by Jason Horowitz from GodfreyTimes Website also HERE...
David Kertzer at the library of the American Academy in Rome, after a day of scholarly investigations inside the Vatican's archives.
Credit - Massimo Berruti for The New York Times
has spent decades excavating the Vatican's hidden history, with his work winning a Pulitzer and capturing Hollywood's attention. A new book examines Pope Pius XII's role in the Holocaust.
David Kertzer put down his cappuccino, put on his backpack and went digging for more Vatican secrets.
Moments later he cut
through a crowd lined up to see Pope
Francis, showed his credentials
to the Swiss Guards and entered the archives of the former
headquarters for the Holy Roman Inquisition.
Using the Vatican's own
archives, the soft-spoken Brown University professor and trustee at
the American Academy in Rome has become arguably the most effective
excavator of the Vatican's hidden sins, especially those leading up
to and during World War II.
That family background,
and his activism in college against the Vietnam War, imbued him with
a sense of moral outrage - tempered by a scholar's caution.
It documents the private decision-making that led Pope Pius XII to stay essentially silent about Hitler's genocide and argues that the pontiff's impact on the war is underestimated.
And not in a good way...
In 2019, Pope Francis ordered that the archives of Pius XII be opened to historians. Credit - Massimo Berruti for The New York Times
But as Francis wrestles with how forcefully to condemn a dictator, this time Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, Mr. Kertzer has unearthed some frightening evidence about,
Mr. Kertzer makes the case that Pius XII's,
The pope was also worried, the book shows, that opposing the Führer would alienate millions of German Catholics.
The book further reveals that a German prince and fervent Nazi acted as a secret back channel between Pius XII and Hitler, and that the pope's top Vatican adviser on Jewish issues urged him in a letter not to protest a Fascist order to arrest and send to concentration camps most of Italy's Jews.
Defenders of Pius XII, whose case for sainthood is still being evaluated, have long argued that he worked behind the scenes to help Jews, and that anti-Catholic enemies have sought to stain the institution by sullying the pontiff.
Mr. Hesemann, who is also
the author of a new book about the wartime pope based on the Vatican
archives, argued that the Vatican, while following its tradition of
neutrality, worked to hide Jews in convents and distribute fake
baptism certificates.
But the urge to protect Pius's reputation, according to Mr. Kertzer, reflects a more general refusal by Italy - and apologists in the Vatican - to come to terms with their complicity in the Second World War, the Holocaust and the murder of Rome's Jews.
of Rome's former Jewish ghetto bearing the names and dates of the deportation of some of the city's Jews during World War II.
Credit
- Massimo Berruti for The New York Times
His book shows that Pius XII's top aides only interceded with the German ambassador to free "non-Aryan Catholics."
In a nearby street, Mr. Kertzer bent down by one of the brass cobblestones memorializing the victims.
Above him loomed the Tempio Maggiore, the Great Synagogue of Rome.
When the U.S. Fifth Army
reached Rome, Mr. Kertzer's father, Lt. Morris Kertzer, a
Canadian-born rabbi, was with them and officiated at the synagogue.
The rabbi positioned the soldier at his side, and when the services started, a cry broke out and the G.I.'s mother rushed up to embrace her son.
A year before Mr. Kertzer's birth in 1948, his parents took in a teenage survivor of Auschwitz.
When footage of Nazi
soldiers appeared on television, Mr. Kertzer and his older sister,
Ruth, would leap to switch the set off to protect their foster
sister, Eva.
As part of the normalizing effort, a young Mr. Kertzer appeared on Jack Paar's "Tonight Show," singing prayers at the family's Passover Seder.
before digging into the Vatican archives.
Credit
- Massimo Berruti for The New York Times
He stayed in school and
became enamored with anthropology and with Susan Dana, a religion
major from Maine.
After earning his Ph.D.,
positions at Bowdoin and Brown followed, as did two children, a
lifelong connection to Italy and a growing familiarity with Italian,
and then by chance, Vatican archives...
The story represented
what Mr. Kertzer called "a dual career shift," toward writing for a
general audience and about Jewish themes.
It caught the eye of his friend, the playwright Tony Kushner, who later gave it to Steven Spielberg, who told Mr. Kertzer he wanted to make it into a movie.
Mark Rylance came on board to play Pius IX. Mr. Kushner wrote the screenplay.
All they needed was a boy to play Edgardo.
Credit
- Massimo Berruti for The New York Times
He emerged from the archives to publish "The Pope Against the Jews," about the church's role in the rise of modern antisemitism.
In 2014, he published "The
Pope and Mussolini," examining Pius XI's role in the rise
of fascism and the antisemitic Racial Laws of 1938. It won the
Pulitzer Prize.
After spending a recent morning in the archives, Mr. Kertzer emerged with a boyish grin.
He had just discovered that even during the German occupation of Rome, Pope Pius XII was still primarily focused on the dangers of Communism.
The pope's top cardinals advised him,
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