Steroid_Virgin
New member
Matt: I dont know where you aquired that nonsence you regurgitate as fact.. but none the less I apologize for calling you an asshole, but you are very much wrong.. Let me dispell your claims one at a time..
Matt said:
How about another one? To be in Hitler's SS, it was strongly preerred that you were Roman Catholic. It gets better. Many high ranking Nazis were smuggled out of europe after the warunder Vatican passports.
Answer:
The precise roles that the Roman Catholic Church played during the Nazi Holocaust is not known in depth. In particular activities by Pope Pius XII are not clear. As Eugenio Pacelli (1876 - 1958), he was the Vatican's envoy to Germany in the 1920's. As the Vatican's secretary of state, he negotiated a Concordat with Germany in the 1930s. This granted Roman Catholics freedom of worship. However, the Church agreed to become much less politically active. He became pope in 1939 at the start of World War II in Europe.
The pope's policy of neutrality may have been the least worse course. If he were to attack Hitler or his policies directly, then the Nazis might have retaliated. "...the Archbishop of Utrecht in July 1942 protested in a pastoral letter against the Jewish persecutions in Holland. Immediately the Nazis rounded up as many Jews and Catholic non-Aryans as possible and deported them to death camps..."
You likely have have a distorted view of Pope Pius XII because you have read Rolf Hochhuth's 1963 play, "The Deputy" in which the Pope was portrayed as coldly indifferent to the Jews.
There are a few facts that are generally accepted:
1)The phrase "righteous among nations" is a term which refers to non-Jews who helped saved Jews from the Nazis. It could be argued that Pius XII would certainly qualify for this honor, because he saved hundreds of thousands of Jews from death. One account estimates 750,000 lives saved. 7 Pinchas E. Lapide estimated 860,000.
2)Pius XII did publicly condemn racist oppression -- in his wartime Christmas messages and at other times. However, the language that he used was so vague that it did not clearly refer to Nazi atrocities.
3)Some Jewish groups, asked the Pope to remain neutral during the war so that he would be more helpful diplomatically.
4)The church did directly condemn the Nazi policy of murdering mentally and physically disabled Germans in the 1930's. The Nazi's discontinued the program for a while.
5)The Vatican hid 477 Jews during the war. Another 4,238 were hidden in church monasteries and convents.
6)The pope spoke to a few select officials in private, encouraging them to help Jewish victims.
7)In 1942, Pope Pius XII was preparing a statement condemning Nazi persecution of Jews. But he decided to not make it public because of events in the Netherlands. As noted above, Dutch bishops had protested against the exportation of Dutch Jews, with disastrous consequences.
8)"In appreciation of what Pius did for the Jews; the World Jewish Congress made a large cash gift to the Vatican in 1945; in the same year, Rabbi Herzog of Jerusalem sent a 'special blessing' to the Pope 'for his lifesaving efforts on behalf of the Jews during the Nazi occupation of Italy'; and when Pius died in 1958, Israel's Foreign Minister Golda Meir gave a him moving eulogy at the United Nations for the same reason."
If you can disprove any of the facts I stated, go right ahead..
Chew on these for a while... I'll will rebute the other swill you call arguements when I have a moment...
Matt said:
How about another one? To be in Hitler's SS, it was strongly preerred that you were Roman Catholic. It gets better. Many high ranking Nazis were smuggled out of europe after the warunder Vatican passports.
Answer:
The precise roles that the Roman Catholic Church played during the Nazi Holocaust is not known in depth. In particular activities by Pope Pius XII are not clear. As Eugenio Pacelli (1876 - 1958), he was the Vatican's envoy to Germany in the 1920's. As the Vatican's secretary of state, he negotiated a Concordat with Germany in the 1930s. This granted Roman Catholics freedom of worship. However, the Church agreed to become much less politically active. He became pope in 1939 at the start of World War II in Europe.
The pope's policy of neutrality may have been the least worse course. If he were to attack Hitler or his policies directly, then the Nazis might have retaliated. "...the Archbishop of Utrecht in July 1942 protested in a pastoral letter against the Jewish persecutions in Holland. Immediately the Nazis rounded up as many Jews and Catholic non-Aryans as possible and deported them to death camps..."
You likely have have a distorted view of Pope Pius XII because you have read Rolf Hochhuth's 1963 play, "The Deputy" in which the Pope was portrayed as coldly indifferent to the Jews.
There are a few facts that are generally accepted:
1)The phrase "righteous among nations" is a term which refers to non-Jews who helped saved Jews from the Nazis. It could be argued that Pius XII would certainly qualify for this honor, because he saved hundreds of thousands of Jews from death. One account estimates 750,000 lives saved. 7 Pinchas E. Lapide estimated 860,000.
2)Pius XII did publicly condemn racist oppression -- in his wartime Christmas messages and at other times. However, the language that he used was so vague that it did not clearly refer to Nazi atrocities.
3)Some Jewish groups, asked the Pope to remain neutral during the war so that he would be more helpful diplomatically.
4)The church did directly condemn the Nazi policy of murdering mentally and physically disabled Germans in the 1930's. The Nazi's discontinued the program for a while.
5)The Vatican hid 477 Jews during the war. Another 4,238 were hidden in church monasteries and convents.
6)The pope spoke to a few select officials in private, encouraging them to help Jewish victims.
7)In 1942, Pope Pius XII was preparing a statement condemning Nazi persecution of Jews. But he decided to not make it public because of events in the Netherlands. As noted above, Dutch bishops had protested against the exportation of Dutch Jews, with disastrous consequences.
8)"In appreciation of what Pius did for the Jews; the World Jewish Congress made a large cash gift to the Vatican in 1945; in the same year, Rabbi Herzog of Jerusalem sent a 'special blessing' to the Pope 'for his lifesaving efforts on behalf of the Jews during the Nazi occupation of Italy'; and when Pius died in 1958, Israel's Foreign Minister Golda Meir gave a him moving eulogy at the United Nations for the same reason."
If you can disprove any of the facts I stated, go right ahead..
Chew on these for a while... I'll will rebute the other swill you call arguements when I have a moment...