Archbishop Antonio Franco, the Vatican’s nuncio in Israel, has announced that he will attend the annual Holocaust Memorial day event at Yad Vashem, Israel’s main Holocaust museum, after the museum indicated it is willing to reconsider a caption of Pope Pius XII that Franco found offensive.
Avner Shalev, President of Yad Vashem, sent a letter to Franco late in the week stating that the museum will “reconsider the way in which Pius XII is presented.” In response, Franco indicated that he will be present for the events Sunday evening.
“Because my action was not intended to disassociate myself from the celebrations, but to call attention to the way in which the pope was presented … my goal has been reached,” Franco said. “I don’t have any reason to keep this tension open” and therefore “I will take part in the ceremonies.”
Earlier this week, news broke in Israel that Franco had told Yad Vashem he would not participate in the annual commemoration of the Shoah due to a caption of Pope Pius XII which catalogs various alleged silences and omissions of the wartime pope with regard to Nazi attacks on Jews. Both the previous nuncio in Israel, Archbishop Pietro Sambi, and Franco had complained about the caption to Yad Vashem.
…Among the statements in the caption, which has been on display at Yad Vashem since 2005, are the following:
Pius XII’s reaction toward the killing of Jews during the period of the Holocaust is controversial. In 1933, as the Vatican Secretary of State, in order to maintain the rights of the Church in Germany, he signed a Concordat with the Nazi regime even at the price of recognizing the racist Nazi regime. When he was elected Pope in 1939, he put aside an encyclical against racism and anti-Semitism prepared by his predecessor…. Although reports about the assassination of Jews reached the Vatican, the Pope did not protest either by speaking out or in writing. … In December of 1942, he did not participate in the condemnation by members of the Allies regarding the killing of Jews. Even when the Jews were being deported from Rome to Auschwitz, the Pope did not intervene. … He maintained a neutral position except toward the end of the war when he appealed on behalf of the government of Hungary and of Slovakia. His silence and the absence of directives obliged the clergy in Europe to decide independently how they should behave toward the persecuted Jews.
Even some Jewish leaders critical of Franco’s boycott acknowledged that the caption may be one-sided.
Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League, told NCR that the caption is "too judgmental, too conclusory" based on what is presently known, calling it "inappropriate" and saying, "I can understand the nuncio’s displeasure." He insisted, however, that this does not justify refusing to attend the memorial, calling Franco’s planned absence "an insult to the victims."
In a previous story from last year.
In a remarkable historical find, testimony has emerged revealing that, in 1941, Pope Pius XII received a German Jewish visitor at the Vatican who was seeking help for certain Jews who were being held in an Italian internment camp. After welcoming the young man and promising him help, Pius told him not once but twice–in emotional language, in front of a large group that included German soldiers–"Be proud to be a Jew!"
The amazing testimony, written as a first-hand account by an anonymous Jewish author in wartime Palestine, originally appeared on April 28, 1944 in The Palestine Post (now, The Jerusalem Post), the most influential Jewish publication in the world at that time.
According to longtime Inside the Vatican contributor William Doino, who discovered the testimony in an archive, maintained by Tel Aviv University, "the testimony has apparently been forgotten, because, as far as I know, no leading Holocaust authority or biographer of Pius XII has ever cited it."
3 comments
Poor Pius XII, nobody believes the truth about his heroic efforts to save Jews even if you put fact by fact on index cards (which would equal about 800,000 index cards for each Jew he saved during WWII)
I really need to write my novel that is about him so that all those Dan Brown readers get a dose of the truth about the Church etc. etc.
Well good on Abe Foxman for that remark about one-sidedness and understanding the nuncio’s annoyance. Foxman is usually a hostility-maximizer where Christians are concerned. Nice to see him take a break; may it be the first of many.
My parents kept in my room that beautiful biography on Pius XII, “Crown of Glory: The Life of Pope Pius XII” by Alden Hatch and Seamus Walshe, which leaves no doubt as to his heroism in saving Jews during WWII