comic aspect of the situation if you examine the
|
|
grounds on which they oppose Socialism. With a dry medieval
|
|
pedantry that must equally amuse the professor of ethics and the
|
|
professor of economics they prove by elaborate arguments that the
|
|
right of private ownership is asserted by "natural moral law," of
|
|
which God is the author, so Socialists who deny it are sinful or
|
|
immoral. It is like chewing sawdust and has as much relation to the
|
|
actual problems of life as have arguments for a flat earth. You
|
|
would hardly expect verbal camouflage of this sort to hide even
|
|
from a sophomore the fact that Rome really hates Socialism because </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
25
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>freethinking generally accompanies it and because the use of the
|
|
Church's international machinery to check the growth of Socialism
|
|
keeps it in alliance with the rich, the privileged and the
|
|
powerful. The Catholic position never was between Liberalism and
|
|
Socialism, but Rome found it expedient to let bodies of Catholics
|
|
take up a position between Liberalism and complete reaction.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The irony is now complete. The Church swings back to reaction
|
|
under the impression that it is going to recover world-power and
|
|
leaves the American apologists looking very foolish as they still
|
|
chant the praises of the Papal Charters of Labor. It was possible
|
|
to conceal from the public the way in which Leo XIII emphatically
|
|
withdrew his Charter of the Rights of the Workers. This was done in
|
|
a letter to the bishops and priests of Italy, and the foreign
|
|
press, which had been enthusiastic about Leo's "revolutionary"
|
|
utterance in 1891, would offend Catholics if it noticed the
|
|
retraction of 1902. The same attempt was made to keep the American
|
|
(and British) public unaware of the really revolutionary encyclical
|
|
of 1931, in which Catholic workers are told that they must join
|
|
syndicates or corporations which are overshadowed by corporations
|
|
of the employers and drastically subject to the state, which will
|
|
not permit strikes. I have read French and German translations of
|
|
this encyclical but found none in English, though the very idea of
|
|
an encyclical is that it is addressed to all nations and must be
|
|
translated into all their languages.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The wheel has turned full circle. For fourteen centuries the
|
|
Church was on the side of the masters and had nothing to say about
|
|
the pitiful condition of the workers. Owing to the victory of
|
|
reaction over the French Revolution this lasted until the middle of
|
|
the 19th Century. Some of the Churches then began to propose half-measures to conciliate the workers, but the Church of Rome was the
|
|
last to patronize even these half measures. At the end of the last
|
|
century, however, the Vatican began to wonder whether the
|
|
emancipation of the workers was not, like democracy, likely to be
|
|
permanent and it began to trim in such countries as it thought this
|
|
profitable. The monstrous progress of reaction and decay of
|
|
idealism in the last ten years have given it courage and it boldly
|
|
enjoins the Catholic world to run up the pirate-flag of the Fascist
|
|
state. One Catholic country after another obeys, but in America the
|
|
slick apologists conceal the Papal orders and continue to drone
|
|
that the Roman Church is, and always was, the angel with a flaming
|
|
sword that keeps the greedy and the exploiter out of their medieval
|
|
paradise.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Chapter V</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> THE CHURCHES AND RACIAL INJUSTICE</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Some day the students of the sociology-class will puzzle over
|
|
this controversy of our time as to who helped or who did not help
|
|
workers. They will read that before the end of the 19th Century
|
|
manhood suffrage or complete democracy was established nearly
|
|
everywhere, and that the workers were something like four-fifths of
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the adult voting males. Why need anybody help them? You know the
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answer. Broadly, they helped themselves. The great advance of
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social and labor legislation, of municipal services, etc., from </p>
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<p> Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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26
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THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
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<p>1890 onward was due to their pressure. What Leo XIII said had no
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more influence on the development than Emerson's essays and less
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than Maeterlinck's essays. It was not until the Popes returned to
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reaction that they had a real influence on contemporary life.</p>
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<p> The conception of the Pope as a beneficent and highly
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effective moral power protecting "be weak from injustice is on a
|
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level with the medieval myth of the knight-errant. I have read
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large numbers of medieval chronicles and never came across the
|
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figure of a knight-errant, a knight who even occasionally set out
|
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from the castle to rescue the distressed and smite the cartiff.
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Naturally it would be a left-handed compliment to their religion if
|
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we had to say that one in a hundred of them did this, but all real
|
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authorities on the Middle Ages seem to have found, like myself,
|
|
that the figure is a sheer myth largely founded on the silly
|
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Spanish fiction, which Cervantes caricatures in Don Quixote. As
|
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Prof. Medley says in Traills' Social England, if a knight met a
|
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maid unprotected on the road he raped her; and I differ from the
|
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learned professor only in this that according to all the leading
|
|
authorities on woman in the Middle Ages she is not likely to have
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|
waited to be raped. In fact, if I were malicious I would press
|
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further the parallel of the knight errant and the Pope. According
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|
to all the historians of the time the knight spent his days roaming
|
|
the land, not to give help, but to acquire wealth in such ways. ...
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But I will not be tempted to any unkind things of the Church to
|
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which I once belonged and, stodgy as the work may be, let us return
|
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to the statement of facts.</p>
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<p> And just to complete the record we may glance at other victims
|
|
of medieval oppression and exploitation who, being minorities,
|
|
really needed a champion after the workers had become strong. This
|
|
should not apply to women seeing that they are half the adult-race,
|
|
but it does; and they had the greater claim on the assistance of
|
|
the Roman Church from the fact that they have been through all the
|
|
modern age of increasing skepticism more loyal and more generous to
|
|
the priests than the men. It would seem too big a subject to engage
|
|
upon at the tall-end of a booklet but we, may simplify it. A
|
|
chapter in my How Freethinkers made Notable Contributions to
|
|
Civilization sketches the fight against injustice to woman, which
|
|
mean's far more than the refusal of political rights, and shows
|
|
that in America the leaders -- F. D'Arusmont, L. Mott, the Grimkes,
|
|
A. Kelly, L. Coleman, M.J. Gage, L.M. Child. E. Rose, H. Gardener,
|
|
C.C. Stanton, and S.B. Anthony were for the most part Deists (in
|
|
the early stage) or Atheists, and that in any case there was not a
|
|
Catholic amongst them. Priests jeered at their crusade. It was the
|
|
same in England and Europe generally. I enlisted in the fight,
|
|
lecturing and writing for the women, about 1900, and in the whole
|
|
20 years never heard of a priest or even a prominent Catholic woman
|
|
who helped. Once, near the end I was invited to address in London
|
|
the Irish (presumably Catholic) Women's Suffrage Society. I got no
|
|
audience and was told that anyway it would not have meant more than
|
|
half a dozen Catholic girls. I trust I am not misinformed but I was
|
|
told that the one nominally Catholic woman in the movement, Mrs.
|
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Despard, had left the Church.</p>
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<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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27
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.
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THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
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<p> Let us try the Jews. I read lately that there is a sort of
|
|
circus-group going about America consisting of a Catholic priest,
|
|
a Protestant minister, and a Jewish rabbi telling from a common
|
|
platform how Christian's and Jews love each other. Adversity has
|
|
made stranger bedfellows than this holy trinity. It is just a sign
|
|
of a wintry age, for Churches. Jews, like the workers, have had to
|
|
fight themselves for emancipation from the Christian tyranny and
|
|
exploitation which lasted from the Dark Age to our own time, and
|
|
which the Pope's allies are restoring. There is a persistent
|
|
statement in Catholic literature that the knights-errant of the
|
|
Vatican always protected the Jews. From whom? Certainly not from
|
|
the Moslem, who were most friendly with them, and not, until this
|
|
perversity of human nature which we call Nazism began from the
|
|
modern skeptical states in which some Jews have grown rich and
|
|
powerful. I looked up the learned Catholic Encyclopedia and In
|
|
support of this statement of the apologists it quoted five Popes.
|
|
Look up what the Jews have to say about those five "champions" of
|
|
their race in Graetz's standard 'History of the Jews.' He shows
|
|
that four of the five made great financial profit out of the Jews
|
|
and the fifth was harsh and cruel to them but protested against the
|
|
infamous popular massacres of them.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> I have a long essay on Anti-Semitism in Christian times in No.
|
|
2 of 'The Appeal to Reason Library.' To sum it in a few lines, the
|
|
Jews were from the 5th to the 11th Century despised and badly
|
|
treated in Christian countries as the murderers of Christ, while in
|
|
Arab Spain, Sicily, and Persia they had complete freedom, except
|
|
when fanatics got power, and made equal contribution with the Arabs
|
|
to the culture and prosperity of the great civilization. From 1100
|
|
to 1500 they suffered such savage treatment in Christian countries
|
|
that the number of victims of massacres is estimated to exceed a
|
|
million. The great oracle of the Middle Ages, the Thomas Aquinas
|
|
who is now said to have been so modern in sentiment -- we will
|
|
consider that in the next book -- instructed, a Christian princess
|
|
that they were the "slaves" of Christians and it was not unjust to
|
|
seize their wealth. The Reformation brought some improvement, but
|
|
it was the growing skepticism of countries like England, Holland,
|
|
and France that inspired a more humane attitude. In short the
|
|
Church of Rome had idly contemplated a monstrous cruel racial
|
|
injustice for 1400 years and has never given a clear moral lead to
|
|
its followers, as is amply proved by the birth of modern Anti-Semitism in Catholic Austria and the recurrence of pogroms in other
|
|
Catholic countries. It has been said in reference, to the collapse
|
|
of civilization in the Dark Age: "The Popes finished what the Huns
|
|
had begun." We may say of the sufferings of the Jews in the last
|
|
ten years: The Huns finished what the Popes began.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Finally, there is the question of the colored folk in America.
|
|
We have here a problem the solution of which requires a delicate
|
|
balance of social sagacity and moral sentiment. When, during the
|
|
fifty years that the Roman Church in America has claimed to be a
|
|
moral power that could contribute materially, in fact uniquely, to
|
|
the national guidance have its leaders made a clear and categorical
|
|
pronouncement on the Negro question, on which whole libraries were
|
|
written? Dubois and, other spokesmen of the colored Americans have
|
|
declared that Catholics are amongst the most stubborn of their
|
|
opponents. We may surely at least say that Catholics as a body, </p>
|
|
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<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
28
|
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.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
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<p>clerical and lay, have shown and show no superior moral and
|
|
humanitarian feeling to others. They have insisted on the removal
|
|
of the colored folk from contact with them, often even in church,
|
|
just like others.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The problem of the colored population in the United States is
|
|
notoriously the sequel to one of the most monstrous racial crimes
|
|
of modern times. In that crime England came to take as active a
|
|
part as Catholic countries, but it is just to take into account the
|
|
fact that it was drawn in by the vast profit which Spain and
|
|
Portugal, the originators of the traffic in African flesh and
|
|
blood, derived from it. This brought the question of black slavery
|
|
well within the sphere of Rome's moral jurisdiction and kept it
|
|
there even after Britain and America had emancipated the slaves.
|
|
Where will you find the luminous wisdom, the austere and
|
|
uncompromising idealism, of the Papacy on that subject? It emerges
|
|
clearly from all the controversy on the subject that the crime had
|
|
two ecclesiastical roots apart from the greed of Spanish and
|
|
Portuguese traders. The clergy decided that since the conversion of
|
|
the Amer-indian's was checked by the imposition of forced labor it
|
|
was expedient (for the good of the Church) to employ Africans, and
|
|
that the cruelty and misery which this involved for the Africans
|
|
was compensated by the fact that it brought them into the Church
|
|
outside of which -- as the Church then taught -- there was no
|
|
salvation.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> A point which is never made in the endless controversy on this
|
|
subject -- at least I have never found it mentioned except by the
|
|
Rev. Dr. Agate in the Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics -- is
|
|
that slavery was the more easily imposed upon the Africans because
|
|
the Church had never condemned it. Most writers on the subject
|
|
imagine a long interval between what they call ancient slavery and,
|
|
the beginning of the African slave-trade; some, in fact many,
|
|
suppose that, through the efforts of the Church of Rome, slavery
|
|
had died with the pagan Romans. There was, on the contrary, as Dr.
|
|
Agate shows, a continuous traffic in slaves. It was one of the
|
|
chief industries, in the west of England (in Irish slaves) in the
|
|
10th Century, and it flourished in north Italy until the middle of
|
|
the 15th Century, when the Turks destroyed the commerce of the
|
|
Venetians and the Genoese. The heirs of these, the Spanish and
|
|
Portuguese, merely transferred the traffic to the Atlantic. No
|
|
Papal or theological pronouncement forbade them. Thomas Aquinas
|
|
had, like Augustine, put the seal of Catholic scholarship upon it.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> As to the abolition of the traffic we never find the Roman
|
|
Church mentioned amongst the claimants of merit. It was not even a
|
|
moral problem in Catholic lands until the French revolutionaries,
|
|
whom the Pope anathematized, condemned it in their colonies. The
|
|
moral guide of the universe failed to see what a Protestant
|
|
apologist has called "the blackest crime of modern times." It was
|
|
only in the light of a skeptical age that the Popes realized that
|
|
the brotherhood of man implied that all men, white, black, and
|
|
yellow, Are brothers and had a right to freedom and a decent life.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> We might extend this inquiry over other fields. When did Rome
|
|
condemn that cruel and stultifying employment of children which
|
|
continued through Catholic ages and survives in full horror in
|
|
Catholic countries? Why is there not a word of rebuke of it in the </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
29
|
|
.
|
|
THE CHURCH THE ENEMY OF THE WORKERS</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>wonderful Charters of the Rights of Labor? The people of half of
|
|
Europe are virtually enslaved to Germany today, the whips of the
|
|
Gestapo replacing the whips of the ancient galley-slave overseers.
|
|
What has Rome said about it? Japan astonishes the world by the
|
|
savagery of its treatment of the helpless, and the Vatican enters
|
|
into closer diplomatic relations with it. But we will be content to
|
|
have made one point clear. The Vatican has never helped the workers
|
|
because its natural alliance is with the exploiters of the workers.
|
|
Its apologists plead that it must look always to "the good of the
|
|
Church." Yes, just as the managers of a corporation assign as the
|
|
first principle of all employers to work for the good of the firm
|
|
-- for its advancement in wealth and power. So it has always been;
|
|
and if the line of Papal policy has shown some strange deviations
|
|
and meanderings in the last 50 years the cause is quite clearly
|
|
seen in the development of contemporary life. For the moment it is
|
|
back on the straight line. The corporative state makes and works a
|
|
serf under the feudal tyranny of masters and pastors.</p>
|
|
|
|
<div> **** ****</div>
|
|
|
|
<p> Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
|
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
|
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
|
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
|
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
|
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
|
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
|
that America can again become what its Founders intended --</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The Free Market-Place of Ideas.</p>
|
|
|
|
<div> **** ****</div>
|
|
|
|
<p> The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
|
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
|
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
|
us, we need to give them back to America.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> **** ****
|
|
|
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|
30
|
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</p></xml> |