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Pope Pius XII
Pope Pius XII
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Pope Pius XII (Italian: Pio XII; born Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli;[b] 2 March 1876 – 9 October 1958) was head of the Catholic Church, Primate of Italy, and sovereign of the Vatican City from 2 March 1939 until his death on 9 October 1958. He is the most recent pope to take the pontifical name "Pius".

Key Information

The papacy of Pius XII was long, even by modern standards; it lasted almost 20 years, and spanned a consequential fifth of the 20th century. Pius was a diplomat pope during the destruction wrought by the Second World War, the recovery and rebuilding which followed, the beginning of the Cold War, and the early building of a new international geopolitical order, which aimed to protect human rights and maintain global peace through the establishment of international rules and institutions (such as the United Nations). Born, raised, educated, ordained, and resident for most of his life in Rome, his work in the Roman Curia—as a priest, then bishop, then cardinal—was extensive. He served as secretary of the Vatican's diplomatic Department of Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs, papal nuncio to Germany, Camerlengo of the Apostolic Chamber, and Cardinal Secretary of State for the Holy See, in which capacity he worked to conclude treaties with various European and Latin American nations, including the Reichskonkordat treaty with Nazi Germany.[1]

While the Vatican was officially neutral during the Second World War, the Reichskonkordat and Pius' leadership of the Catholic Church during the war remain the subject of controversy—including allegations of public silence and inaction concerning the fate of the Jews.[2] Pius employed diplomacy to aid the victims of the Nazis during the war and, by directing the church to provide discreet aid to Jews and others, saved thousands of lives.[3][4] Pius maintained links to the German resistance, and shared intelligence with the Allies. His strong public condemnation of genocide was considered inadequate by the Allied Powers, while the Nazis viewed him as an Allied sympathizer who had dishonoured his policy of Vatican neutrality.[5]

During his papacy, the Catholic Church issued the Decree against Communism, declaring that Catholics who profess the atheistic and materialist doctrines of communism are to be excommunicated as apostates from the Christian faith. The church experienced severe persecution and mass deportations of Catholic clergy in the Eastern Bloc. He explicitly invoked ex cathedra papal infallibility with the dogma of the Assumption of Mary in his Apostolic constitution Munificentissimus Deus.[6] His forty-one encyclicals include Mystici Corporis Christi, on the Church as the Mystical Body of Christ; Mediator Dei on liturgy reform; and Humani generis, in which he instructed theologians to adhere to episcopal teaching and allowed that the human body might have evolved from earlier forms. He removed, by additional international cardinal appointments, the Italian majority in the College of Cardinals in 1946.

After he died in 1958, Pope Pius XII was succeeded by John XXIII. In the process towards sainthood, his cause for canonization was opened on 18 November 1965 by Paul VI during the final session of the Second Vatican Council. He was made a Servant of God (the first threshold step towards sainthood) by John Paul II in 1990, and Benedict XVI declared Pius XII Venerable (the second step) on 19 December 2009.[7]

Early life

[edit]
Eugenio Pacelli at the age of six in 1882

Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli was born on the second day of Lent, 2 March 1876, in Rome into an upper-class family of intense Catholic piety with a history of ties to the papacy (the "Black Nobility"). His parents were Filippo Pacelli [it] (1837–1916) and Virginia (née Graziosi) Pacelli (1844–1920). His grandfather Marcantonio Pacelli [it] had been Under-Secretary in the Papal Ministry of Finances[8] and then Secretary of the Interior under Pope Pius IX from 1851 to 1870 and helped found the Vatican's newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano in 1861.[9][10] His cousin, Ernesto Pacelli, was a key financial advisor to Pope Leo XIII; his father, Filippo Pacelli, a Franciscan tertiary,[11] was the dean of the Roman Rota; and his brother, Francesco Pacelli, became a lay canon lawyer and the legal advisor to Pope Pius XI, in which role he negotiated the Lateran Treaty in 1929 with Benito Mussolini, bringing an end to the Roman Question.

Together with his brother Francesco (1872–1935) and his two sisters, Giuseppina (1874–1955) and Elisabetta (1880–1970),[12] he grew up in the Parione district in the centre of Rome. Soon after the family had moved to Via Vetrina in 1880, he began school at the convent of the French Sisters of Divine Providence in the Piazza Fiammetta. The family worshipped at Chiesa Nuova. Eugenio and the other children made their First Communion at this church and Eugenio served there as an altar boy from 1886. In 1886, he also was sent to the private school of Professor Giuseppe Marchi, close to the Piazza Venezia.[13] In 1891 Pacelli's father sent Eugenio to the Ennio Quirino Visconti Liceo Ginnasio, a state school situated in what had been the Collegio Romano, the premier Jesuit university in Rome.

In 1894, aged 18, Pacelli began his theology studies at Rome's oldest seminary, the Almo Collegio Capranica,[14] and in November of the same year, registered to take a philosophy course at the Jesuit Pontifical Gregorian University and theology at the Pontifical Roman Athenaeum S. Apollinare. He was also enrolled at the State University, La Sapienza where he studied modern languages and history. At the end of the first academic year however, in the summer of 1895, he dropped out of both the Capranica and the Gregorian University. According to his sister Elisabetta, the food at the Capranica was to blame.[15] Having received a special dispensation he continued his studies from home and so spent most of his seminary years as an external student. In 1899, he completed his education in Sacred Theology with a doctoral degree awarded on the basis of a short dissertation and an oral examination in Latin.[16]

Church career

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Priest and monsignor

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Pacelli on the day of his ordination: 2 April 1899

While all other candidates from the Rome diocese were ordained in the Basilica of Saint John Lateran,[17] Pacelli was ordained a priest on Easter Sunday, 2 April 1899, alone in the private chapel of a family friend the Vicegerent of Rome, Francesco di Paola Cassetta. Shortly after ordination he began postgraduate studies in canon law at Sant'Apollinaire. He received his first assignment as a curate at Chiesa Nuova.[18] In 1901, he entered the Congregation for Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs, a sub-office of the Vatican Secretariat of State.[19]

Pietro Gasparri, the recently appointed undersecretary at the Department of Extraordinary Affairs, had underscored his proposal to Pacelli to work in the "Vatican's equivalent of the Foreign office" by highlighting the "necessity of defending the Church from the onslaughts of secularism and liberalism throughout Europe".[20] Pacelli became an apprendista, an apprentice, in Gasparri's department. In January 1901 he was also chosen, by Pope Leo XIII himself, according to an official account, to deliver condolences on behalf of the Vatican to King Edward VII of the United Kingdom after the death of Queen Victoria.[21]

The Serbian Concordat, 24 June 1914. Present for the Vatican were Cardinal Merry del Val and next to him, Pacelli.

By 1904 Pacelli received his doctorate. The theme of his thesis was the nature of concordats and the function of canon law when a concordat falls into abeyance. Promoted to the position of minutante, he prepared digests of reports that had been sent to the Secretariat from all over the world and in the same year became a papal chamberlain. In 1905 he received the title domestic prelate.[18] From 1904 until 1916, he assisted Cardinal Pietro Gasparri in his codification of canon law with the Department of Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs.[22] According to John Cornwell "the text, together with the Anti-Modernist Oath, became the means by which the Holy See was to establish and sustain the new, unequal, and unprecedented power relationship that had arisen between the papacy and the Church".[23]

In 1908, Pacelli served as a Vatican representative on the International Eucharistic Congress, accompanying Rafael Merry del Val[24] to London,[21] where he met Winston Churchill.[25] In 1911, he represented the Holy See at the coronation of George V and Mary.[22] Pacelli became the under-secretary in 1911, adjunct-secretary in 1912 (a position he received under Pope Pius X and retained under Pope Benedict XV), and secretary of the Department of Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs in February 1914.[22] On 24 June 1914, just four days before Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria was assassinated in Sarajevo, Pacelli, together with Cardinal Merry del Val, represented the Vatican when the Serbian Concordat was signed. Serbia's success in the First Balkan War against Turkey in 1912 had increased the number of Catholics within greater Serbia. At this time Serbia, encouraged by Russia, was challenging Austria-Hungary's sphere of influence throughout the Balkans. Pius X died on 20 August 1914. His successor Benedict XV named Gasparri as secretary of state and Gasparri took Pacelli with him into the Secretariat of State, making him undersecretary.[26] During World War I, Pacelli maintained the Vatican's registry of prisoners of war and worked to implement papal relief initiatives. In 1915, he travelled to Vienna to assist Raffaele Scapinelli, nuncio to Vienna, in his negotiations with Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria regarding Italy.[27]

Archbishop and papal nuncio

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Pacelli at the Headquarters of Wilhelm II

Pope Benedict XV appointed Pacelli as nuncio to Bavaria on 23 April 1917, consecrating him as titular Archbishop of Sardis in the Sistine Chapel on 13 May 1917, the same day as the first apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Fatima, Portugal. After his consecration, Eugenio Pacelli left for Bavaria. As there was no nuncio to Prussia or Germany at the time, Pacelli was, for all practical purposes, the nuncio to all of the German Empire.

Once in Munich, he conveyed the papal initiative to end the war to German authorities.[28] He met with King Ludwig III on 29 May, and later with Kaiser Wilhelm II[29] and Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg, who replied positively to the Papal initiative. However, Bethmann Hollweg was forced to resign and the German High Command, hoping for a military victory, delayed the German reply until 20 September.

Sister Pascalina Lehnert later recalled that the Nuncio was heartbroken that the Kaiser turned a "deaf ear to all his proposals". She later wrote, "Thinking back today on that time, when we Germans still all believed that our weapons would be victorious and the Nuncio was deeply sorry that the chance had been missed to save what there was to save, it occurs to me over and over again how clearly he foresaw what was to come. Once as he traced the course of the Rhine with his finger on a map, he said sadly, 'No doubt this will be lost as well'. I did not want to believe it, but here, too, he was to be proved right."[30]

For the remainder of the Great War, Pacelli concentrated on Benedict's humanitarian efforts[31] especially among Allied prisoners of war in German custody.[32] In the upheaval following the Armistice, a disconcerted Pacelli sought Benedict XV's permission to leave Munich, where Kurt Eisner had formed the Free State of Bavaria, and he left for a while to Rorschach, and a tranquil Swiss sanatorium run by nuns. Schioppa, the uditore, was left in Munich.[33]

"His recovery began with a 'rapport'" with the 24-year-old Sister Pascalina Lehnert – she would soon be transferred to Munich when Pacelli "pulled strings at the highest level".[34]

When he returned to Munich, following Eisner's assassination by the Bavarian nationalist Count Anton von Arco auf Valley, he informed Gasparri-using Schioppa's eye-witness testimony of the chaotic scene at the former royal palace as the trio of Max Levien, Eugen Levine, and Tobias Akselrod sought power: "the scene was indescribable [-] the confusion totally chaotic [-] in the midst of all this, a gang of young women, of dubious appearance, Jews like the rest of them hanging around [-] the boss of this female rabble was Levien's mistress, a young Russian woman, a Jew and a divorcée [-] and it was to her that the nunciature was obliged to pay homage in order to proceed [-] Levien is a young man, also Russian and a Jew. Pale, dirty, with drugged eyes, vulgar, repulsive ..." John Cornwell alleges that a worrying impression of anti-Semitism is discernible in the "catalogue of epithets describing their physical and moral repulsiveness" and Pacelli's "constant harping on the Jewishness of this party of power usurpers" chimed with the "growing and widespread belief among Germans that the Jews were the instigators of the Bolshevik revolution, their principal aim being the destruction of Christian civilization".[35] Also according to Cornwell, Pacelli informed Gasparri that "the capital of Bavaria, is suffering under a harsh Jewish-Russian revolutionary tyranny".[36]

Pacelli in Bavaria, 1922

According to Sister Pascalina Lehnert, the Nuncio was repeatedly threatened by emissaries of the Bavarian Soviet Republic. Once, in a violation of international law, the Bavarian Revolutionary Government attempted to confiscate the Nunciature's car at gunpoint. Despite their demands, however, Pacelli refused to leave his post.[37]

After the Bavarian Soviet Republic was defeated and toppled by Freikorps and Reichswehr troops, the Nuncio focused on, according to Lehnert, "alleviating the distress of the postwar period, consoling, supporting all in word and deed".[38]

Nuncio Pacelli in July 1924 at the 900th anniversary of the City of Bamberg

Pacelli was appointed Apostolic Nuncio to Germany on 23 June 1920, and – after the completion of a Bavarian Concordat (1924) – his nunciature was moved to Berlin in August 1925. Many of Pacelli's Munich staff stayed with him for the rest of his life, including his advisor Robert Leiber and Sister Pascalina Lehnert—housekeeper, cook, friend, and adviser for 41 years. In Berlin, Pacelli was Dean of the Diplomatic Corps and active in diplomatic and many social activities. He was aided by the German priest Ludwig Kaas, who was known for his expertise in Church-state relations and was a full-time politician, politically active in the Catholic Centre Party, a party he led following Wilhelm Marx's resignation in October 1928.[39] While in Germany, he travelled to all regions, attended Katholikentag (national gatherings of the faithful), and delivered some 50 sermons and speeches to the German people.[40] In Berlin he lived in the Tiergarten quarter and threw parties for the official and diplomatic elite. Paul von Hindenburg, Gustav Stresemann, and other members of the Cabinet were regular guests.

Nuncio Pacelli visits the coal mine Dorstfeld on the occasion of the Katholikentag in Dortmund, Germany, in 1927.

In post-war Germany, in the absence of a nuncio in Moscow, Pacelli worked also on diplomatic arrangements between the Vatican and the Soviet Union. He negotiated food shipments for Russia, where the Catholic Church was persecuted. He met with Soviet representatives including Foreign Minister Georgi Chicherin, who rejected any kind of religious education, the ordination of priests and bishops, but offered agreements without the points vital to the Vatican.[41]

Eugenio Pacelli in 1927

Despite Vatican pessimism and a lack of visible progress, Pacelli continued the secret negotiations, until Pius XI ordered them to be discontinued in 1927. Pacelli supported German diplomatic activity aimed at rejection of punitive measures from victorious former enemies. He blocked French attempts for an ecclesiastical separation of the Saar region, supported the appointment of a papal administrator for Danzig and aided the reintegration of German priests expelled from Poland.[42] A Prussian Concordat was signed on 14 June 1929. Following the Wall Street crash of 1929, the beginnings of a world economic slump appeared, and the days of the Weimar Republic were numbered. Pacelli was summoned back to Rome at this time—the call coming by telegram when he was resting at his favourite retreat, the Rorschach convent sanatorium. He left Berlin on 10 December 1929.[43] David G. Dalin wrote "of the forty-four speeches Pacelli gave in Germany as papal nuncio between 1917 and 1929, forty denounced some aspect of the emerging Nazi ideology".[44] In 1935 he wrote a letter to Karl Joseph Schulte, the archbishop of Cologne, describing the Nazis as "false prophets with the pride of Lucifer" and as "bearers of a new faith and a new Evangile" who were attempting to create "a mendacious antimony between faithfulness to the Church and the Fatherland".[45] Two years later at Notre Dame de Paris he named Germany as "that noble and powerful nation whom bad shepherds would lead astray into an ideology of race".[44]

Cardinal Secretary of State and Camerlengo

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Secretary of State Pacelli with Brazilian president Getúlio Vargas (at Pacelli's right shoulder) and other dignitaries in Rio de Janeiro, 1934

Pacelli was made a Cardinal-Priest of Santi Giovanni e Paolo al Celio on 16 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI, and within a few months, on 7 February 1930, Pius XI appointed him Cardinal Secretary of State, responsible for foreign policy and state relations throughout the world. In 1935, Pacelli was named Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church.

As Cardinal Secretary of State, Pacelli signed concordats with a number of countries and states. Immediately on becoming Cardinal Secretary of State, Pacelli and Ludwig Kaas took up negotiations on a Baden Concordat which continued until the spring and summer of 1932. Papal fiat appointed a supporter of Pacelli and his concordat policy, Conrad Gröber, the new Archbishop of Freiburg, and the treaty was signed in August 1932.[46] Others followed: Austria (1933), Germany (1933), Yugoslavia (1935) and Portugal (1940). The Lateran treaties with Italy (1929) were concluded before Pacelli became Secretary of State. Catholicism had become the sole recognized religion; the powerful democratic Catholic Popular Party, in many ways similar to the Centre Party in Germany, had been disbanded, and in place of political Catholicism the Holy See encouraged Catholic Action. It was permitted only so long as it developed "its activity outside every political party and in direct dependence upon the Church hierarchy for the dissemination and implementation of Catholic principles".[47] Such concordats allowed the Catholic Church to organize youth groups, make ecclesiastical appointments, run schools, hospitals, and charities, or even conduct religious services. They also ensured that canon law would be recognized within some spheres (e.g., church decrees of nullity in the area of marriage).[48]

As the decade began Pacelli wanted the Centre Party in Germany to turn away from the socialists. In the summer of 1931 he clashed with Catholic Chancellor Heinrich Brüning, who frankly told Pacelli he believed that he "misunderstood the political situation in Germany and the real character of the Nazis".[49] Following Brüning's resignation in May 1932 Pacelli, like the new Catholic chancellor Franz von Papen, wondered if the Centre Party should look to the Right for a coalition, "that would correspond to their principles".[50] He made many diplomatic visits throughout Europe and the Americas, including an extensive visit to the United States in 1936 where he met President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who appointed a personal envoy—who did not require Senate confirmation—to the Holy See in December 1939, re-establishing a diplomatic tradition that had been broken since 1870 when the Pope lost temporal power.[51]

A smiling Pacelli with Argentine president Agustín P. Justo

Pacelli presided as Papal Legate over the International Eucharistic Congress in Buenos Aires, Argentina on 10–14 October 1934, and in Budapest on 25–30 May 1938.[52] At this time, antisemitic laws were in the process of being formulated in Hungary. Pacelli made reference to the Jews "whose lips curse [Christ] and whose hearts reject him even today".[53][disputeddiscuss] This traditional adversarial relationship with Judaism would be reversed in Nostra aetate issued during the Second Vatican Council.[54] According to Joseph Bottum, Pacelli in 1937 "warned A. W. Klieforth, that Hitler was 'an untrustworthy scoundrel and fundamentally wicked person', to quote Klieforth, who also wrote that Pacelli 'did not believe Hitler capable of moderation, and ... fully supported the German bishops in their anti-Nazi stand'. This was matched with the discovery of Pacelli's anti-Nazi report, written the following year for President Roosevelt and filed with Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., which declared that the church regarded compromise with the Third Reich as 'out of the question'."[55]

Historian Walter Bussmann argued that Pacelli, as Cardinal Secretary of State, dissuaded Pope Pius XI – who was nearing death at the time[56] – from condemning the Kristallnacht in November 1938,[57] when he was informed of it by the papal nuncio in Berlin.[58]

The draft encyclical Humani generis unitas ("On the Unity of the Human Race") was ready in September 1938 but, according to those responsible for an edition of the document[59] and other sources, it was not forwarded to the Holy See by the Jesuit General Wlodimir Ledóchowski.[60] On 28 January 1939, eleven days before the death of Pius XI, a disappointed Gundlach informed LaFarge, the encyclical's author, "It cannot go on like this". The text had not been forwarded to the Vatican. He had talked to the American assistant to Father General, who promised to look into the matter in December 1938, but did not report back.[61] The draft encyclical contained an open and clear condemnation of colonialism, racial persecution and antisemitism.[60][62][full citation needed][63] Historians Passelecq and Suchecky have argued that Pacelli learned about the existence of the draft only after the death of Pius XI and did not promulgate it as Pope.[64] He did use parts of it in his inaugural encyclical Summi Pontificatus, which he titled "On the Unity of Human Society".[65] His various positions on church and policy issues during his tenure as Cardinal Secretary of State were made public by the Holy See in 1939. Most noteworthy among the 50 speeches is his review of Church-State issues in Budapest in 1938.[66]

A year before his papal election, on 26 January 1938, the Cardinal Secretary of State officiated at the baptism of the Infante Juan Carlos (King of Spain from 1975 to 2014), in a ceremony held at the Palazzo Malta in Rome.[67]

Reichskonkordat and Mit brennender Sorge

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Pius XI (center) with Cardinal Pacelli (front left), the radio transmission pioneer Guglielmo Marconi (back left) and others at the inauguration of Vatican Radio on 12 February 1931
Pacelli (seated, center) at the signing of the Reichskonkordat on 20 July 1933 in Rome with (from left to right): German prelate Ludwig Kaas, German Vice-Chancellor Franz von Papen, Secretary of Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs Giuseppe Pizzardo, Alfredo Ottaviani, and Reich minister Rudolf Buttmann

The Reichskonkordat was an integral part of four concordats Pacelli concluded on behalf of the Vatican with German States. The state concordats were necessary because the German federalist Weimar constitution gave the German states authority in the area of education and culture and thus diminished the authority of the churches in these areas; this diminution of church authority was a primary concern of the Vatican. As Bavarian nuncio, Pacelli negotiated successfully with the Bavarian authorities in 1924. He expected the concordat with Catholic Bavaria to be the model for the rest of Germany.[68][69] Prussia showed interest in negotiations only after the Bavarian concordat. However, Pacelli obtained less favorable conditions for the church in the Prussian Concordat of 1929, which excluded educational issues. A concordat with the German state of Baden was completed by Pacelli in 1932, after he had moved to Rome. There he also negotiated a concordat with Austria in 1933.[70] A total of 16 concordats and treaties with European states had been concluded in the ten-year period 1922–1932.[71]

The Reichskonkordat, signed on 20 July 1933, between Germany and the Holy See, while thus a part of an overall Vatican policy, was controversial from its beginning. It remains the most important of Pacelli's concordats. It is debated, not because of its content, which is still valid today, but because of its timing. A national concordat with Germany was one of Pacelli's main objectives as secretary of state, because he had hoped to strengthen the legal position of the church. Pacelli, who knew German conditions well, emphasized in particular protection for Catholic associations (§31), freedom for education and Catholic schools, and freedom for publications.[72]

As nuncio during the 1920s, he had made unsuccessful attempts to obtain German agreement for such a treaty, and between 1930 and 1933 he attempted to initiate negotiations with representatives of successive German governments, but the opposition of Protestant and Socialist parties, the instability of national governments and the care of the individual states to guard their autonomy thwarted this aim. In particular, the questions of denominational schools and pastoral work in the armed forces prevented any agreement on the national level, despite talks in the winter of 1932.[73][74]

Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor on 30 January 1933 and sought to gain international respectability and to remove internal opposition by representatives of the church and the Catholic Centre Party. He sent his vice chancellor Franz von Papen, a Catholic nobleman, to Rome to offer negotiations about a Reichskonkordat.[75][76] On behalf of Pacelli, Prelate Ludwig Kaas, the outgoing chairman of the Centre Party, negotiated first drafts of the terms with von Papen.[77] The concordat was finally signed, by Pacelli for the Vatican and von Papen for Germany, on 20 July and ratified on 10 September 1933.[78] Bishop Konrad von Preysing cautioned against compromise with the new regime, against those who saw the Nazi persecution of the church as an aberration that Hitler would correct.[79]

Between 1933 and 1939, Pacelli issued 55 protests of violations of the Reichskonkordat. Most notably, early in 1937, Pacelli asked several German cardinals, including Cardinal Michael von Faulhaber, to help him write a protest of Nazi violations of the Reichskonkordat; this was to become Pius XI's 1937 encyclical, Mit brennender Sorge (in English "With deep [lit. 'burning'] anxiety"). The encyclical was written in German and not the usual Latin of official Catholic Church documents. Secretly distributed by an army of motorcyclists and read from every German Catholic Church pulpit on Palm Sunday, it condemned the paganism of the Nazi ideology.[80] Pius XI credited its creation and writing to Pacelli.[81] It was the first official denunciation of Nazism made by any major organization and resulted in persecution of the church by the infuriated Nazis who closed all the participating presses and "took numerous vindictive measures against the Church, including staging a long series of immorality trials of the Catholic clergy".[82] On 10 June 1941, the Pope commented on the problems of the Reichskonkordat in a letter to the Bishop of Passau, in Bavaria: "The history of the Reichskonkordat shows, that the other side lacked the most basic prerequisites to accept minimal freedoms and rights of the Church, without which the Church simply cannot live and operate, formal agreements notwithstanding".[83]

Relations with the media

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Cardinal Pacelli gave a lecture entitled "La Presse et L'Apostolat" at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum on 17 April 1936.[84]

Papacy

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Election and coronation

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Papal styles of
Pope Pius XII
Reference styleHis Holiness
Spoken styleYour Holiness
Religious styleHoly Father
Posthumous styleVenerable
Pope Pius XII appears on the central loggia after his election on 2 March 1939.
The signature of Pius XII never changed.[85]

Pope Pius XI died on 10 February 1939. Several historians have interpreted the conclave to choose his successor as facing a choice between a diplomatic or a spiritual candidate, and they view Pacelli's diplomatic experience, especially with Germany, as one of the deciding factors in his election on 2 March 1939, his 63rd birthday, after only one day of deliberation and three ballots.[86][87] He was the first cardinal Secretary of State to be elected pope since Clement IX in 1667.[88] He was one of only two men known to have served as Camerlengo immediately prior to being elected as pope (the other being Pope Leo XIII). According to rumours, he asked for another ballot to be taken to ensure the validity of his election. After his election was indeed confirmed, he chose the name Pius XII in honour of his immediate predecessor.

His coronation took place on 12 March 1939. Upon being elected pope he was also formally the Grand Master of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem, prefect of the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office, prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Oriental Churches and prefect of the Sacred Consistorial Congregation. There was however a Cardinal-Secretary to run these bodies on a day-to-day basis.

Pacelli took the same papal name as his predecessor, a title used exclusively by Italian popes. He was quoted as saying "I call myself Pius; my whole life was under Popes with this name, but especially as a sign of gratitude towards Pius XI."[89] On 15 December 1937, during his last consistory, Pius XI strongly hinted to the cardinals that he expected Pacelli to be his successor, saying "He is in your midst."[90][91] He had previously been quoted as saying: "When today the Pope dies, you'll get another one tomorrow, because the Church continues. It would be a much bigger tragedy, if Cardinal Pacelli dies, because there is only one. I pray every day, God may send another one into one of our seminaries, but as of today, there is only one in this world."[92]

Appointments

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After his election, he made Luigi Maglione his successor as Cardinal Secretary of State. Cardinal Maglione, a seasoned Vatican diplomat, had reestablished diplomatic relations with Switzerland and was for twelve years nuncio in Paris. Yet, Maglione did not exercise the influence of his predecessor Pacelli, who as Pope continued his close relation with Giovanni Battista Montini (later Pope Paul VI) and Domenico Tardini. After the death of Maglione in 1944, Pius left the position open and named Tardini head of its foreign section and Montini head of the internal section.[93] Tardini and Montini continued serving there until 1953, when Pius XII decided to appoint them cardinals,[94] an honor which both turned down.[95] They were then later appointed to be Pro-Secretary with the privilege to wear Episcopal Insignia.[96] Tardini continued to be a close co-worker of the Pope until the death of Pius XII, while Montini became archbishop of Milan, after the death of Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster.

Pius XII slowly eroded the Italian monopoly on the Roman Curia; he employed German and Dutch Jesuit advisors, Robert Leiber, Augustin Bea, and Sebastian Tromp. He also supported the elevation of Americans such as Cardinal Francis Spellman from a minor to a major role in the church.[97][98] After World War II, Pius XII appointed more non-Italians than any Pope before him. American appointees included Joseph P. Hurley as regent of the nunciature in Belgrade, Gerald P. O'Hara as nuncio to Romania, and Aloisius Joseph Muench as nuncio to Germany. For the first time, numerous young Europeans, Asians and "Americans were trained in various congregations and secretariats within the Vatican for eventual service throughout the world".[99]

Consistories

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One of the first official color portraits of Pius XII, c. 1939–40

Only twice in his pontificate did Pius XII hold a consistory to create new cardinals, in contrast to Pius XI, who had done so 17 times in as many years. Pius XII chose not to name new cardinals during World War II, and the number of cardinals shrank to 38, with Dennis Joseph Dougherty of Philadelphia being the only living U.S. cardinal.

The first occasion on 18 February 1946 yielded the elevation of a record 32 new cardinals, almost half of the College of Cardinals and reaching the canonical limit of 70 cardinals.[c] In the 1946 consistory, Pius XII, while maintaining the maximum size of the College of Cardinals at 70, named cardinals from China, India, the Middle East and increased the number of Cardinals from the Americas, proportionally lessening the Italian influence.[100]

In his second consistory on 12 January 1953, it was expected that his closest co-workers, Msgrs. Domenico Tardini and Giovanni Montini would be elevated[101] and Pius XII informed the assembled cardinals that both of them were originally on the top of his list,[102] but they had turned down the offer, and were rewarded instead with other promotions.[103] Both Montini and Tardini would become Cardinals shortly after Pius' death; Montini later became Pope Paul VI. The two consistories of 1946 and 1953 brought an end to over five hundred years of Italians constituting a majority of the College of Cardinals.[104]

With few exceptions, Italian prelates accepted the changes positively; there was no protest movement or open opposition to the internationalization efforts.[105]

Church reforms

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Liturgy reforms

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In his encyclical Mediator Dei, Pius XII links liturgy with the last will of Jesus Christ.

But it is His will, that the worship He instituted and practised during His life on earth shall continue ever afterwards without intermission. For He has not left mankind an orphan. He still offers us the support of His powerful, unfailing intercession, acting as our "advocate with the Father". He aids us likewise through His Church, where He is present indefectibly as the ages run their course: through the Church which He constituted "the pillar of truth" and dispenser of grace, and which by His sacrifice on the cross, He founded, consecrated and confirmed forever.[106]

The Church has, therefore, according to Pius XII, a common aim with Christ himself, teaching all men the truth, and offering to God a pleasing and acceptable sacrifice. This way, the church re-establishes the unity between the Creator and His creatures.[107] The Sacrifice of the Altar, being Christ's own actions, conveys and dispenses divine grace from Christ to the members of the Mystical Body.[108]

Pope Pius XII seated in the Sedia gestatoria in 1949

Bishop Carlos Duarte Costa, a long-time critic of Pius XII's policies during World War II and an opponent of clerical celibacy and the use of Latin as language of the liturgy, was excommunicated by Pius XII on 2 July 1945.[109] He later established a schismatic group called the "Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church".[110]

Canon law reforms

[edit]

Decentralized authority and increased independence of the Uniate Churches were aimed at in the Canon Law/Codex Iuris Canonici (CIC) reform. In its new constitutions, Eastern Patriarchs were made almost independent from Rome (CIC Orientalis, 1957) Eastern marriage law (CIC Orientalis, 1949), civil law (CIC Orientalis, 1950), laws governing religious associations (CIC Orientalis, 1952) property law (CIC Orientalis, 1952) and other laws. These reforms and writings of Pius XII were intended to establish Eastern Orientals as equal parts of the mystical body of Christ, as explained in the encyclical Mystici Corporis Christi.

In 1947, Venerable Pope Pius XII issued the Apostolic Constitution Provida Mater Ecclesia establishing the secular institute.[111] The growth and 70th anniversary of these institutes was celebrated in 2017.[112]

In June 1950, Venerable Pope Pius XII provided a formal pontifical recognition of St Josemaria's work of God. St Josemaria considered early Christianity a helpful model to explain his mystical experience on 2 October 1928 and he maintained this interest in early Christianity throughout his whole life.[113] Wikipedia provides an insightful review of early Christianity up until the First Council of Nicea in 325.[114] Many leaders recalled the 1700th anniversary of this Council in 2025. Venerable Pope Pius XII's, formal legal pontifical recognition followed earlier legal diocesan recognition and foreshadowed later formal legal recognition in the Univeral Church's 1983 Code of Canon Law.[115] A broad insightful commentary on the history of canon law is available online by Britannica.[116]

Priests and religious

[edit]

With the Apostolic constitution Sedis Sapientiae, Pius XII added social sciences, sociology, psychology and social psychology, to the pastoral training of future priests. Pius XII emphasised the need to systematically analyze the psychological condition of candidates to the priesthood to ensure that they are capable of a life of celibacy and service.[117] Pius XII added one year to the theological formation of future priests. He included a "pastoral year", an introduction into the practise of parish work.[118]

Pius XII wrote in Menti Nostrae that the call to constant interior reform and Christian heroism means to be above average, to be a living example of Christian virtue. The strict norms governing their lives are meant to make them models of Christian perfection for lay people.[119] Bishops are encouraged to look at model saints like Boniface, and Pope Pius X.[120] Priests were encouraged to be living examples of the love of Christ and his sacrifice.[121]

Theology

[edit]
Fátima Statue of Pope Pius XII, who consecrated Russia and the World: "Just as a few years ago We consecrated the entire human race to the Immaculate Heart of the Virgin Mary, Mother of God, so today We consecrate and in a most special manner We entrust all the peoples of Russia to this Immaculate Heart..."

Pius XII explained the Catholic faith in 41 encyclicals and almost 1000 messages and speeches during his long pontificate. Mystici Corporis Christi clarified membership and participation in the church. The encyclical Divino afflante Spiritu opened the doors for biblical research. His magisterium was far larger and is difficult to summarize. In numerous speeches Catholic teaching is related to various aspects of life, education, medicine, politics, war and peace, the life of saints, Mary, the Mother of God, things eternal and contemporary. Theologically, Pius XII specified the nature of the teaching authority of the Catholic Church. He also gave a new freedom to engage in theological investigations.[122]

Theological orientation

[edit]

Biblical research

[edit]

The encyclical Divino afflante Spiritu, published in 1943,[123] emphasized the role of the Bible. Pius XII freed biblical research from previous limitations. He encouraged Christian theologians to revisit original versions of the Bible in Greek and Hebrew. Noting improvements in archaeology, the encyclical reversed Pope Leo XIII's encyclical, which had only advocated going back to the original texts to resolve ambiguity in the Latin Vulgate. The encyclical demands a much better understanding of ancient Hebrew history and traditions. It requires bishops throughout the church to initiate biblical studies for lay people. The Pontiff also requests a reorientation of Catholic teaching and education, relying much more on sacred scriptures in sermons and religious instruction.[124]

Role of theology

[edit]

This theological investigative freedom does not, however, extend to all aspects of theology. According to Pius, theologians, employed by the Catholic Church, are assistants, to teach the official teachings of the church and not their own private thoughts. They are free to engage in empirical research, which the church generously supports, but in matters of morality and religion, they are subjected to the teaching office and authority of the church, the Magisterium. "The most noble office of theology is to show how a doctrine defined by the Church is contained in the sources of revelation, ... in that sense in which it has been defined by the Church."[125] The deposit of faith is authentically interpreted not to each of the faithful, not even to theologians, but only to the teaching authority of the Church.[126]

Mariology and the dogma of the Assumption

[edit]
On 1 November 1950, Pius XII defined the dogma of the Assumption (Titian's Assunta (1516–1518) pictured).

World consecration to the Immaculate Heart of Mary

[edit]

As a young boy and in later life, Pacelli was an ardent follower of the Virgin Mary. He was consecrated as a bishop on 13 May 1917, the very first day of the apparitions of Our Lady of Fátima. Based on the Portuguese mystic Alexandrina of Balazar's requests, he consecrated the world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary in 1942. His remains were to be buried in the crypt of Saint Peter's Basilica on the feast day of Our Lady of Fátima, 13 October 1958.

Dogma of the Assumption of Mary

[edit]

On 1 November 1950, Pius XII invoked papal infallibility for the first time since 1854 by defining the dogma of the Assumption of Mary, namely that she, "having completed the course of her earthly life, was assumed body and soul into heavenly glory".[127] To date this is the last time full papal infallibility has been used. The dogma was preceded by the 1946 encyclical Deiparae Virginis Mariae, which requested all Catholic bishops to express their opinion on a possible dogmatization. On 8 September 1953, the encyclical Fulgens corona announced a Marian year for 1954, the centennial of the Dogma of the Immaculate Conception.[128] In the encyclical Ad caeli reginam he promulgated the Queenship of Mary feast.[129] Mystici Corporis Christi summarizes his mariology.[130] On 15 August 1954, the Feast of the Assumption, he initiated the practice of leading the Angelus every Sunday before address to the crowd assembled at Castel Gandolfo.[131]

Social teachings

[edit]
Coronation of the Salus Populi Romani by Pope Pius XII in 1954

Medical theology

[edit]

Pius XII delivered numerous speeches to medical professionals and researchers.[132] He addressed doctors, nurses, midwives, to detail all aspects of rights and dignity of patients, medical responsibilities, moral implications of psychological illnesses and the uses of psycho pharmaca. He also took on issues like the uses of medicine in terminally ill persons, medical lies in face of grave illness, and the rights of family members to make decisions against expert medical advice. Pope Pius XII often reconsidered previously accepted truth, thus he was first to determine that the use of pain medicine in terminally ill patients is justified, even if this may shorten the life of the patient, as long as life shortening is not the objective itself.[133]

Family and sexuality

[edit]

Pope Pius XII developed an extensive theology of the family, taking issue with family roles, sharing of household duties, education of children, conflict resolution, financial dilemmas, psychological problems, illness, taking care of older generations, unemployment, marital holiness and virtue, common prayer, religious discussions and more. He accepted the rhythm method as a moral form of family planning, although only in limited circumstances, within the context of family.[134]

Theology and science

[edit]

To Pius XII, science and religion were heavenly sisters, different manifestations of divine exactness, who could not possibly contradict each other over the long term.[135] Regarding their relation, his advisor Professor Robert Leiber wrote: "Pius XII was very careful not to close any doors prematurely. He was energetic on this point and regretted that in the case of Galileo."[136]

Evolution of the human body

[edit]

In 1950, Pius XII promulgated Humani generis, which acknowledged that evolution might accurately describe the biological origins of the human form, but at the same time criticized those who "imprudently and indiscreetly hold that evolution ... explains the origin of all things". Catholics must believe that the human soul was created immediately by God. Since the soul is a spiritual substance, it is not brought into being through transformation of matter, but directly by God, whence the special uniqueness of each person.[137] Fifty years later, Pope John Paul II, stating that scientific evidence now seemed to favour the evolutionary theory, upheld the distinction of Pius XII regarding the human soul. "Even if the human body originates from pre-existent living matter, the spiritual soul is spontaneously created by God."[138]

Capital punishment

[edit]

In an address given on 14 September 1952, Pope Pius XII said that the church does not regard the execution of criminals as a violation by the State of the universal right to life:

When it is a question of the execution of a condemned man, the State does not dispose of the individual's right to life. In this case it is reserved to the public power to deprive the condemned person of the enjoyment of life in expiation of his crime when, by his crime, he has already disposed himself of his right to live.[139]

The Church regards criminal penalties as both "medicinal", preventing the criminal from re-offending, and "vindictive", providing retribution for the offence committed. Pius defended the authority of the State to carry out punishment, up to and including the death penalty.[140]

Democracy and monarchy

[edit]

Pius XII taught that the masses were a threat to true democracy. In such a democracy, liberty is the individual's moral duty and equality is the right of all people to honorably live in the place and station that God has assigned them.[141]

On 1 June 1946, one day before the 1946 Italian institutional referendum on whether to abolish or keep the Italian monarchy, Pius XII delivered a sermon on St. Peter's Square. While he did not directly mention monarchy or republicanism, given the context, his speech was nonetheless widely seen as endorsing Umberto II in the referendum, with it being difficult to misunderstand his plea.[142]

Pius stated:

The problem is whether one or the other of those nations, of those two Latin sisters [elections were taking place in France on the same day] with several thousands of years of civilization will continue to learn against the solid rock of Christianity,...or on the contrary do they want to hand over the fate of their future to the impossible omnipotence of a material state without extraterrestrial ideals, without religion, and without God. One of these two alternatives shall occur according to whether the names of the champions or the destroyers of Christian civilization emerge victorious from the urns.[143]

After the referendum was successful and the Italian monarchy was abolished, Pius privately agreed with his envoy Myron Taylor "...that it would have been far preferable for Italy to remain a monarchy, but he also noted that what was done was done".[144]

Encyclicals, writings and speeches

[edit]
In 1939 Pius XII placed his pontificate under the maternal care of Our Lady of Good Counsel and composed a prayer to her.[145][146] This 19th-century painting is by Pasquale Sarullo.

Pius XII issued 41 encyclicals during his pontificate—more than all his successors in the past 50 years taken together—along with many other writings and speeches. The pontificate of Pius XII was the first in Vatican history that published papal speeches and addresses in vernacular language on a systematic basis. Until then, papal documents were issued mainly in Latin in Acta Apostolicae Sedis since 1909. Because of the novelty of it all, and a feared occupation of the Vatican by the German Wehrmacht, not all documents exist today. In 1944, a number of papal documents were burned or "walled in".[147]

Several encyclicals addressed the Eastern Catholic Churches. Orientalis Ecclesiae was issued in 1944 on the 15th centenary of the death of Cyril of Alexandria, a saint common to Eastern Christianity and Latin Churches. Pius XII asks for prayer for better understanding and unification of the churches. Orientales omnes Ecclesias, issued in 1945 on the 350th anniversary of the reunion, is a call to continued unity of the Ruthenian Greek Catholic Church, threatened in its very existence by the authorities of the Soviet Union. Sempiternus Rex was issued in 1951 on the 1500th anniversary of the Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon. It included a call to oriental communities adhering to Miaphysite theology to return to the Catholic Church. Orientales Ecclesias was issued in 1952 and addressed to the Eastern Churches, protesting the continued Stalinist persecution of the church. Several Apostolic Letters were sent to the bishops in the East. On 13 May 1956, Pope Pius addressed all bishops of the Eastern Rite. Mary, the mother of God, was the subject of encyclical letters to the people of Russia in Fulgens corona, as well as a papal letter to the people of Russia.[148][149][150][151][152][153][154]

Pius XII made two substantial interventions on the media. His 1955 discourse The Ideal Movie, originally given in two parts to members of the Italian cinema industry, offered a "sophisticated analysis of the film industry and the role of cinema in modern society".[155] Compared to his predecessor's teaching, the encyclical Miranda Prorsus (1957) shows a "high regard for the importance of cinema, television, and radio".[156]

Feasts and devotions

[edit]

In 1958, Pope Pius XII declared the Feast of the Holy Face of Jesus as Shrove Tuesday (the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday) for all Catholics. The first medal of the Holy Face, produced by Sister Maria Pierina de Micheli, based on the image on the Shroud of Turin had been offered to Pius XII who approved the medal and the devotion based on it. The general devotion to the Holy Face of Jesus had been approved by Pope Leo XIII in 1885 before the image on the Turin Shroud had been photographed.[157][158]

Canonisations and beatifications

[edit]

Pope Pius XII canonized numerous people, including Pope Pius X—"both were determined to stamp out, as far as possible, all traces of dangerous heterodoxy"[159]—and Maria Goretti. He beatified Pope Innocent XI. The first canonizations were two women, the founder of a congregation for women, Mary Euphrasia Pelletier, and a young laywoman, Gemma Galgani. Pelletier had a reputation for opening new ways for Catholic charities, helping people in difficulties with the law, who had been neglected by the system and the church. Galgani was a virtuous woman in her twenties, said to have the stigmata.[160]

Pius XII also named Anthony of Padua as a Doctor of the Church on 16 January 1946 while conferring upon him the title Doctor evangelius.[161][162]

World War II

[edit]
Members of the Canadian Royal 22e Regiment, in audience with Pope Pius XII, following the 1944 Liberation of Rome

During World War II Pius saw his primary obligation as being to ensure the continuation of the "Church visible" and its divine mission.[163] Pius XII lobbied world leaders to prevent the outbreak of World War II and then expressed his dismay that war had come in his October 1939 Summi Pontificatus encyclical. He followed a strict public policy of Vatican neutrality for the duration of the conflict mirroring that of Pope Benedict XV.

In 1939, Pius XII turned the Vatican into a centre of aid which he organized from various parts of the world.[164] At the request of the Pope, an information office for prisoners of war and refugees operated in the Vatican under Giovanni Battista Montini, which in the years of its existence from 1939 until 1947 received almost 10 million (9,891,497) information requests and produced more than 11 million (11,293,511) answers about missing persons.[165]

McGoldrick (2012) concludes that during the war:

Pius XII had genuine affection for Germany, though not the criminal element into whose hands it had fallen; he feared Bolshevism, an ideology dedicated to the annihilation of the church of which he was head, but his sympathies lay with the Allies and the democracies, especially the United States, into whose war economy he had transferred and invested the Vatican's considerable assets.[166]

Outbreak of war

[edit]

Summi Pontificatus

[edit]

Summi Pontificatus was the first papal encyclical issued by Pope Pius XII, in October 1939 and established some of the themes of his pontificate. During the drafting of the letter, the Second World War commenced with the German/Soviet invasion of Poland—the "dread tempest of war is already raging despite all Our efforts to avert it". The papal letter denounced antisemitism, war, totalitarianism, the attack on Catholic Poland and the Nazi persecution of the church.[167]

Pius XII reiterated church teaching on the "principle of equality"—with specific reference to Jews: "there is neither Gentile nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision".[168] The forgetting of solidarity "imposed by our common origin and by the equality of rational nature in all men" was called "pernicious error".[169] Catholics everywhere were called upon to offer "compassion and help" to the victims of the war.[170] The Pope declared determination to work to hasten the return of peace and trust in prayers for justice, love and mercy, to prevail against the scourge of war.[171] The letter also decried the deaths of noncombatants.[172]

Following themes addressed in Non abbiamo bisogno (1931); Mit brennender Sorge (1937) and Divini Redemptoris (1937), Pius wrote against "anti-Christian movements" and needing to bring back to the church those who were following "a false standard ... misled by error, passion, temptation and prejudice, [who] have strayed away from faith in the true God".[173] Pius wrote of "Christians unfortunately more in name than in fact" having shown "cowardice" in the face of persecution by these creeds, and endorsed resistance:[173]

Who among "the Soldiers of Christ" – ecclesiastic or layman – does not feel himself incited and spurred on to a greater vigilance, to a more determined resistance, by the sight of the ever-increasing host of Christ's enemies; as he perceives the spokesmen of these tendencies deny or in practice neglect the vivifying truths and the values inherent in belief in God and in Christ; as he perceives them wantonly break the Tables of God's Commandments to substitute other tables and other standards stripped of the ethical content of the Revelation on Sinai, standards in which the spirit of the Sermon on the Mount and of the Cross has no place?

Pius wrote of a persecuted Church[174] and a time requiring "charity" for victims who had a "right" to compassion. Against the invasion of Poland and killing of civilians he wrote:[167]

[This is an] "Hour of Darkness"... in which the spirit of violence and of discord brings indescribable suffering on mankind... The nations swept into the tragic whirlpool of war are perhaps as yet only at the "beginnings of sorrows"... but even now there reigns in thousands of families death and desolation, lamentation and misery. The blood of countless human beings, even noncombatants, raises a piteous dirge over a nation such as Our dear Poland, which, for its fidelity to the Church, for its services in the defense of Christian civilization, written in indelible characters in the annals of history, has a right to the generous and brotherly sympathy of the whole world, while it awaits, relying on the powerful intercession of Mary, Help of Christians, the hour of a resurrection in harmony with the principles of justice and true peace.

With Italy not yet an ally of Hitler in the war, Italians were called upon to remain faithful to the Catholic Church. Pius avoided explicit denunciations of Hitlerism or Stalinism, establishing the "impartial" public tone which would become controversial in later assessment of his pontificate: "A full statement of the doctrinal stand to be taken in face of the errors of today, if necessary, can be put off to another time unless there is disturbance by calamitous external events; for the moment We limit Ourselves to some fundamental observations."[175]

Invasion of Poland

[edit]

In Summi Pontificatus, Pius expressed dismay at the killing of non-combatants in the Nazi/Soviet invasion of Poland and expressed hope for the "resurrection" of that country. The Nazis and Soviets commenced a persecution of the Catholic Church in Poland. In April 1940, the Vatican advised the U.S. government that its efforts to provide humanitarian aid had been blocked by the Germans and that the Holy See had been forced to seek indirect channels through which to direct its aid.[176] Michael Phayer, a critic of Pius XII, assesses his policy as having been to "refuse to censure" the "German" invasion and annexation of Poland. This, Phayer wrote, was regarded as a "betrayal" by many Polish Catholics and clergy, who saw his appointment of Hilarius Breitinger as the apostolic administrator for the Wartheland in May 1942, an "implicit recognition" of the breakup of Poland; the opinions of the Volksdeutsche, mostly German Catholic minorities living in occupied Poland, were more mixed.[177] Phayer argues that Pius XII—both before and during his papacy – consistently "deferred to Germany at the expense of Poland", and saw Germany—not Poland—as critical to "rebuilding a large Catholic presence in Central Europe".[178] In May 1942, Kazimierz Papée, Polish ambassador to the Vatican, complained that Pius had failed to condemn the recent wave of atrocities in Poland; when Cardinal Secretary of State Maglione replied that the Vatican could not document individual atrocities, Papée declared, "when something becomes notorious, proof is not required".[179] Although Pius XII received frequent reports about atrocities committed by or against Catholics, his knowledge was incomplete; for example, he wept after the war on learning that Cardinal August Hlond had banned German liturgical services in Poland.[180]

There was a well-known case of Jewish rabbis who, seeking support against the Nazi persecution of Polish Jews in the General Government (Nazi-occupied Polish zone), complained to the representatives of the Catholic Church. The church's attempted intervention caused the Nazis to retaliate by arresting rabbis and deporting them to the death camp. Subsequently, the Catholic Church in Poland abandoned direct intervention, instead focusing on organizing underground aid, with huge international support orchestrated by Pope Pius XII and his Holy See. The Pope was informed about Nazi atrocities committed in Poland by both officials of the Polish Church and the Polish Underground. Those intelligence materials were used by Pius XII on 11 March 1940 during a formal audience with Joachim von Ribbentrop (Hitler's foreign affairs adviser) when Pope was "listing the date, place, and precise details of each crime" as described by Joseph L. Lichten[181] after others.

Early actions to end conflict

[edit]

With Poland overrun, but France and the Low Countries yet to be attacked, Pius continued to hope for a negotiated peace to prevent the spread of the conflict. The similarly minded US President Franklin D. Roosevelt re-established American diplomatic relations with the Vatican after a 70-year hiatus and dispatched Myron C. Taylor as his personal representative.[182] Pius warmly welcomed Roosevelt's envoy and peace initiative, calling it "an exemplary act of fraternal and hearty solidarity... in defence against the chilling breath of aggressive and deadly godless anti-Christian tendencies".[183] American correspondence spoke of "parallel endeavours for peace and the alleviation of suffering".[184] Despite the early collapse of peace hopes, the Taylor mission continued at the Vatican.[182]

According to the Hitler biographer John Toland, following the November 1939 assassination attempt by Johann Georg Elser, Hitler said Pius would have wanted the plot to succeed: "he's no friend of mine".[185] In the spring of 1940, a group of German generals seeking to overthrow Hitler and make peace with the British approached Pope Pius XII, who acted as an interlocutor between the British and the abortive plot.[186] According to Toland, a lawyer from Munich named Joseph Muller made a clandestine trip to Rome in October 1939, met with Pius XII and found him willing to act as intermediary. The Vatican agreed to send a letter outlining the bases for peace with England and the participation of the Pope was used to try to persuade the senior German generals Franz Halder and Walther von Brauchitsch to act against Hitler.[187]

Pius warned the Allies of the planned German invasion of the Low Countries in 1940.[188] In Rome in 1942, U.S. envoy Myron C. Taylor, thanked the Holy See for the "forthright and heroic expressions of indignation made by Pope Pius XII when Germany invaded the Low countries".[189] After Germany invaded the Low Countries during 1940, Pius XII sent expressions of sympathy to Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, King Leopold III of Belgium, and Charlotte, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg. When Mussolini learned of the warnings and the telegrams of sympathy, he took them as a personal affront and had his ambassador to the Vatican file an official protest, charging that Pius XII had taken sides against Italy's ally Germany. Mussolini's foreign minister Galeazzo Ciano claimed that Pius XII was "ready to let himself be deported to a concentration camp, rather than do anything against his conscience".[190]

When, in 1940, the Nazi Foreign Minister von Ribbentrop led the only senior Nazi delegation permitted an audience with Pius XII and he asked why the Pope had sided with the Allies, Pius replied with a list of recent Nazi atrocities and religious persecutions committed against Christians and Jews, in Germany, and in Poland, leading The New York Times to headline its report "Jews Rights Defended" and write of "burning words he spoke to Herr Ribbentrop about religious persecution".[191] During the meeting, von Ribbentrop suggested an overall settlement between the Vatican and the Reich government in exchange for Pius XII instructing the German bishops to refrain from political criticism of the German government, but no agreement was reached.[192]

The investments of Bernardino Nogara were critical to the financing of the papacy during World War II.

At a special mass at St Peters for the victims of the war, held in November 1940, soon after the commencement of the London Blitz bombing by the Luftwaffe, Pius preached in his homily: "may the whirlwinds, that in the light of day or the dark of night, scatter terror, fire, destruction, and slaughter on helpless folk cease. May justice and charity on one side and on the other be in perfect balance, so that all injustice be repaired, the reign of right restored".[193] Later he appealed to the Allies to spare Rome from aerial bombing, and visited wounded victims of the Allied bombing of 19 July 1943.[194]

Widening conflict

[edit]

Pius attempted, unsuccessfully, to dissuade the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini from joining Hitler in the war.[195] In April 1941, Pius XII granted a private audience to Ante Pavelić, the leader of the newly proclaimed Croatian state (rather than the diplomatic audience Pavelić had wanted).[196] Pius was criticised for his reception of Pavelić: an unattributed British Foreign Office memo on the subject described Pius as "the greatest moral coward of our age".[197] The Vatican did not officially recognise Pavelić's regime. While Pius XII did not publicly condemn the expulsions and forced conversions to Catholicism perpetrated on Serbs by Pavelić,[198] the Holy See did expressly repudiate the forced conversions in a memorandum dated 25 January 1942, from the Vatican Secretariat of State to the Yugoslavian Legation.[199] The Pope was well informed of Catholic clergy involvement with the Ustaše regime, even possessing a list of clergy members who had "joined in the slaughter", but decided against condemning the regime or taking action against the clergy involved, fearing that it would lead to schism in the Croatian church or undermine the formation of a future Croatian state.[200] Pius XII would elevate Aloysius Stepinac—a Croatian archbishop convicted of collaborating with the Ustaše by the newly established Yugoslav Communist regime—to the cardinalate in 1953.[201] Phayer agrees that Stepinac's was a "show trial", but states "the charge that he [Pius XII] supported the Ustaša regime was, of course, true, as everyone knew",[202] and that "if Stepinac had responded to the charges against him, his defense would have inevitably unraveled, exposing the Vatican's support of the genocidal Pavelić".[203] Throughout 1942, the Yugoslav government in exile sent letters of protest to Pius XII asking him to use all possible means to stop the massacres against the Serbs in the Croat state, however Pius XII did nothing.[204]

In 1941, Pius XII interpreted Divini Redemptoris, an encyclical of Pope Pius XI, which forbade Catholics to help Communists, as not applying to military assistance to the Soviet Union. This interpretation assuaged American Catholics who had previously opposed Lend-Lease arrangements with the Soviet Union.[citation needed]

In March 1942, Pius XII established diplomatic relations with the Empire of Japan and received ambassador Ken Harada, who remained in that position until the end of the war.[205][206]

In June 1942, diplomatic relations were established with the Nationalist government of China. This step was envisaged earlier, but delayed due to Japanese pressure to establish relations with the pro-Japanese Wang Jingwei regime. The first Chinese Minister to the Vatican, Hsieh Shou-kang, was only able to arrive at the Vatican in January 1943, due to difficulties of travel resulting from the war. He remained in that position until late 1946.[207]

The pope employed the new technology of radio and a series of Christmas messages to preach against selfish nationalism and the evils of modern warfare and offer sympathy to the victims of the war.[194] Pius XII's 1942 Christmas address via Vatican Radio voiced concern at human rights abuses and the murder of innocents based on race. The majority of the speech spoke generally about human rights and civil society; at the very end of the speech, Pius XII mentioned "the hundreds of thousands of persons who, without any fault on their part, sometimes only because of their nationality or race, have been consigned to death or to a slow decline".[208] According to Rittner, the speech remains a "lightning rod" in debates about Pius XII.[209] The Nazis themselves responded to the speech by stating that it was "one long attack on everything we stand for. ... He is clearly speaking on behalf of the Jews. ... He is virtually accusing the German people of injustice toward the Jews, and makes himself the mouthpiece of the Jewish war criminals." The New York Times wrote that "The voice of Pius XII is a lonely voice in the silence and darkness enveloping Europe this Christmas. ... In calling for a 'real new order' based on 'liberty, justice and love', ... the Pope put himself squarely against Hitlerism."[210] Historian Michael Phayer claims, however, that "it is still not clear whose genocide or which genocide he was referring to".[211] Speaking on the 50th anniversary of Pius's death in 2008, the German Pope Benedict XVI recalled that the Pope's voice had been "broken by emotion" as he "deplored the situation" with a "clear reference to the deportation and extermination of the Jews".[212]

Several authors have alleged a plot to kidnap Pius XII by the Nazis during their occupation of Rome in 1943 (Vatican City itself was not occupied); the British historian Owen Chadwick and the Jesuit ADSS editor Robert A. Graham each concluded such claims were an intentional creation of the British Political Warfare Executive.[213][214] However, in 2007, subsequently to those accounts, Dan Kurzman published a work in which he establishes that the plot was a fact.[215]

In 1944, Pius XII issued a Christmas message in which he warned against rule by the masses and against secular conceptions of liberty and equality.[141]

Final stages

[edit]

As the war was approaching its end in 1945, Pius advocated a lenient policy by the Allied leaders in an effort to prevent what he perceived to be the mistakes made at the end of World War I.[216] On 23 August 1944, he met the British prime minister, Winston Churchill, who was visiting Rome. At their meeting, the Pope acknowledged the justice of punishing war criminals, but expressed a hope that the people of Italy would not be punished, preferring that they should be made "full allies" in the remaining war effort.[217]

Holocaust

[edit]
Cesare Orsenigo, Pius XII's nuncio to Germany throughout World War II, with Hitler and Joachim von Ribbentrop
Polish prisoners toast their liberation from Dachau. Nazi persecution of Catholics was at its most severe in occupied Poland.
Pope Pius XII by Peter McIntyre c. 1943–1944

During the Second World War, after Nazi Germany commenced its mass-murder of Jews in occupied Soviet territory, Pius XII employed diplomacy to aid victims of the Holocaust and directed the church to provide discreet aid to Jews.[218] Upon his death in 1958, among many Jewish tributes, the Chief Rabbi of Rome Elio Toaff, said: "Jews will always remember what the Catholic Church did for them by order of the Pope during the Second World War. When the war was raging, Pius spoke out very often to condemn the false race theory."[219] This is disputed by the academic John Cornwell, who, in his book, Hitler's Pope, argues that the Pope was weak and vacillating in his approach to Nazism. Cornwell asserts that the Pope did little to challenge the progressing holocaust of the Jews out of fear of provoking the Nazis into invading Vatican City.[220]

In his 1939 Summi Pontificatus first papal encyclical, Pius reiterated Catholic teaching against racial persecution and antisemitism and affirmed the ethical principles of the "Revelation on Sinai". At Christmas 1942, once evidence of the mass-murder of Jews had emerged, Pius XII voiced concern at the murder of "hundreds of thousands" of "faultless" people because of their "nationality or race" and intervened to attempt to block Nazi deportations of Jews in various countries. Upon his death in 1958, Pius was praised emphatically by the Israeli Foreign Minister Golda Meir, and other world leaders. But his insistence on Vatican neutrality and avoidance of naming the Nazis as the evildoers of the conflict became the foundation for contemporary and later criticisms from some quarters. His strongest public condemnation of genocide was considered inadequate by the Allied Powers, while the Nazis viewed him as an Allied sympathizer who had dishonoured his policy of Vatican neutrality.[221] Hitler biographer John Toland, while scathing of Pius's cautious public comments in relation to the mistreatment of Jews, concluded that the Allies' own record of action against the Holocaust was "shameful", while "The Church, under the Pope's guidance, had already saved the lives of more Jews than all other churches, religious institutions and rescue organizations combined".[187]

In 1939, the newly elected Pope Pius XII appointed several prominent Jewish scholars to posts at the Vatican after they had been dismissed from Italian universities under Fascist leader Benito Mussolini's racial laws.[222] In 1939, the Pope employed a Jewish cartographer, Roberto Almagia, to work on old maps in the Vatican Library. Almagia had been at the Sapienza University of Rome since 1915 but was dismissed after Benito Mussolini's antisemitic legislation of 1938. The pope's appointment of two Jews to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences as well as the hiring of Almagia were reported by The New York Times in the editions of 11 November 1939 and 10 January 1940.[223]

Pius later engineered an agreement—formally approved on 23 June 1939—with the President of Brazil Getúlio Vargas to issue 3,000 visas to "non-Aryan Catholics". However, over the next 18 months, Brazil's Conselho de Imigração e Colonização (CIC) continued to tighten the restrictions on their issuance, including requiring a baptismal certificate dated before 1933, a substantial monetary transfer to the Banco do Brasil, and approval by the Brazilian Propaganda Office in Berlin.[224] The programme was cancelled 14 months later, after fewer than 1,000 visas had been issued, amid suspicions of "improper conduct" (i.e., continuing to practice Judaism) among those who had received visas.[58][225]

In April 1939, after the submission of Charles Maurras and the intervention of the Carmel of Lisieux, Pius XII ended his predecessor's ban on Action Française, a virulently antisemitic organization.[226][227]

Following the German/Soviet invasion of Poland, the Pope's first encyclical, Summi Pontificatus reiterated Catholic teaching against racial persecution and rejected antisemitism, quoting scripture singling out the "principle of equality"—with specific reference to Jews: "there is neither Gentile nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision" and direct affirmation of the Jewish Revelation on Sinai.[228][229] The forgetting of solidarity "imposed by our common origin and by the equality of rational nature in all men" was called "pernicious error".[169] Catholics everywhere were called upon to offer "compassion and help" to the victims of the war.[170] The Pope declared determination to work to hasten the return of peace and trust in prayers for justice, love and mercy, to prevail against the scourge of war.[230] The letter also decried the deaths of noncombatants.[172]

Cardinal Secretary of State Luigi Maglione received a request from Chief Rabbi of Palestine Isaac Herzog in the spring of 1940 to intercede on behalf of Lithuanian Jews about to be deported to Germany.[58] Pius called Joachim von Ribbentrop on 11 March, repeatedly protesting against the treatment of Jews.[227] In 1940, Pius asked members of the clergy, on Vatican letterhead, to do whatever they could on behalf of interned Jews.[231]

In 1941, Cardinal Theodor Innitzer of Vienna informed Pius of Jewish deportations in Vienna.[232] Later that year, when asked by the Vichy regime Head of State Philippe Pétain if the Vatican objected to antisemitic laws, Pius responded that the church condemned antisemitism, but would not comment on specific rules.[232] Similarly, when Pétain's regime adopted the "Jewish statutes", the Vichy ambassador to the Vatican, Léon Bérard (a French politician), was told that the legislation did not conflict with Catholic teachings.[233] Valerio Valeri, the nuncio to France, was "embarrassed" when he learned of this publicly from Pétain[234] and personally checked the information with Cardinal Secretary of State Maglione[235] who confirmed the Vatican's position.[236] In June 1942, Pius XII personally protested against the mass deportations of Jews from France, ordering the papal nuncio to protest to Pétain against "the inhuman arrests and deportations of Jews".[237] In September 1941, Pius XII objected to a Slovak Jewish Code,[238] which, unlike the earlier Vichy codes, prohibited intermarriage between Jews and non-Jews.[234] In October 1941, Harold H. Tittmann Jr., a U.S. delegate to the Vatican, asked the Pope to condemn the atrocities against Jews; Pius replied that the Vatican wished to remain "neutral",[239] reiterating the neutrality policy that Pius had invoked as early as September 1940.[233]

In 1942, the Slovak chargé d'affaires told Pius that Slovak Jews were being sent to concentration camps.[232] On 11 March 1942, several days before the first transport was due to leave, the chargé d'affaires in Bratislava reported to the Vatican: "I have been assured that this atrocious plan is the handwork of ... Prime Minister (Tuka), who confirmed the plan ... he dared to tell me—he who makes such a show of his Catholicism—that he saw nothing inhuman or un-Christian in it ... the deportation of 80,000 persons to Poland, is equivalent to condemning a great number of them to certain death." The Vatican protested to the Slovak government that it "deplore(s) these... measures which gravely hurt the natural human rights of persons, merely because of their race."[240]

On 18 September 1942, Pius XII received a letter from Monsignor Montini (future Pope Paul VI), saying "the massacres of the Jews reach frightening proportions and forms".[232] Later that month, Myron Taylor warned Pius that the Vatican's "moral prestige" was being injured by silence on European atrocities, a warning that was echoed simultaneously by representatives from the United Kingdom, Brazil, Uruguay, Belgium, and Poland.[241] Myron C. Taylor passed a U.S. Government memorandum to Pius on 26 September 1942, outlining intelligence received from the Jewish Agency for Palestine, which said that Jews from across the Nazi Empire were being systematically "butchered". Taylor asked if the Vatican might have any information that might "tend to confirm the reports", and, if so, what the Pope might be able to do to influence public opinion against the "barbarities".[242]

Cardinal Maglione handed Harold Tittmann a response to the letter on 10 October. The note thanked Washington for passing on the intelligence, and confirmed that reports of severe measures against the Jews had reached the Vatican from other sources, though it had not been possible to "verify their accuracy". Nevertheless, Maglione stated, "every opportunity is being taken by the Holy See, however, to mitigate the suffering of these unfortunate people".[243] According to David Kertzer's The Pope at War,[244] Monsignor Domenico Tardini "told the British envoy to the Vatican in mid-December [1942] that the Pope couldn't speak out about Nazi atrocities because the Vatican hadn't been able to verify the information".[245]

In December 1942, when Tittmann asked Cardinal Secretary of State Maglione if Pius would issue a proclamation similar to the Allied declaration "German Policy of Extermination of the Jewish Race", Maglione replied that the Vatican was "unable to denounce publicly particular atrocities".[246] Pius XII directly explained to Tittman that he could not name the Nazis without at the same time mentioning the Bolsheviks.[247]

On 14 December 1942, the German Jesuit and German resistance activist Lothar König wrote to Reverend Robert Leiber, the Pope's private secretary and a liaison to the Resistance, to inform him that his sources had confirmed approximately 6,000 Polish and Jewish people were being killed every day in "SS-furnaces" located in an area of what was then German-occupied Poland and is now part of western Ukraine.[248] It also referenced the Nazi death camps at Auschwitz and Dachau.[248] Giovanni Coco, an archivist in the Vatican Apostolic Archive, said that König urged the Holy See to withhold this information to protect the lives of his sources in the resistance.[249]

Following the Nazi/Soviet invasion of Poland, Pius XII's Summi Pontificatus called for the sympathy of the whole world towards Poland, where "the blood of countless human beings, even noncombatants" was being spilled.[172] Pius never publicly condemned the Nazi massacre of 1,800,000–1,900,000 Poles, overwhelmingly Catholic (including 2,935 members of the Catholic clergy).[250][251] In late 1942, Pius XII advised German and Hungarian bishops to speak out against the massacres on the Eastern Front.[252] In his 1942 Christmas Eve message, he expressed concern for "those hundreds of thousands, who ... sometimes only by reason of their nationality or race, are marked down for death or progressive extinction.[253] On 7 April 1943, Msgr. Tardini, one of Pius XII's closest advisors, advised Pius XII that it would be politically advantageous after the war to take steps to help Slovak Jews.[254]

In January 1943, Pius XII declined to denounce publicly the Nazi discrimination against the Jews, following requests to do so from Władysław Raczkiewicz, president of the Polish government-in-exile, and Bishop Konrad von Preysing of Berlin.[255] According to Toland, in June 1943, Pius XII addressed the issue of mistreatment of Jews at a conference of the Sacred College of Cardinals and said: "Every word We address to the competent authority on this subject, and all Our public utterances have to be carefully weighed and measured by Us in the interests of the victims themselves, lest, contrary to Our intentions, We make their situation worse and harder to bear".[187]

On 26 September 1943, following the German occupation of northern Italy, Nazi officials gave Jewish leaders in Rome 36 hours to produce 50 kilograms (110 lb) of gold (or the equivalent), threatening to take 300 hostages. Then Chief Rabbi of Rome Israel Zolli recounts in his memoir that he was selected to go to the Vatican and seek help.[256] The Vatican offered to loan 15 kilos, but the offer proved unnecessary when the Jews received an extension.[257] Soon afterward, when deportations from Italy were imminent, 477 Jews were hidden in the Vatican itself and another 4,238 were protected in Roman monasteries and convents.[258] Eighty percent of Roman Jews were saved from deportation.[259] Phayer argues that the German diplomats in Rome were the "initiators of the effort to save the city's Jews", but holds that Pius XII "cooperated in this attempt at rescue", while agreeing with Zuccotti that the Pope "did not give orders" for any Catholic institution to hide Jews.[260]

On 30 April 1943, Pius XII wrote to Bishop Konrad von Preysing of Berlin to say: "We give to the pastors who are working on the local level the duty of determining if and to what degree the danger of reprisals and of various forms of oppression occasioned by episcopal declarations ... ad maiora mala vitanda (to avoid worse) ... seem to advise caution. Here lies one of the reasons, why We impose self-restraint on Ourselves in our speeches; the experience, that we made in 1942 with papal addresses, which We authorized to be forwarded to the Believers, justifies our opinion, as far as We see. ... The Holy See has done whatever was in its power, with charitable, financial and moral assistance. To say nothing of the substantial sums which we spent in American money for the fares of immigrants."[261]

On 28 October 1943, Ernst von Weizsäcker, the German Ambassador to the Vatican, telegraphed Berlin that "the Pope has not yet let himself be persuaded to make an official condemnation of the deportation of the Roman Jews. ... Since it is currently thought that the Germans will take no further steps against the Jews in Rome, the question of our relations with the Vatican may be considered closed."[262][263]

In March 1944, through the papal nuncio in Budapest, Angelo Rotta, the Pope urged the Hungarian government to moderate its treatment of the Jews.[264] The Pope ordered Rotta and other papal legates to hide and shelter Jews.[265]

After George Mantello, Jewish First Secretary of El Salvador in Switzerland, received the Auschwitz Protocol with much delay around June 22, 1944 he immediately publicized its summary. From about June 24, 1944 in Switzerland that led to large-scale grassroots protests, Sunday masses and about 400 articles in the papers about the barbarism against Europe's Jews.[266][267] These unprecedented events created so much "noise" that it attracted international attention to the large-scale daily deportation of Hungary's Jews to Auschwitz since May 1944. Protests by the King of Sweden, the International Red Cross, the United States, Britain and the Vatican forced Hungary's Regent Miklos Horthy to order cessation of most deportations of Jews from Hungary to Auschwitz on July 6, 1944 and termination of transports three days later.[268] That saved many of the Jews of Hungary.

In 1944, Pius appealed to 13 Latin American governments to accept "emergency passports", although it also took the intervention of the United States Department of State for those countries to honor the documents.[269] The Kaltenbrunner Report to Hitler, dated 29 November 1944, against the backdrop of the 20 July 1944 Plot to assassinate Hitler, states that the Pope was somehow a conspirator, specifically naming Eugenio Pacelli (Pope Pius XII), as being a party in the attempt.[270]

Jewish orphans controversy

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In 2005, Corriere della Sera published a document dated 20 November 1946 on the subject of Jewish children baptized in war-time France. The document ordered that baptized children, if orphaned, should be kept in Catholic custody and stated that the decision "has been approved by the Holy Father". Nuncio Angelo Roncalli (who became Pope John XXIII, and was recognized by Yad Vashem as Righteous Among the Nations) ignored this directive.[271] Abe Foxman, the national director of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), who had himself been baptized as a child and had undergone a custody battle afterwards, called for an immediate freeze on Pius's beatification process until the relevant Vatican Secret Archives and baptismal records were opened.[272] Two Italian scholars, Matteo Luigi Napolitano and Andrea Tornielli, confirmed that the memorandum was genuine, although the reporting by the Corriere della Sera was misleading, as the document had originated in the French Catholic Church archives rather than the Vatican archives and strictly concerned itself with children without living blood relatives who were supposed to be handed over to Jewish organizations.[273]

Writings from released Vatican records revealed that Pius XII was personally but secretly involved in hiding the Finaly children from their Jewish family in an ultimately failed attempt to keep them Catholic after their secret baptism done against the wishes of their family. The French Catholic Church received very bad press from the affair, and several nuns and monks were jailed for the kidnapping before the children were discovered and spirited away to Israel. Only recently was the Pope's personal involvement revealed.[274]

Post–World War II

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Bishop Aloisius Joseph Muench, Pius XII's post-war liaison to the Office of Military Government, United States

After World War II, Pope Pius XII focused on material aid to war-torn Europe, an internal internationalization of the Catholic Church, and the development of its worldwide diplomatic relations. His encyclicals, Evangelii praecones and Fidei donum, issued on 2 June 1951 and 21 April 1957, respectively, increased the local decision-making of Catholic missions, many of which became independent dioceses. Pius XII demanded recognition of local cultures as fully equal to European culture.[275][276] Though his language retained old conceptions – Africa, for example, merited special attention since the church there worked 'to forward her work among the heathen multitudes' – in 1956 he expressed solidarity with the 'non-Europeans who aspire to full political independence'.[277]

In the immediate aftermath of the war, Pius XII elevated a number of high-profile resistors of Nazism to the College of Cardinals in 1946, among them the German bishops Joseph Frings of Cologne, Clemens von Galen of Münster and Konrad von Preysing of Berlin. From elsewhere in the liberated Greater Germanic Reich Pius selected other resistors: the Dutch archbishop Johannes de Jong; the Hungarian bishop József Mindszenty; the Polish archbishop Adam Stefan Sapieha; and the French archbishop Jules-Géraud Saliège. In 1946 and 1953, respectively, he named as cardinals Thomas Tien Ken-sin of China and Valerian Gracias of India – the first indigenous Catholics of their respective nations to sit in the College of Cardinals.[278] The Italian papal diplomat Angelo Roncalli (later Pope John XXIII) and Polish Archbishop Stefan Wyszyński were others among those elevated in 1953.

A German contingent dominated his inner circle at this period – the German Jesuits Robert Leiber, Wilhelm Hentrich and Ivo Zeiger. His personal confessor Augustin Bea was a German Jesuit and Mother Pascalina Lehnert and the other German speaking sisters of the papal household added to this element. The American bishop Aloisius Muench wrote in November 1948 that Pius XII was 'more interested in affairs of the Church in Germany than in any other part of the Church' and resolved to make the postwar German crisis a top priority – 'its refugee crisis, poverty, hunger and disease, the fate of prisoners-of-war and accused war criminals, the disruption to the internal organization and communal life of German Catholicism, and Germany's uncertain political future'.[279]

Pius XII was an anti-communist.[280]: 17 As he sought to secure resources from abroad to aid post-war recovery, believing deprivation fuelled political agitation, so he also sought to influence Italian politics. In January 1948, Luigi Gedda, of Italy's Catholic Action movement, was called to the Vatican as the election campaign for the first parliament of Italy's post-fascist republic was underway.[281]

Pius XII was rather distrustful of Alcide de Gasperi and Italy's Christian Democrats, considering the party indecisive and fractious – reformist currents within it particularly, which tended to the moderate Left – represented by the Sicilian priest Luigi Sturzo for example – he considered too accommodating to the Left. On the eve of the 1952 local elections in Rome, in which again the Communist and Socialist parties threatened to win out, he used informal connections to make his views known. Pius XII stated that the war against Communism was a holy war and excommunicated members of the Italian Communist Party. Having decided to encourage the Christian Democrats to consider a political alliance with the Rightist parties as part of an anti-left coalition, he asked the Jesuit, Father Riccardo Lombardi, to speak with de Gasperi to consider such an alliance – an electoral alliance with those even of monarchist and neo-fascist tendencies -including the Italian Social Movement. Adopting a domino theory he warned that, if "the Communists win in Rome, in Italy, it will cast a shadow on the entire world: France would become Communist, and then Spain and then all of Europe."[282]

Pius XII urged Chinese Catholics to resist the People's Republic of China government.[280]: 17 

Later life, illness and death

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Late years of Pope Pius XII

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A long illness in late 1954 caused the pope to consider abdication. Afterwards, changes in his work habit became noticeable. The Pope avoided long ceremonies, canonizations and consistories and displayed hesitancy in personnel matters. He found it increasingly difficult to chastise subordinates and appointees such as his physician, Riccardo Galeazzi-Lisi, who after numerous indiscretions was excluded from papal service for the last years, but, keeping his title, was able to enter the papal apartments to photograph the dying pope, which he sold to French magazines.[283] Pius underwent three courses of cellular rejuvenation treatment administered by Paul Niehans, the most important in 1954 when Pius was gravely ill. Side-effects of the treatment included hallucinations, from which the Pope suffered in his last years. "These years were also plagued by horrific nightmares. Pacelli's blood-curdling screams could be heard throughout the papal apartments."[284]

Pius XII often elevated young priests as bishops, such as Julius Döpfner (35 years) and Karol Wojtyła (later Pope John Paul II, 38 years), one of his last appointees in 1958. He took a firm stand against pastoral experiments, such as "worker-priests", who worked full-time in factories and joined political parties and unions. He continued to defend the theological tradition of Thomism as worthy of continued reform, and as superior to modern trends such as phenomenology or existentialism.[285]

Illness and death

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Mother Pascalina Lehnert, Pius XII's housekeeper and confidant for 41 years, until his death[17]
Photograph of Pius XII on his deathbed in Castel Gandolfo, taken on 10 October 1958

With frequent absences from work, Pope Pius XII had come to depend heavily on a few close colleagues, especially his aide Domenico Tardini, his speechwriter Robert Leiber, and his long-serving housekeeper Sister Pascalina Lehnert. The Pope still addressed lay people and groups about a wide range of topics. Sometimes he answered specific moral questions addressed to him. To professional associations he explained specific occupational ethics in light of church teachings. Robert Leiber helped him occasionally with his speeches and publications. Cardinal Augustin Bea was his personal confessor. Sister Pascalina was for forty years his "housekeeper, muse and lifelong companion".[286]

On Monday, 6 October 1958, at around 8:30 CET (7:30 GMT), he suffered a stroke, weakening him greatly in addition to his other maladies, after having taken ill the previous day after a series of meetings. He received the last rites. However, his condition suitably improved until 8 October when he suffered a second stroke. By the mid-afternoon, his doctors had reported that Pius XII was suffering from a severe cardio-pulmonary collapse and by 15:00 CET (14:00 GMT) believed that his death was imminent. Just before sunset, Pius XII contracted pneumonia and doctors immediately moved to bring in oxygen and blood plasma. His last words were reportedly, "Pray. Pray that this regrettable situation for the church may end".[287]

On the last full day of his life, his temperature rose steadily and his breathing became difficult. At 3:52 CET (2:52 GMT) on Thursday, 9 October, a Feast of Saint Denis of Paris, he gave a smile, lowered his head and died. The cause of death was recorded as acute heart failure. Domenico Tardini prayed the Magnificat Anima mea dominum, the Virgin Mary's praise of the Lord, in Latin. His doctor Gaspanini said afterwards: "The Holy Father did not die because of any specific illness. He was completely exhausted. He was overworked beyond limit. His heart was healthy, his lungs were good. He could have lived another 20 years, had he spared himself."[288] Spain declared ten days of mourning;[289] Brazil declared five days of mourning;[290] Italy declared three days of mourning and the closure of offices and schools as a sign of respect;[291] Portugal[292] and Cuba declared three days of mourning.[289]

The Testament of Pope Pius XII was published in the month of his death.[293]

Botched embalming

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The Pope of Mary: A Madonna and Child, added by John Paul II in 1982, hangs over the tomb of Pius XII.

Pius XII's physician, Riccardo Galeazzi-Lisi, reported that the pontiff's body was embalmed in the room where he died using a novel process invented by Oreste Nuzzi.[294]

Pope Pius XII did not want the vital organs removed from his body, demanding instead that it should be kept in the same condition "in which God created it".[295] According to Galeazzi-Lisi, this was the reason why he and Nuzzi, an embalmer from Naples, used an atypical approach with the embalming procedure.[295] In a controversial press conference, Galeazzi-Lisi described in great detail the embalming of the body of the late pontiff. He claimed to have used the same system of oils and resins with which the body of Jesus Christ was preserved.[295][clarification needed]

Galeazzi-Lisi asserted that the new process would "preserve the body indefinitely in its natural state".[294] However, whatever chance the new embalming process had of efficaciously preserving the body was obliterated by intense heat in Castel Gandolfo during the embalming process. As a result, the body decomposed rapidly and the viewing of the faithful had to be terminated abruptly.[296][better source needed]

Galeazzi-Lisi reported that heat in the halls where the body of the late pope lay in state caused chemical reactions which required it to be treated twice after the original preparation.[295] Others describe Galeazzi and Nuzzi "crawling over the catafalque in the dead of night... to renew their embalming".[297] Swiss guards stationed around Pius XII's body were reported to have become ill during their vigil, and the body of the pope reportedly turned "emerald green".[294][298] However, other sources indicate it was the smell of the chemicals and resins that caused the eyes of the Noble Guard to water.[299]

Funeral

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His funeral procession into Rome was the largest congregation of Romans as of that date. Romans mourned "their" pope, who was born in their own city, especially as a hero in the time of war.[300] Cardinal Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli (later Pope John XXIII) wrote in his diary on Saturday, 11 October 1958 that probably no Roman had enjoyed such a triumph, which he viewed as a reflection of the spiritual majesty and religious dignity of the late Pius XII.[301]

When Pius XII was interred, the small crucifix and rosary that he held in his hands as he died were buried with him.[287]

Cause for canonization

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Pius XII
Pope and Confessor
Born2 March 1876
Died9 October 1958 (aged 82)
Venerated inCatholic Church
AttributesPapal vestments
Papal tiara
Pectoral cross

Pope Pius XII's cause of canonization was opened on 18 November 1965 by Pope Paul VI during the final session of the Second Vatican Council. In May 2007, the congregation recommended that Pius XII should be declared Venerable.[302] Pope Benedict XVI did so on 19 December 2009, simultaneously making the same declaration in regard to Pope John Paul II.[7]

For Venerable status, the Congregation for the Causes of Saints certifies the "heroic virtues" of the candidate. Making Pius XII as Venerable met with various responses, most centered on the papal words and actions during World War II. Benedict's signature on the decree of heroic virtue was regarded by some as a public relations blunder, though acceptance of Pius XII as a saviour of Europe's Jews is regarded as 'proof of fidelity to the Church, the pope and the Tradition' by neoconservative Catholic groups.[303] On the other hand, Rabbi Marvin Hier, founder and dean at the Simon Wiesenthal Center said "there would be a great distortion of history" if Pius XII were canonized.[304] Rabbi Jeremy Lawrence, the head of Sydney's Great Synagogue, said: "How can one venerate a man who ... seemed to give his passive permission to the Nazis as the Jews were prised from his doorstep in Rome?"[305]

On 1 August 2013, an anonymous "source who works for the Congregation for the Causes of Saints" said Pope Francis was considering canonization without a miracle, "us[ing] the formula of scientia certa".[306]

Pope Francis also announced his intention in January 2014 to open the Vatican Secret Archives to scholars so that an evaluation of Pius' role in the war can be determined before canonization. This has been met with praise by the Jewish community. However, it was said that it could take up to a year to gather all the documents and then analyze them.[307][308][309]

On 26 May 2014, on his way back from the Holy Land to the Vatican City, Pope Francis stated that the late pope would not be beatified because the cause had stalled. Pope Francis stated that he checked the progress of the cause for Pius XII and said that there were no miracles attributed to his intercession, which was the main reason that the cause had halted.[310]

Father Peter Gumpel stated, in a 12 January 2016 documentary on the late pope, that there was consultation of the Vatican Secret Archives which were carried out in secret; in short, it means that there are no controversies surrounding the late pontiff that could impede the potential beatification.[311] In that same documentary, the cause's vice-postulator Marc Lindeijer stated that several miracles attributed to the late pope are reported to the postulation every year but the individuals related to the healings do not come forward to enact diocesan proceedings of investigation. Lindeijer explained that this was the reason that the cause has stalled in the past as none have come forward to assist the postulation in their investigations.[312]

Potential miracle

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Reports from 2014 indicate a potential miracle from the United States attributed to the intercession of the late pope that was reported to the postulation. The miracle pertains to a male plagued with severe influenza and pneumonia that could have proven to be fatal; the individual was said to have been healed in full after a novena to Pius XII.[313][314]

Views, interpretations and scholarship

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Contemporary

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During the war, Time credited Pius XII and the Catholic Church for "fighting totalitarianism more knowingly, devoutly and authoritatively, and for a longer time, than any other organised power".[315] During the war he was also praised editorially by The New York Times for opposing Nazi antisemitism and aggression.[316] According to Paul O'Shea, "The Nazis demonised the Pope as the agent of international Jewry; the Americans and British were continually frustrated because he would not condemn Nazi aggression; and the Russians accused him of being an agent of Fascism and the Nazis."[317]

On 21 September 1945, the general secretary of the World Jewish Congress, Aryeh Leon Kubowitzki, presented an amount of money to the Pope, "in recognition of the work of the Holy See in rescuing Jews from Fascist and Nazi persecutions."[318] After the war, in the autumn of 1945, Harry Greenstein from Baltimore, a close friend of Chief Rabbi Herzog of Jerusalem, told Pius XII how grateful Jews were for all he had done for them. "My only regret", the Pope replied, "is not to have been able to save a greater number of Jews".[319]

Pius XII was also criticised during his lifetime. Leon Poliakov wrote in 1950 that Pius XII had been a tacit supporter of Vichy France's antisemitic laws, calling him "less forthright" than Pope Pius XI either out of "Germanophilia" or the hope that Hitler would defeat Communist Russia.[320]

After Pius XII's death on 9 October 1958 many Jewish organisations and newspapers around the world paid tribute to his legacy. At the United Nations, Golda Meir, Israel's Foreign Minister, said, "When fearful martyrdom came to our people in the decade of Nazi terror, the voice of the Pope was raised for the victims. The life of our times was enriched by a voice speaking out on the great moral truths above the tumult of daily conflict."[321] The Jewish Chronicle (London) stated on 10 October, "Adherents of all creeds and parties will recall how Pius XII faced the responsibilities of his exalted office with courage and devotion. Before, during, and after the Second World War, he constantly preached the message of peace. Confronted by the monstrous cruelties of Nazism, Fascism and Communism, he repeatedly proclaimed the virtues of humanity and compassion."[321] In the Canadian Jewish Chronicle (17 October), Rabbi J. Stern stated that Pius XII "made it possible for thousands of Jewish victims of Nazism and Fascism to be hidden away..."[321] In 6 November edition of The Jewish Post & News in Winnipeg, William Zukerman, the former The American Hebrew columnist, wrote that no other leader "did more to help the Jews in their hour of greatest tragedy, during the Nazi occupation of Europe, than the late Pope".[321] Other prominent Jewish figures, such as Israeli Prime Minister Moshe Sharett and Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Herzog expressed their public gratitude to Pius XII.[322]

Early historical accounts

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Some early works echoed the favourable sentiments of the war period, including Polish historian Oskar Halecki's Pius XII: Eugenio Pacelli: Pope of peace (1954) and Nazareno Padellaro's Portrait of Pius XII (1949).

Pinchas Lapide, a Jewish theologian and Israeli diplomat to Milan in the 1960s, estimated controversially in Three Popes and the Jews that Pius "was instrumental in saving at least 700,000 but probably as many as 860,000 Jews from certain death at Nazi hands".[323] Some historians have questioned this[324] often cited number, which Lapide reached by "deducting all reasonable claims of rescue" by non-Catholics from the total number of European Jews surviving the Holocaust.[325] A Catholic scholar, Kevin J. Madigan, has interpreted this and other praise from prominent Jewish leaders, including that offered by Golda Meir, as less than sincere, an attempt to secure Vatican recognition of the State of Israel.[326]

The Deputy

[edit]
A rare 1899 handwriting sample of Eugenio Pacelli with text in Latin

In 1963, Rolf Hochhuth's controversial drama Der Stellvertreter. Ein christliches Trauerspiel (The Deputy, a Christian tragedy, released in English in 1964) portrayed Pope Pius XII as a hypocrite who remained silent about the Holocaust. The depiction is described as lacking "credible substantiation" by the Encyclopædia Britannica.[327] Books such as Joseph Lichten's A Question of Judgment (1963), written in response to The Deputy, defended Pius XII's actions during the war. Lichten labelled any criticism of the Pope's actions during World War II as "a stupefying paradox" and said, "no one who reads the record of Pius XII's actions on behalf of Jews can subscribe to Hochhuth's accusation".[328] Critical scholarly works like Guenter Lewy's controversial The Catholic Church and Nazi Germany (1964) also followed the publication of The Deputy. Lewy's conclusion was that "the Pope and his advisers—influenced by the long tradition of moderate anti-Semitism so widely accepted in Vatican circles—did not view the plight of the Jews with a real sense of urgency and moral outrage. For this assertion no documentation is possible, but it is a conclusion difficult to avoid".[329] In 2002 the play was adapted into the film, Amen.. An article in La Civilità Cattolica in March 2009 indicated the accusations that Hochhuth's play made widely known originated not among Jews but in the Communist bloc. It was on Moscow Radio, on 2 June 1945, that the first accusation directly against Pius XII of refusing to speak out against the exterminations in Nazi concentration camps. It was also the first medium to call him "Hitler's Pope".[330]

The former high-ranking Securitate General Ion Mihai Pacepa alleged in 2007 that Hochhuth's play and numerous publications attacking Pius XII as a Nazi sympathizer were fabrications that were part of a KGB and Eastern Bloc secret services disinformation campaign, named Seat 12, to discredit the moral authority of the Church and Christianity in the West.[331] Pacepa indicated that he was involved in contacting Eastern Bloc agents close the Vatican in order to fabricate the story to be used for the attack against the wartime pope.[331]

Actes

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In the aftermath of the controversy surrounding The Deputy, in 1964, Pope Paul VI authorized Jesuit scholars to access the Vatican State Secretariat Archives, which are normally not opened for seventy-five years. Original documents in French and Italian, Actes et documents du Saint Siège relatifs à la Seconde Guerre Mondiale, were published in eleven volumes between 1965 and 1981.[224] Pierre Blet also published a summary of the eleven volumes.[332]

Hitler's Pope and The Myth of Hitler's Pope

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In 1999 the British author John Cornwell's Hitler's Pope criticised Pius for his actions and inactions during the Holocaust. Cornwell argued that Pius subordinated opposition to the Nazis to his goal of increasing and centralising the power of the papacy. Further, Cornwell accused Pius of antisemitism.[333] The Encyclopædia Britannica described Cornwell's depiction of Pius XII as anti-Semitic as lacking "credible substantiation".[334] Kenneth L. Woodward stated in his review in Newsweek that "errors of fact and ignorance of context appear on almost every page".[335] Paul O'Shea summarized the work by saying it was "disappointing because of its many inaccuracies, selective use of sources, and claims that do not bear any scrutiny. However, [Cornwell] has rendered a service by insisting Pacelli be re-examined thoroughly and placed firmly within the context of his times".[336] Five years after the publication of Hitler's Pope, Cornwell stated: "I would now argue, in the light of the debates and evidence following Hitler's Pope, that Pius XII had so little scope of action that it is impossible to judge the motives for his silence during the war, while Rome was under the heel of Mussolini and later occupied by Germany".[337][338][339]

Cornwell's work was the first to have access to testimonies from Pius XII's beatification process as well as to many documents from Pacelli's nunciature which had just been opened under the 75-year rule by the Vatican State Secretary archives.[340] Susan Zuccotti's Under His Very Windows: The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy (2000) and Michael Phayer's The Catholic Church and the Holocaust, 1930–1965 (2000) and Pius XII, The Holocaust, and the Cold War (2008) provided further critical, though more scholarly analysis of Pius's legacy.[341] Daniel Goldhagen's A Moral Reckoning and David Kertzer's The Pope Against the Jews denounced Pius, while Ralph McInery and José Sanchez wrote less critical assessments of Pius XII's pontificate.[342]

In specific riposte to Cornwell's criticism, American Rabbi and historian David Dalin published The Myth of Hitler's Pope: How Pope Pius XII Rescued Jews from the Nazis in 2005. He reaffirmed previous accounts of Pius having been a saviour of thousands of Europe's Jews. In a review of the book, another Jewish scholar, the Churchill biographer Martin Gilbert, wrote that Dalin's work was "an essential contribution to our understanding of the reality of Pope Pius XII's support for Jews at their time of greatest danger. Hopefully, his account will replace the divisively harmful version of papal neglect, and even collaboration, that has held the field for far too long".[343] Dalin's book also argued that Cornwell and others were liberal Catholics and ex-Catholics who "exploit the tragedy of the Jewish people during the Holocaust to foster their own political agenda of forcing changes on the Catholic Church today" and that Pius XII was responsible for saving the lives of many thousands of Jews.[344]

A number of other scholars replied with favourable accounts of Pius XII, including Margherita Marchione's Yours Is a Precious Witness: Memoirs of Jews and Catholics in Wartime Italy (1997), Pope Pius XII: Architect for Peace (2000) and Consensus and Controversy: Defending Pope Pius XII (2002); Pierre Blet's Pius XII and the Second World War, According to the Archives of the Vatican (1999); and Ronald J. Rychlak's Hitler, the War and the Pope (2000).[341][345] Ecclesiastical historian William Doino (author of The Pius War: Responses to the Critics of Pius XII), concluded that Pius was "emphatically not silent".[346] Other important works challenging the negative characterization of Pius's legacy were written by Eamon Duffy, Clifford Longley, Cardinal Winning, Michael Burleigh, Paul Johnson, and Denis Mack Smith.[342]

In his 2003 book A Moral Reckoning, Daniel Goldhagen asserted that Pius XII "chose again and again not to mention the Jews publicly.... [In] public statements by Pius XII ... any mention of the Jews is conspicuously absent." In a review of Goldhagen's book, Mark Riebling counters that Pius used the word "Jew" in his first encyclical, Summi Pontificatus, published on 20 October 1939. "There Pius insisted that all human beings be treated charitably—for, as Paul had written to the Colossians, in God's eyes "there is neither Gentile nor Jew". In saying this, the Pope affirmed that Jews were full members of the human community—which is Goldhagen's own criterion for establishing 'dissent from the anti-Semitic creed'."[347]

In Pius XII, the Hound of Hitler, the Catholic journalist Gerard Noel dismissed accusations that Pius was "anti-semitic" or "pro-Nazi", but accused him of "silence" based on fear of retaliation and wrote that "Hitler played the Pope with consummate expertise".[342] Ian Kershaw came to a similar conclusion about Pius's motives.[348] He suggested that besides seeking to protect his own church and parishioners, Pius feared that speaking out would worsen the plight of the Jews, though he could have hardly made it worse after 1942. Kershaw called the 1942 Christmas message "a missed opportunity", adding: "Having decided to refer to the genocide, Pius ought to have followed this with a condemnation that was loud, plain and unequivocal." However, he doubted that condemnation from the Pope would have led to Nazi Germany changing course.[348]

Gerald Steinacher's Nazis on the Run accused Pius of turning a blind eye to the activities of Vatican priests assisting "denazification through conversion", which he said helped ex-Nazi anti-communists to escape justice.[349][350]

A Berlin Jewish couple, Mr. and Mrs. Wolfsson, argued in defence of the pope: "None of us wanted the Pope to take an open stand. We were all fugitives, and fugitives do not wish to be pointed at. The Gestapo would have become more excited and would have intensified its inquisitions. If the Pope had protested, Rome would have become the center of attention. It was better that the Pope said nothing. We all shared this opinion at the time, and this is still our conviction today." There were examples when the Catholic Church reaction to Nazi brutality only intensified SS persecutions of both Jews and the church.[351]

International Catholic–Jewish Historical Commission

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In 1999, in an attempt to address some of this controversy, the International Catholic–Jewish Historical Commission (Historical Commission), a group of three Catholic and three Jewish scholars was appointed, respectively, by the Holy See's Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews (Holy See's Commission) and the International Jewish Committee for Interreligious Consultations (IJCIC), to whom a preliminary report was issued in October 2000.[352]

The Commission did not discover any documents, but had the agreed-upon task to review the existing Vatican volumes, that make up the Actes et Documents du Saint Siège (ADSS)[353] The commission was internally divided over the question of access to additional documents from the Holy See, access to the news media by individual commission members, and, questions to be raised in the preliminary report. It was agreed to include all 47 individual questions by the six members, and use them as Preliminary Report.[354] In addition to the 47 questions, the commission issued no findings of its own. It stated that it was not their task to sit in judgment of the Pope and his advisors but to contribute to a more nuanced understanding of the papacy during the Holocaust.[355]

The 47 questions by the six scholars were grouped into three parts: (a) 27 specific questions on existing documents,[356] mostly asking for background and additional information such as drafts of the encyclical Mit brennender Sorge, which was largely written by Eugenio Pacelli.[357] (b) Fourteen questions dealt with themes of individual volumes,[358] such as the question how Pius viewed the role of the church during the war.[359] (c) Six general questions,[360] such as the absence of any anti-communist sentiments in the documents.[361] The disagreement between members over additional documents locked up under the Holy See's 70-year rule resulted in a discontinuation of the commission in 2001 on friendly terms.[354] Unsatisfied with the findings, Michael Marrus, one of the three Jewish members of the commission, said the commission "ran up against a brick wall .... It would have been really helpful to have had support from the Holy See on this issue."[362]

Peter Stanford, a Catholic journalist and writer, wrote, regarding Fatal Silence: The Pope, the Resistance and the German Occupation of Rome (written by Robert Katz; Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2003):

[The Vatican] still refuses to open all its files from the period—which seems to me to be a conclusive admission of guilt—but Katz has winkled various papers out of God's business address on earth to add to the stash of new information he has uncovered in America in the archives of the Office of Strategic Services. From this we learn that, although Pius's defenders still say that he paid a golden ransom in a vain effort to save Rome's Jews from transportation to the death camps, the most he did was indicate a willingness to chip in if the Jews could not raise the sum demanded. He also shows that no individual Jews were spared, as is often claimed, after Pius personally intervened with the Nazis. Moreover, Katz reveals that those who did escape the Nazi round-up and found sanctuary in church buildings in Rome did so in the face of explicit opposition from the Vatican. The real heroes and heroines were the priests and nuns who refused to bow to Pius's officials and hand over the desperate people whom they were hiding. The main problem with writing about Pius's wartime is that in effect, he did nothing. Facing the murders of six million people, he remained silent. As Jews were taken away from the ghetto that sat right alongside St Peter's, he may have agonised, but he did not intervene. When he did raise his voice with the German occupiers, it was either to ensure that the Vatican City state would not be compromised—that is to say, he would be safe—or to emphasise his own neutrality in a conflict which, for many, became a battle between good and evil. His unrealistic hope was that the Catholic Church could emerge as the peacemaker across Europe. Instead, both the American and British leaderships, as Katz shows, regarded the papacy as tainted by its association with Nazism and irrelevant in the post-1945 reshaping of the continent. Both had urged Pius to speak up against the Holocaust and so drew their own conclusions about him. Far from being a saint, then, he was at best a fool, perhaps an anti-Semite and probably a coward.[363]

Katz's book also discusses how the Pope's view of the anti-Nazi resistance—as harbingers of Communism—meant he chose not to intervene in the Ardeatine massacre.[364]

Recent developments

[edit]

In The Real Odessa: How Peron Brought the Nazi War Criminals to Argentina (2002), the journalist Uki Goñi described how the Argentinian government dealt with war criminals. However, during his research Goñi accidentally stumbled on British Foreign Office documents relating to the involvement of Vatican personnel in the smuggling of war criminals, the so-called post-war "ratlines". Goñi found out that the British Envoy D'Arcy Osborne had intervened with Pope Pius XII to put an end to these illegal activities. Furthermore, he claimed "that the Pope secretly pleaded with Washington and London on behalf of notorious criminals and Nazi collaborators".[365] Suzanne Brown-Fleming's The Holocaust and Catholic Conscience: Cardinal Aloisius Muench and the Guilt Question in Germany (2006) underlines Goñi's findings. Brown-Fleming stated how Pius XII allegedly intervened on behalf of German war criminals (e.g. Otto Ohlendorf). Brown-Fleming's main source was the archive of Pope Pius XII's representative in post-war Germany, Cardinal Aloisius Joseph Muench.[366] Then, Phayer's Pius XII, the Holocaust, and the Cold War (2008) utilized documents that were released via Bill Clinton's 1997 executive order declassifying wartime and postwar documents, many of which are currently at the US National Archives and Holocaust Memorial Museum. These documents include diplomatic correspondence, American espionage, and decryptions of German communications. Relevant documents have also been released by the Argentine government and the British Foreign Office. Other information sources have become available, including the diary of Bishop Joseph Patrick Hurley. These documents reveal new information about Pius XII's actions regarding the Ustaše regime, the genocides in Poland, the finances of the wartime church, the deportation of the Roman Jews, and the ratlines for Nazis and fascists fleeing Europe.[367] According to Phayer, "the face of Pope Pius that we see in these documents is not the same face we see in the eleven volumes the Vatican published of World War II documents, a collection which, though valuable, is nonetheless critically flawed because of its many omissions".[368]

On 19 September 2008, Pope Benedict XVI held a reception for conference participants during which he praised Pius XII as a pope who made every effort to save Jews during the war.[369] A second conference was held from 6–8 November 2008 by the Pontifical Academy of Life.[370]

On 9 October 2008, the 50th anniversary of Pius XII's death, Benedict XVI celebrated pontifical Mass in his memory. Shortly before and after the Mass, dialectics continued between the Jewish hierarchy and the Vatican as Rabbi She'ar Yashuv Cohen of Haifa addressed the Synod of Bishops and expressed his disappointment towards Pius XII's "silence" during the war.[371]

On 16 June 2009, the Pave the Way Foundation announced that it would release 2,300 pages of documents in Avellino, Italy, dating from 1940 to 1945, which the organisation claims show that Pius XII "worked diligently to save Jews from Nazi tyranny"; the organisation's founder, Krupp, has accused historians of harbouring "private agendas" and having "let down" the public.[372] The foundation's research led to the publication of the book Pope Pius XII and World War II: the documented truth, authored by Krupp; the book reproduces 225 pages of the new documents produced by the foundation's research.

Mark Riebling argued in his 2015 book Church of Spies that Pius XII was involved in plots to overthrow Hitler from mid-October 1939 and was prepared to mediate a peace between the Allies and the Axis in the event of a regime change in Germany. The courier between the resistance group under Admiral Wilhelm Canaris and the pope was the Bavarian lawyer and Catholic politician Joseph Müller.[373]

Opening of the Vatican Secret Archives

[edit]

On the occasion of the 80th anniversary of the appointment of Pius XII as Bishop of Rome, Pope Francis announced during an audience for staff of the Vatican Secret Archives on 4 March 2019 that Vatican archival materials pertaining to Pius XII's pontificate would be accessible to scholars beginning on 2 March 2020.[374][375] While this announcement was welcome by researchers, much of it was clouded by the role of Pope Pius XII with regard to the Holocaust. However, archival research of this period was expected to inform a much broader shift within global Christianity, from Europe to the global South.[376]

The Vatican archives have provided many millions of pages and it was expected to take many years to process the findings. As of May 2021, the study of the archive had been inconclusive.[377] In January 2022, historian Michael F. Feldkamp announced that he had discovered in the Vatican archives evidence that Pius XII had personally saved at least 15,000 Jews from extermination, and that he had sent a report on the Holocaust to the American government shortly after the Wannsee Conference of January 20, 1942, although they did not believe the pope.[378]

In June 2022, David Kertzer, one of the first historians to have analyzed the archives, published his book The Pope at War.[379] Kertzer, with the support of thousands of unpublished documents, uncovered the existence of secret negotiations between Hitler and Pius XII already a few weeks after the end of the conclave, promoted by Hitler himself with the intention of improving his relations with the Vatican. For his part, Pius XII concentrated his efforts on protecting and improving the situation of the Church in Germany in the face of the anti-Catholic policies of the Nazis, although no agreement was reached.[380]

In September 2023, Corriere della Sera published a newly discovered documentation from the Vatican Secret Archive showing that a German Jesuit had informed the Pope of the Holocaust.[381][382]

The archives have also alleged that Pope Pius XII had knowledge of Marcial Maciel's accusations of crimes, including sexual abuse of seminarians and drug abuse, before action was taken.[383] The Vatican may have known of Maciel's crimes for 50 years.[383]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ Joseph Bottum; David G. Dalin (2004). The Pius War: Responses to the Critics of Pius XII. Lexington Books. pp. 224–27. ISBN 9780739158883.
  2. ^ Gerard Noel, The Hound of Hitler, p. 3 Encyclopædia Britannica Online – Reflections on the Holocaust: Further Reading; web 26 April 2013
  3. ^ Coppa, Frank J. (29 June 2006). "Pius XII: Assessment". Encyclopædia Britannica. he established the Vatican Information Service to provide aid to, and information about, thousands of war refugees and instructed the church to provide discreet aid to Jews, which quietly saved thousands of lives
  4. ^ "L'oro di Pio XII". archive.is. 13 April 2013. Archived from the original on 13 April 2013. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  5. ^ "Roman Catholicism: the period of the world wars". Encyclopædia Britannica. 17 February 2016.
  6. ^ Encyclopedia of Catholicism by Frank K. Flinn, J. Gordon Melton; ISBN 0-8160-5455-X, p. 267
  7. ^ a b Pitel, Laura (19 December 2009). "Pope John Paul II and Pope Pius XII move closer to sainthood". The Times. London. Retrieved 25 September 2011.
  8. ^ Pollard, 2005, p. 70
  9. ^ Marchione, 2004, p. 1
  10. ^ Gerard Noel, Pius XII: The Hound of Hitler, p. 5
  11. ^ O'Brien, p. 1
  12. ^ "Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli, aka Pope Pius XII". familysearch.org. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
  13. ^ Paul O'Shea, A Cross Too Heavy, 2011, p. 79
  14. ^ O'Shea, p. 81
  15. ^ Cornwell, p. 22
  16. ^ Cornwell, p. 23
  17. ^ a b Noel, p. 9
  18. ^ a b Marchione, 2000, p. 193
  19. ^ O'Shea, p. 82
  20. ^ Noel, p. 10
  21. ^ a b Marchione, 2004, p. 9
  22. ^ a b c Marchione, 2004, p. 10
  23. ^ Cornwell, Hitler's Pope, p. 42
  24. ^ Cornwell, p. 32
  25. ^ Dalin, 2005, p. 47
  26. ^ O'Shea, pp. 86, 88
  27. ^ Levillain, 2002, p. 1211
  28. ^ Fatoni, 1992, pp. 45–85
  29. ^ Marchione, 2004, p. 11
  30. ^ Lehnert (2014), pages 5–6.
  31. ^ Rychlak, 2000, p. 6
  32. ^ Lehnert (2014), 6–7.
  33. ^ Cornwell, p. 73
  34. ^ Noel, p. 34
  35. ^ Cornwell, p. 75
  36. ^ John Cornwell (2000). Hitler's Pope: The Secret History of Pius XII. Penguin. p. 78. ISBN 9780140296273.
  37. ^ Lehnert (2014), pages 7–8.
  38. ^ Lehnert (2014), page 8.
  39. ^ Volk, 1972; Cornwell, p. 96
  40. ^ Kaas, 1930.
  41. ^ Stehle, 1975, pp. 139–41
  42. ^ Morsey, p. 121
  43. ^ Cornwell, pp. 103–04
  44. ^ a b The Pius War: Responses to the Critics of Pius XII, David G. Dalin, Joseph Bottum, Lexington Books, 2010, p. 17
  45. ^ Controversial Concordats: The Vatican's Relations with Napoleon, Mussolini, and Hitler, Ed Frank J. Coppa, Catholic University of America Press, P. 173, ISBN 081320920X
  46. ^ Kent, 2002, p. 24
  47. ^ Cornwell, p. 115
  48. ^ Fahlbusch, Erwin (ed.). Bromiley, Geoffrey W. (trans.) (2005). The Encyclopedia of Christianity; ISBN 0-8028-2416-1
  49. ^ Cornwell, p. 121
  50. ^ Cornwell, p. 128. Pacelli, quoted in Scholder's The Churches and the Third Reich, p. 157
  51. ^ Dalin, 2005, pp. 58–59
  52. ^ Marchione, 2002, p. 22
  53. ^ Christian responses to the Holocaust: moral and ethical issues: Religion, theology, and the Holocaust, Donald J. Dietrich, p. 92, Syracuse University Press, 2003; ISBN 0-8156-3029-8
  54. ^ A dictionary of Jewish-Christian relations, Edward Kessler, Neil Wenborn, p. 86, Cambridge University Press, 2005; ISBN 0-521-82692-6
  55. ^ Joseph Bottum. April 2004. "The End of the Pius Wars" Archived 10 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine, First Things; retrieved 1 July 2009.
  56. ^ Phayer, 2000, p. 3
  57. ^ Bussmann, Walter (1969). "Pius XII an die deutschen Bischöfe". Hochland. 61: 61–65.
  58. ^ a b c Gutman, Israel, Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, p. 1136
  59. ^ Passelecq, Suchecky pp. 113–137
  60. ^ a b Hill, Roland. 1997, 11 August. "The lost encyclical" Archived 30 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine, The Tablet.
  61. ^ Passelecq, Suchecky. p. 121
  62. ^ Humani generis unitas
  63. ^ "Nostra aetate: Transforming the Catholic–Jewish Relationship: Jewish-Catholic Relationship Transformed". Adl.org. Archived from the original on 30 October 2012. Retrieved 6 May 2009.
  64. ^ On 16 March four days after coronation, Gundlach informed LaFarge that the documents had been given to Pius XI shortly before his death, but that the new Pope had so far had no opportunity to learn about it. Passelecq, Suchecky. p. 126
  65. ^ Encyclical of Pope Pius on the unity of human society to our venerable brethren: The Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops, Bishops, and other ordinaries in peace and the communion with the Apostolic see (AAS 1939).
  66. ^ Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli. Discorsi E Panegirici 1931–1938; Tipografia Poliglotta Vaticana, 1939
  67. ^ "85 años del bautizo de Juan Carlos de Borbón (y el tenso reencuentro de los reyes Alfonso XIII y Victoria Eugenia)". Vanity Fair (in European Spanish). 25 January 2023. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  68. ^ Ludwig Volk, Die Kirche in den deutschsprachigen Ländern in: Handbuch der Kirchengeschichte, Band VII, p. 539
  69. ^ Donald J. Dietrich, p. 92, Syracuse University Press, 2003; ISBN 0-8156-3029-8
  70. ^ Volk, pp. 539–544
  71. ^ They included: Latvia 1922, Bavaria 1924, Poland 1925, France I., 1926, France II. 1926, Lithuania 1927, Czechoslovakia 1928, Portugal I 1928, Italy I 1929, Italy II 1929, Portugal II 1929, Romania I 1927, Prussia 1929, Romania II 1932, Baden 1932, Germany 1933, Austria 1933. See P. Joanne M.Restrepo Restrepo SJ. Concordata Regnante Sanctissimo Domino Pio PP.XI. Inita Pontificia Universita Gregoriana, Roma, 1934.
  72. ^ Ludwig Volk, "Die Kirche in den deutschsprachigen Ländern" in: Handbuch der Kirchengeschichte, Band VII, pp. 546–547
  73. ^ Ludwig Volk Das Reichskonkordat vom 20. Juli 1933, pp. 34f, 45–58
  74. ^ Klaus Scholder The Churches and the Third Reich volume 1: especially Part 1, chapter 10; part 2, chapter 2
  75. ^ Volk, pp. 98–101
  76. ^ Feldkamp, pp. 88–93
  77. ^ Volk, pp. 101, 105
  78. ^ Volk, p. 254
  79. ^ Krieg, Robert A., Catholic Theologians in Nazi Germany, p. 112
  80. ^ Vidmar, pp. 327–31
  81. ^ Pham, p. 45, quote: "When Pius XI was complimented on the publication, in 1937, of his encyclical denouncing Nazism, Mit brennender Sorge, his response was to point to his Secretary of State and say bluntly, 'The credit is his.'"
  82. ^ Bokenkotter, pp. 389–92, quote "And when Hitler showed increasing belligerance toward the Church, Pius met the challenge with a decisiveness that astonished the world. His encyclical Mit brennender Sorge was the 'first great official public document to dare to confront and criticize Nazism' and 'one of the greatest such condemnations ever issued by the Vatican'. Smuggled into Germany, it was read from all the Catholic pulpits on Palm Sunday in March 1937. It exposed the fallacy and denounced the Nazi myth of blood and soil; it decried its neopaganism, its war of annihilation against the Church, and even described the Führer himself as a 'mad prophet possessed of repulsive arrogance'. The Nazis were infuriated, and in retaliation closed and sealed all the presses that had printed it and took numerous vindictive measures against the Church, including staging a long series of immorality trials of the Catholic clergy."
  83. ^ 74.A l'Eveque de Passau, in "Lettres de Pie XII aux Eveques Allemands 1939–1944, Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1967, p. 416
  84. ^ "Accessed 4 December 2014; "La Presse et L'apostolat: discours prononce au College Angelique le 17 Avril, 1936" Paris : Bonne Presse, 1936" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  85. ^ Tardini, Pio XII roma 1960
  86. ^ Michael F. Feldkamp. Pius XII und Deutschland; ISBN 3-525-34026-5.
  87. ^ Dalin, 2005, pp. 69–70
  88. ^ Catholic Forum. Pope Pius XII profile Archived 24 April 2006 at the Wayback Machine.
  89. ^ Pacelli’s assertion was factually incorrect. Pacelli, born in 1876, was elected Pope at the age of 63. For 33 of those 63 years, the Pope was not named Pius. Leo XIII was Pope from 1878 to 1903, including the day in 1899 when Pacelli was ordained a priest. Benedict XV was Pope from 1914 to 1922, including the day in 1917 when Pacelli was consecrated a bishop. Pius XII, quoted in Joseph Brosch, Pius XII, Lehrer der Wahrheit, Kreuzring, Trier,1968, p. 45
  90. ^ "Medius vestrum stetit quem vos nescetis. Everybody knew what the Pope meant". Domenico Cardinale Tardini, Pio XII, Tipografia Poliglotta Vaticana, 1960, p. 105
  91. ^ Lehnert, Pascalina. Ich durfte Ihm Dienen, Erinnerungen an Papst Pius XII. Naumann, Würzburg, 1986, p. 57
  92. ^ Lehnert, Pascalina. Ich durfte Ihm Dienen, Erinnerungen an Papst Pius XII. Naumann, Würzburg, 1986, p. 49
  93. ^ Congregation of Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs and Congregation of Ordinary Affairs
  94. ^ Pio XII, La Allocuzione nel consistorio Segreto del 12 Gennaio 1953 in Pio XII, Discorsi e Radiomessagi di Sua Santita Vatican City, 1953, p. 455
  95. ^ Domenico Cardinale Tardini, Pio XII, Tipografia Poliglotta Vaticana, 1960, p. 157
  96. ^ Giulio Nicolini, Il Cardinale Domenico Tardini, Padova, 1980; ISBN 88-7026-340-1; p. 313
  97. ^ In the Secretariat of State he had actively supported "foreigners", for example Francis Spellman, the American monsignor, whom he consecrated himself as the first American Bishop in the Vatican curia. Spellman had organized and accompanied Pacelli's American journey and arranged a meeting with President Roosevelt. Only 30 days after his coronation, on 12 April 1939, Pope Pius XII named Spellman as archbishop of New York.
  98. ^ Gannon, Robert I. The Cardinal Spellman Story, Doubleday Company, New York, 1962
  99. ^ Oscar Halecki, James Murray, Jr. Pius XII, Eugenio Pacelli, Pope of Peace; p. 370
  100. ^ Oscar Halecki, James Murray, Jr. Pius XII, Eugenio Pacelli, Pope of Peace, p. 371
  101. ^ Levillain, 2002, p. 1136
  102. ^ Pio XII, La Allocuzione nel concistorio Segreto del 12 Gennaio 1953 in Pio XII, Discorsi e Radiomessaggi di Sua Santità, Vatican City, 1953, p. 455
  103. ^ Tardini later thanked him for not appointing him. The Pope replied with a smile. "Monsignore mio, you thank me, for not letting me do what I wanted to do". I replied "Yes Holy Father, I thank you for everything you have done for me, but even more, what you have not done for me". The Pope smiled. In Domenico Cardinale Tardini, Pio XII, Tipografia Poliglotta Vaticana, 1960 157
  104. ^ Tobin, Greg. (2003). Selecting the Pope: Uncovering the Mysteries of Papal Elections. Barnes & Noble Publishing; ISBN 0-7607-4032-1. pp. xv–xvi, 143.
  105. ^ For example, Padellaro: "Church history will memorize with special letters the secret conclave of 1946, and the cosmopolitan Pius XII, who called men of all races into the Senate of the Church", Nazareno Padellaro, Pio XII Torino, 1956, p. 484
  106. ^ AAS, 1947, Mediator Dei, p. 18
  107. ^ AAS, 1947, Mediator Dei, p. 19
  108. ^ AAS, 1947, Mediator Dei, p. 31
  109. ^ "Religion: Rebel in Rio". Time. 23 July 1945.
  110. ^ Howe, Marvine (3 August 1973). "Ex-Priest's 'Sainthood' Irks Catholics in Brazil". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 1 August 2023.
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Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli (2 March 1876 – 9 October 1958), who took the papal name Pius XII, was the 260th pope of the Catholic Church and sovereign of Vatican City, reigning from 2 March 1939 until his death. Born in Rome to a family with deep ecclesiastical ties, Pacelli was ordained a priest in 1899 and pursued a diplomatic career, serving as apostolic nuncio to Germany from 1917 to 1929 before becoming Cardinal Secretary of State under Pope Pius XI in 1930. In this role, he negotiated the 1933 Reichskonkordat with Nazi Germany to safeguard Catholic institutions amid rising totalitarianism.
Pius XII's pontificate, spanning World War II and the early Cold War, emphasized Catholic social teaching through encyclicals such as Summi Pontificatus (1939), which condemned racism and totalitarianism, Mystici Corporis Christi (1943) on the Church as the Mystical Body of Christ, Mediator Dei (1947) promoting liturgical renewal, and Humani Generis (1950) addressing theological modernism. A defining achievement was the 1950 apostolic constitution Munificentissimus Deus, which dogmatically defined the Assumption of Mary into heaven, drawing on scriptural, patristic, and liturgical evidence to affirm a long-held belief. His reign advanced biblical scholarship via Divino Afflante Spiritu (1943), encouraging modern methods while upholding tradition, and fostered global missionary efforts and humanitarian aid. During the Holocaust, Pius XII's approach—prioritizing discreet diplomacy and Vatican networks over public denunciations—has sparked enduring controversy, with critics alleging insufficient condemnation of Nazi atrocities and defenders citing evidence of Vatican-orchestrated rescues that saved hundreds of thousands of Jews, including in Rome where 4,000 were sheltered in church properties after his direct intervention in 1943. Archival openings and scholarly analyses, including from Jewish sources, reveal his private protests to Hitler and Allied coordination, though claims of complicity or excessive silence often trace to post-war polemics amplified by ideologically driven narratives rather than comprehensive wartime records. Pius XII's legacy thus reflects a leader navigating existential threats to the Church through calculated restraint, credited by contemporaries for mitigating worse outcomes amid geopolitical perils.

Early Life and Formation

Birth and Family Background

Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli was born on 2 March 1876 in Rome, Italy, the third of four children in an aristocratic family with deep ties to the Holy See. The Pacellis traced their lineage to noble houses in Acquapendente and Sant'Angelo in Vado, forming part of the "Black Nobility"—papal loyalists who refused to recognize the Kingdom of Italy after 1870 and maintained allegiance to the Vatican. His father, Filippo Pacelli (1837–1916), was a distinguished lawyer serving as an advocate in the Congregation of the Sacred Rota, the Vatican's highest ecclesiastical court, and held the lay title of monsignor for his contributions. Filippo's grandfather, Marcantonio Pacelli, had been a key administrator under Pope Pius IX, establishing a multi-generational tradition of Vatican service. His mother, Virginia Graziosi Pacelli, came from an educated family and supported the devout Catholic upbringing of her children. Pacelli's siblings included his elder brother Francesco (1872–1935), a canon lawyer who later negotiated the 1929 Lateran Treaty resolving the "Roman Question," and sisters Giuseppa and another, both of whom married into prominent families. The family's patrician status and legal expertise in ecclesiastical matters profoundly influenced Pacelli's early environment, fostering a commitment to Church law and papal authority from childhood.

Education and Seminary Years

Eugenio Pacelli received his early education at the Liceo Ennio Quirino Visconti Institute starting in 1891, where he demonstrated strong academic aptitude. In 1894, at the age of eighteen, he entered Rome's oldest seminary, the Almo Collegio Capranica, to commence his theological studies and simultaneously enrolled at the Pontifical Gregorian University. During his first year at Capranica, Pacelli faced health challenges, particularly stomach issues exacerbated by the seminary's food, prompting him to leave the institution and the Gregorian University in 1895; he continued his studies as an external student, with intervention from Pope Leo XIII allowing him to avoid full withdrawal due to illness. He pursued further coursework at the Athenaeum Sancti Apollinaris for theology and philosophy, as well as the University of Rome (La Sapienza) for modern languages and history. Pacelli earned a baccalaureate and licentiate in theology summa cum laude in 1895, followed by a doctorate in Sacred Theology in 1899, which required a dissertation and a rigorous Latin oral examination. His academic excellence during these seminary years laid the foundation for his subsequent ecclesiastical career, marked by a focus on canon and civil law alongside theological proficiency.

Ordination and Early Priestly Ministry

Eugenio Pacelli was ordained a priest on Easter Sunday, April 2, 1899, in a private ceremony conducted in the chapel of the Vice-Regent of Rome, as he was too ill to participate in the public ordination at the Basilica of St. John Lateran. The ordaining prelate was the Vice-Regent himself, and Pacelli received the sacrament alone due to his health condition. He celebrated his first public Mass two days later, on April 4, 1899, at the Chiesa Nuova, where he had served as an altar boy and continued to hear weekly confessions in the early months following his ordination. Despite his initial intention to pursue parish ministry, Pacelli was drawn into Vatican administrative service in February 1901, when he received an appointment in the Secretariat of State's Congregation for Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs, tasked with handling diplomatic correspondence and international ecclesiastical issues. In this role, he began as a minutante, drafting summaries and responses to papal dispatches on foreign policy matters, distinguishing himself through meticulous legal analysis under the guidance of senior officials like Monsignor Pietro Gasparri. By 1904, he had advanced to a position focusing on codifying canon law and managing relations with foreign governments, reflecting his growing expertise in both civil and ecclesiastical jurisprudence, for which he earned a doctorate in utroque iure in 1902. Pacelli's early curial work involved summarizing reports from nuncios and preparing briefs on complex diplomatic negotiations, often under the direction of Cardinal Rafael Merry del Val after the latter's appointment as Secretary of State in 1903 under Pope Pius X. His contributions during this period laid the foundation for his later prominence in Vatican diplomacy, emphasizing precision in legal documentation and a commitment to the Holy See's extraterritorial interests amid rising secular challenges in Europe. In 1911, he was promoted to undersecretary of the Congregation, overseeing routine administrative duties while deepening his involvement in the reform of canon law.

Pre-Papal Career in the Curia and Diplomacy

Service as Papal Nuncio in Bavaria and Germany

On 23 April 1917, Pope Benedict XV consecrated Eugenio Pacelli as titular Archbishop of Sardes and appointed him Apostolic Nuncio to the Kingdom of Bavaria, with Pacelli taking up his post in Munich later that year. During World War I, he undertook diplomatic missions on behalf of the Holy See, including delivering papal peace proposals to Kaiser Wilhelm II at Kreuznach on 29 June 1917. In the chaotic aftermath of the war, Pacelli remained at his post amid the establishment of the Weimar Republic and reported extensively to the Vatican on the political and social upheavals, including events during the short-lived Bavarian Soviet Republic from April to May 1919. Pacelli's mandate expanded on 23 June 1920 when he was additionally appointed Apostolic Nuncio to the German Reich, serving in personal union with his Bavarian role. In this capacity, he focused on safeguarding Catholic interests through diplomatic negotiations, notably initiating talks for a concordat with Bavaria in 1919 by presenting an initial list of 10 demands, which he later expanded to 19 points on 4 February 1920. Intensive negotiations between 1922 and 1923 culminated in the Bavarian Concordat, signed on 29 March 1924 and ratified by the Bavarian parliament on 15 January 1925 before formal approval on 24 January 1925. The treaty granted the Holy See the right to appoint bishops and parish priests independently of state influence, ensured denominational primary schools with religious instruction supervised by clergy, and replaced state subsidies with endowments for pastoral care, establishing a framework of church-state cooperation that influenced subsequent agreements in Germany. Throughout his tenure, Pacelli provided detailed reports to Rome on key developments, such as Adolf Hitler's attempted coup in the Beer Hall Putsch of November 1923. Following the Bavarian Concordat's completion, he resigned as nuncio specifically to Bavaria on 8 June 1925 and transferred the German nunciature to Berlin to better oversee national affairs.

Return to Vatican and Role as Undersecretary

In late 1929, after serving as Apostolic Nuncio to Bavaria (1917–1925) and then to Germany and Prussia (1925–1929), Eugenio Pacelli was recalled to Rome by Pope Pius XI on 9 December, shortly following his final nuncial report on 1 December. This return concluded a diplomatic tenure during which Pacelli had navigated the complexities of post-World War I Germany, including the negotiation of a 1929 concordat with Prussia amid rising political instability. His expertise in German affairs and Vatican diplomacy positioned him for elevated curial responsibilities, leveraging prior experience in the Secretariat of State. Pacelli's early curial career had included appointment as undersecretary of the Congregation for Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs in 1911, a role focused on the Holy See's foreign relations and humanitarian initiatives, followed by promotion to its secretary in 1914. These positions honed his administrative skills in ecclesiastical diplomacy before his nunciature. Upon returning in 1929, he effectively resumed influence over Vatican foreign policy matters in an advisory capacity under Cardinal Pietro Gasparri, the aging Secretary of State, amid the economic turbulence of the Great Depression and the recent resolution of the Roman Question via the 1929 Lateran Treaty. On 16 December 1929, Pacelli formally resigned his nunciature and was created a cardinal by Pius XI, receiving the titular church of Santi Giovanni e Paolo three days later. This rapid elevation, occurring just weeks after his return, underscored Pius XI's intent to groom him as Gasparri's successor, entrusting him with preparatory oversight of diplomatic correspondence and European negotiations. Pacelli's interim contributions emphasized continuity in the Holy See's cautious engagement with secular states, informed by his firsthand knowledge of authoritarian trends in Germany.

Appointment as Cardinal Secretary of State

Eugenio Pacelli concluded his tenure as apostolic nuncio to Bavaria and Germany in October 1929, returning to Rome at the direction of Pope Pius XI to assume a more central role in Vatican diplomacy amid growing European instability. His extensive experience negotiating concordats and observing political shifts in post-World War I Germany positioned him as a key figure for addressing emerging totalitarian regimes. On December 16, 1929, Pope Pius XI elevated Pacelli to the cardinalate during a consistory, assigning him the titular church of Santi Giovanni e Paolo, a move signaling his imminent prominence in the Curia. This elevation followed the aging Cardinal Pietro Gasparri's long service as Secretary of State, with Pacelli designated as his successor in anticipation of a transition. Pacelli's formal appointment as Cardinal Secretary of State occurred on February 7, 1930, when Pius XI named him to replace Gasparri, who retired at age 85 after 17 years in the post. Pius XI valued Pacelli's diplomatic acumen and loyalty, entrusting him with oversight of Vatican foreign relations at a time when negotiations with authoritarian states, including Mussolini's Italy and the rising Nazi movement, demanded seasoned negotiation. In this capacity, Pacelli coordinated the Holy See's efforts to secure ecclesiastical protections through concordats while navigating ideological pressures that threatened Catholic institutions.

Negotiations with Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany

As Cardinal Secretary of State under Pope Pius XI from February 1930, Eugenio Pacelli conducted diplomacy aimed at preserving the Catholic Church's autonomy and protecting its members in the face of rising totalitarian regimes in Europe. His negotiations with Fascist Italy focused on implementing and defending the 1929 Lateran Pacts, which had resolved the Roman Question by recognizing Vatican sovereignty and restoring certain Church privileges, while addressing ongoing encroachments by Mussolini's government on Catholic institutions. Tensions escalated in the early 1930s over Fascist attempts to control youth organizations, prompting Pius XI's 1931 encyclical Non Abbiamo Bisogno, which condemned state interference in Catholic Action; Pacelli managed subsequent diplomatic exchanges to mitigate suppression efforts and secure concessions for ecclesiastical independence. Relations with Italy remained pragmatic but strained, particularly after Mussolini's 1935 invasion of Ethiopia, which drew papal criticism, and the 1936 formation of the Rome-Berlin Axis, yet Pacelli pursued dialogue to avert broader conflicts affecting Italian Catholics numbering over 90% of the population. In response to the 1938 Italian racial laws modeled on Nazi precedents, which targeted Jews and threatened Catholic converts, Pacelli facilitated quiet interventions, including aid for affected individuals, reflecting a strategy of discreet protection amid Mussolini's alignment with Hitler. Pacelli's most prominent negotiation with Nazi Germany culminated in the Reichskonkordat, signed on July 20, 1933, in Rome between Pacelli, acting as the Holy See's plenipotentiary, and German Vice-Chancellor Franz von Papen. The treaty guaranteed key protections for German Catholics, including freedom of public worship (Article 1), inviolability of Church property (Article 17), state non-interference in clerical appointments (Article 14), maintenance of Catholic schools and religious education (Articles 21 and 23), and safeguards for clergy in spiritual duties (Article 5). Despite these provisions, the Nazi regime systematically violated the concordat through actions like dissolving Catholic youth groups, arresting clergy, and promoting pagan ideology, prompting Pacelli to issue repeated diplomatic protests and contribute to the drafting of Pius XI's 1937 encyclical Mit brennender Sorge, smuggled into Germany for secret reading in churches, which explicitly denounced Nazi racial doctrines and totalitarianism as incompatible with Christianity. Pacelli's pre-war efforts extended to private condemnations of Nazi methods, as confided to foreign diplomats, balancing legal safeguards with moral opposition to forestall worse persecution of Germany's 20 million Catholics.

Election and Inception of Pontificate

Papal Conclave of March 1939

The death of Pope Pius XI on February 10, 1939, from a heart attack at age 81, initiated the sede vacante period, during which the Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church, Cardinal Eugenio Tosi, administered the Vatican under the direction of the College of Cardinals. The traditional nine days of mourning and funeral rites, known as the novendiales, concluded on February 18, after which preparations for the conclave proceeded in accordance with papal constitutions governing such elections. The conclave opened on March 1, 1939, in the Sistine Chapel, with all 62 living cardinals eligible to vote participating, marking full attendance by the College of Cardinals for the first time since 1831. Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli, aged 63 and serving as Secretary of State since 1930, was widely regarded as the frontrunner due to his extensive diplomatic experience, including negotiations with European governments, and his close collaboration with Pius XI on key issues such as the 1933 Reichskonkordat. The proceedings followed established rituals, including oaths of secrecy and the burning of ballots to signal progress, with two ballots conducted daily until a candidate achieved a two-thirds majority. After three ballots spanning two days, Pacelli received the requisite supermajority on the afternoon of March 2, 1939, and accepted the election as the 260th pope, selecting the name Pius XII in continuity with his predecessor's legacy of affirming Catholic principles amid rising totalitarianism. White smoke from the Sistine Chapel chimney announced the result to thousands gathered in St. Peter's Square, followed by the traditional Habemus Papam declaration from the central balcony. This conclave, one of the shortest of the 20th century, reflected the cardinals' consensus on the need for experienced leadership amid escalating European tensions, including the recent Munich Agreement and threats of war.

Coronation and Inaugural Encyclical

Following his election as pope on March 2, 1939, Eugenio Pacelli, who had chosen the name Pius XII, underwent the traditional coronation ceremony on March 12, 1939, during a solemn Mass in St. Peter's Basilica. The rite, conducted by the senior cardinal-deacon, involved the placement of the papal tiara on the new pontiff's head, symbolizing his supreme authority, and included the recitation of the coronation oath affirming fidelity to Church traditions and doctrine. The procession featured Pius XII attired in white vestments, a jeweled pectoral cross, and mitre, proceeding down the Scala Regia amid throngs of the faithful crowding St. Peter's Square. This event marked the formal inception of his pontificate, drawing international dignitaries and underscoring the continuity of papal succession amid rising global tensions. Pius XII's inaugural encyclical, Summi Pontificatus, promulgated on October 20, 1939—the Feast of Christ the King—addressed the unity of human society in the face of contemporary disorders. Subtitled "On the Unity of Human Society," the document critiqued totalitarian ideologies, including Nazism and communism, for subordinating the individual to the state and rejecting natural law, while emphasizing the family as the foundational social unit derived from divine order. It condemned racism as incompatible with Christian anthropology, asserting the equal dignity of all peoples under God, and advocated for solidarity, charity, and subsidiarity as remedies to individualism and collectivism. Drawing on prior papal teachings like those of Leo XIII, Pius XII urged states to respect moral limits on authority and promoted international cooperation grounded in truth and justice, presciently warning against the errors fueling World War II.

Initial Administrative and Diplomatic Priorities

Upon his election on March 2, 1939, Pope Pius XII, leveraging his prior role as Secretary of State, prioritized direct personal oversight of Vatican diplomacy to avert impending European conflict, appointing Cardinal Luigi Maglione as Secretary of State on March 10 to assist in these efforts while maintaining centralized control over foreign policy. This administrative approach reflected a continuity of experienced bureaucratic efficiency rather than sweeping internal reforms, as the pontiff focused resources on external mediation amid rising tensions following Germany's occupation of Czechoslovakia on March 15. Absent major Curial reorganizations in the immediate aftermath, Pius XII emphasized pragmatic staffing to support peace initiatives, including discreet channels to influence key powers like Italy and Germany. Diplomatic priorities centered on preventing war through appeals and backchannel negotiations, with an urgent emphasis on preserving Italian non-belligerence to limit Axis expansion. On April 20, 1939, Pius XII issued his first public call for worldwide prayers for peace during May, invoking divine protection against aggression and underscoring moral imperatives against totalitarianism. These efforts extended to mediation attempts post-Czechoslovakia, where the absence of a German representative at his March 12 coronation signaled early Vatican-Nazi friction, prompting Pius XII to explore compromises such as Polish concessions on Danzig while urging restraint on all sides. A core focus was dissuading Benito Mussolini from full alignment with Adolf Hitler, utilizing intermediaries like Jesuit Father Pietro Tacchi Venturi in late August 1939 to advocate Italian neutrality and negotiation over military escalation. These initiatives, including diplomatic notes to Britain, France, Germany, Poland, and Italy on August 31 imploring avoidance of incidents, aimed to contain the conflict but yielded limited success as war erupted on September 1; nonetheless, they temporarily bolstered Italy's initial restraint until June 1940. This strategy aligned with causal assessments of totalitarianism's threats, prioritizing containment over confrontation to safeguard Catholic populations and broader humanitarian outcomes.

World War II Era

Pre-War Warnings and Diplomatic Efforts

As Cardinal Secretary of State under Pope Pius XI, Eugenio Pacelli pursued diplomatic channels to safeguard Catholic interests amid the rise of Nazism in Germany. On July 20, 1933, he signed the Reichskonkordat with Nazi representatives in Rome, establishing formal protections for the Church, including guarantees for Catholic schools, youth organizations, and clerical appointments free from state interference. This agreement provided a legal framework for Vatican protests against subsequent Nazi encroachments, though the regime repeatedly violated its terms through actions such as the suppression of Catholic presses and arrests of clergy. Pacelli viewed the concordat as essential for maintaining a basis to challenge Nazi policies, distrusting Hitler's intentions from the outset. Pacelli's opposition to Nazi ideology manifested in direct contributions to papal condemnations. He drafted significant portions of the encyclical Mit brennender Sorge ("With Burning Concern"), issued by Pius XI on March 14, 1937, which denounced the Nazi elevation of race and state above divine law, rejected paganism in German nationalism, and highlighted breaches of the concordat. The document, composed in German and covertly distributed to evade Nazi censorship, was read from pulpits across German parishes on Palm Sunday, March 21, 1937, eliciting severe reprisals including raids on Catholic institutions. This marked one of the Holy See's strongest pre-war rebukes of totalitarianism, reflecting Pacelli's assessment of Nazism as incompatible with Christian principles. In private communications, Pacelli articulated profound alarm over Hitler's character and regime, informing diplomatic contacts that the Führer represented a "new manifestation" of the Antichrist, marked by obsession and readiness to "walk over corpses." Following the November 1938 Kristallnacht pogroms, he directed Vatican diplomats to register formal complaints against the violence targeting Jews and synagogues, underscoring his consistent stance against Nazi extremism despite the constraints of diplomatic prudence. Upon his election as Pope Pius XII on March 2, 1939, these efforts transitioned into papal initiatives amid mounting European tensions. In the ensuing months, Pius XII issued appeals for reconciliation, including private overtures to Berlin urging restraint toward Poland and Czechoslovakia, while publicly emphasizing moral opposition to aggressive nationalism in addresses that echoed prior Vatican critiques. These pre-war diplomatic maneuvers sought to avert conflict through negotiation and ethical persuasion, building on Pacelli's established record of confronting totalitarian threats without compromising the Church's institutional position.

Response to Outbreak of War and Early Phases

Pope Pius XII responded to the German invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939, by privately expressing profound distress, reportedly falling to his knees in prayer upon receiving news of the aggression. Publicly, he avoided direct condemnation of Germany by name to preserve Vatican diplomatic neutrality, which he deemed essential for mediating ceasefires and aiding civilians across belligerent lines without reprisals against Catholic populations under Axis control. Through Vatican Radio and nuncios, initial broadcasts and protests highlighted atrocities in Poland, including the roundup of tens of thousands for elimination, prompting Nazi ire but underscoring early ecclesiastical opposition to the occupation's brutality. In his inaugural encyclical, Summi Pontificatus, issued on October 20, 1939, Pius XII articulated a principled critique of the war's ideological roots, decrying totalitarian systems that subordinated individuals to the state or race and implicitly referencing the Polish invasion's violations of international law and human dignity. The document, smuggled into occupied Poland for distribution, rejected "false mysticism" of nationalism and partitions that fragmented sovereign peoples, positioning the Church as a moral arbiter against aggression while calling for unity in human society under natural law. This stance aligned with causal realism, recognizing that explicit partisanship risked escalating suffering rather than alleviating it through discreet channels. Throughout 1939 and into 1940, Pius XII pursued multilateral peace initiatives, dispatching appeals to world leaders—including Hitler, Mussolini, and Roosevelt—for negotiations to halt the "madness of war," emphasizing that "nothing is lost by peace; everything may be lost by war." These efforts extended to early humanitarian actions, such as coordinating relief via papal nunciatures for Polish refugees and prisoners, while instructing bishops to shelter victims irrespective of nationality, laying groundwork for broader wartime aid without compromising the Vatican's impartiality. By maintaining operational independence, the Holy See enabled unhindered distribution of food, medical supplies, and false documents in war zones, countering narratives of inaction with evidence of pragmatic interventionism.

Strategies for Peace and Humanitarian Aid

Pius XII employed a multifaceted strategy for peace, combining public appeals with discreet diplomatic interventions to mitigate the war's escalation and promote negotiation. On August 24, 1939, days before Germany's invasion of Poland, he delivered a radio address urging European leaders to resolve disputes through arbitration rather than arms, emphasizing the catastrophic consequences of conflict for civilian populations. His annual Christmas radio messages from 1939 to 1944 consistently advocated for justice, mutual respect among nations, and cessation of hostilities; for instance, the 1942 message decried the "progressive extinction" of innocent groups due to nationality or descent, implicitly referencing genocidal policies while calling for humanitarian restraint amid total war. Privately, he pursued mediation, such as raising concerns about persecution during a March 11, 1940, meeting with German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop and instructing papal nuncios to explore peace channels between Axis and Allied powers, though these efforts yielded no breakthroughs due to entrenched hostilities. In parallel, Pius XII organized systematic humanitarian aid through Vatican agencies to alleviate suffering among prisoners, refugees, and civilians. He established the Vatican's Information Bureau for Prisoners of War early in the conflict, tasking it with compiling lists of captives, verifying statuses, and relaying information to families, in coordination with entities like the International Red Cross; this service processed inquiries for millions affected by deportations and battles, facilitating reunions and basic welfare support. On April 18, 1944, amid Allied advances in Italy, he founded the Pontifical Commission for Assistance to deliver non-bureaucratic relief—food, clothing, and shelter—to war-displaced persons, POWs, and orphans, distributing thousands of packages by war's end and extending operations postwar. The Vatican allocated over $4 million in direct financial aid to Jewish and other persecuted groups, funding visas, shelter in ecclesiastical institutions, and escape networks that preserved tens of thousands of lives, particularly in Rome where church properties hid approximately 4,000 Jews during 1943–1944 Nazi roundups. These initiatives prioritized empirical relief over public denunciation to maximize reach under Axis occupation, leveraging the Church's global diocesan structure for discreet distribution.

Direct Interventions in the Holocaust

In the wake of the German occupation of Rome on October 10, 1943, Pope Pius XII directed the Catholic clergy in Italy to shelter Jews in convents, monasteries, and Vatican properties, resulting in the hiding of approximately 4,000 Jews within the Vatican and affiliated institutions in Rome alone during the ensuing months. This effort included the issuance of false baptismal certificates and identity documents by Vatican officials to facilitate escapes, with direct papal instructions conveyed through intermediaries to avoid detection by Nazi forces. On October 28, 1943, following the failed roundup of Roman Jews on October 16—during which German forces seized over 1,000 individuals—Pius XII intervened diplomatically by summoning the German ambassador Ernst von Weizsäcker and protesting the actions, while simultaneously organizing underground networks for food, shelter, and evacuation. Earlier in the war, Pius XII authorized the transfer of at least 3,000 Jews to safety in South America between 1939 and 1941 through Vatican diplomatic channels, coordinating with nuncios to issue travel visas and papal passports. In 1940, he personally approved the sheltering of hundreds of Jewish children in Catholic orphanages across Europe, including in France and Slovakia, where Church networks under his guidance provided forged documents and relocation to rural safe houses. These actions extended to direct financial support, with Vatican funds disbursed to rescue operations in Hungary in 1944, aiding the evasion of deportation for thousands amid Adolf Eichmann's campaigns. Quantitative estimates from Jewish historian Pinchas Lapide attribute to Pius XII's leadership the rescue of approximately 860,000 Jews across Europe, primarily through Catholic institutions acting on papal directives, a figure corroborated by survival rates in Italy where 80% of the Jewish population evaded death compared to 20% continent-wide. Recent examinations of Vatican archives, opened in 2020, confirm Pius XII's personal role in saving at least 15,000 Jews via targeted interventions, including encrypted communications to bishops urging discretion to prevent Nazi reprisals against both Jews and clergy. At Castel Gandolfo, his summer residence, up to 3,000 Jews were harbored at peak occupancy in 1943-1944, with Vatican personnel providing medical care and smuggling routes southward. These interventions prioritized covert efficacy over public statements, as Pius XII assessed that overt condemnation risked escalating deportations, a calculus supported by Nazi threats to liquidate sheltered Jews and execute priests, as evidenced in intercepted SS communications. In specific locales like Livorno, Lucca, and Pisa in 1944, papal appeals to local bishops spared around 800 Jews from roundup through hurried relocations to Church properties. Overall, the pontiff's strategy leveraged ecclesiastical networks for tangible rescues, yielding higher Jewish survival rates in Vatican-influenced regions than in areas without such coordination.

Allegations of Silence and Empirical Rebuttals

Critics, beginning prominently with Rolf Hochhuth's 1963 play The Deputy, have alleged that Pope Pius XII maintained a deliberate public silence on the Nazi genocide of Jews during World War II, failing to issue explicit condemnations of the Holocaust despite awareness of its scale, thereby prioritizing Vatican neutrality or institutional self-preservation over moral imperative. This narrative gained traction through John Cornwell's 1999 book Hitler's Pope, which portrayed Pius as antisemitic and complicit in Nazi aims via the 1933 Reichskonkordat, though Cornwell later conceded that archival evidence did not substantiate claims of personal antisemitism or deliberate inaction. Such allegations often overlook contemporaneous Jewish testimonies praising Pius's interventions and emphasize selective interpretation of his cautious public rhetoric, which avoided naming "Jews" explicitly to prevent Nazi escalation against Catholic networks sheltering them, as retaliation followed papal criticisms of atrocities in general terms. Empirical records contradict the silence charge by documenting Pius XII's multifaceted actions to mitigate Jewish suffering. Vatican diplomatic channels protested deportations: in October 1942, Pius instructed nuncios to appeal to governments against mass expulsions from Slovakia and Croatia, while his secretary of state, Luigi Maglione, conveyed concerns to Axis powers about "barbarous" persecutions. In Rome after the 1943 German occupation, Vatican properties, convents, and monasteries sheltered approximately 4,500 Jews, with new research confirming 3,200 hidden in religious houses alone, coordinated under Pius's directives despite risks to clergy. German historian Michael Feldkamp estimates Pius personally authorized rescue of at least 15,000 Jews through false baptisms, identity papers, and smuggling networks extending to Hungary, where Vatican efforts saved over 100,000 in 1944 via delegate Angelo Rotta's interventions. These operations, involving 4,000 Roman priests and religious, reduced Rome's Jewish death toll to under 1,000 out of 10,000, compared to higher rates elsewhere, with Pius funding aid from Vatican resources amid Allied bombings. Pius's public allocutions, while indirect, repeatedly denounced Nazi ideologies and crimes: his October 20, 1939 encyclical Summi Pontificatus condemned totalitarianism, racism, and the "new form of slavery" imposed on conquered peoples, implicitly referencing Poland's invasion and Jewish plight just weeks after war's outbreak. His 1942 Christmas address alluded to "hundreds of thousands" suffering extermination for race or descent, prompting Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels to note the Pope's "hostile" stance toward the regime. Private diaries and intercepted messages confirm Pius received detailed reports of death camps by 1942, including from Jesuit sources, yet calibrated responses to maximize rescues without provoking shutdowns of safe havens, as explicit naming of Jews in 1943 Budapest broadcasts by Rotta led to immediate SS threats. Historians like Martin Gilbert affirm that labeling Pius "silent" ignores these verifiable protests and aids, which exceeded those of other neutral leaders. Postwar assessments by Jewish organizations rebut revisionist claims: the World Jewish Congress credited Pius with saving "tens of thousands," while Israeli leaders like Golda Meir eulogized him in 1958 for "speaking out when all remained silent." Yad Vashem's archives, while critiquing the absence of explicit Holocaust references, acknowledge Vatican sheltering of thousands, and ongoing archival openings since 2020 have yielded further evidence of Pius's anti-Nazi stance, including early knowledge of genocide plans. The persistence of silence allegations, often amplified by sources with ideological incentives to critique ecclesiastical authority, contrasts with primary documents showing pragmatic defiance that prioritized lives over rhetorical confrontation, amid causal realities of Nazi reprisals against outspoken clergy—over 2,500 priests killed in camps.

Post-Liberation Assessments of Wartime Actions

Following the Allied liberation of Rome on June 4, 1944, contemporaneous evaluations of Pope Pius XII's wartime conduct emphasized the Vatican's extensive efforts to shelter Jews during the nine-month German occupation of the city, which had begun in September 1943. Approximately 4,700 Jews found refuge in Roman convents and monasteries under ecclesiastical direction, with additional hundreds protected within Vatican properties, preventing their deportation to extermination camps. These actions, coordinated through papal instructions to religious superiors, contributed to the survival of roughly 80 percent of Italy's pre-war Jewish population of about 40,000, or approximately 32,000 individuals, amid widespread deportations elsewhere in Nazi-occupied Europe. Jewish communal leaders promptly acknowledged these interventions. On July 14, 1944, Chief Rabbi Israel Zolli of Rome publicly commended the Holy See's assistance to Jews "without distinction of race," highlighting the Vatican's role in providing sanctuary during the occupation. Zolli, who had gone into hiding with Vatican support, later converted to Catholicism in 1945, citing the pope's charitable works as a profound influence, though this decision drew criticism from some Jewish quarters. The National Jewish Welfare Board and World Jewish Congress extended formal thanks to Pius XII on July 21, 1944, for his aid to Italian Jews, reflecting broad appreciation among relief organizations for the Church's logistical networks. In the war's final months and immediate aftermath, further tributes underscored the empirical impact of Vatican diplomacy and relief operations. Moshe Sharett, head of the Jewish Agency's rescue committee, met with Pius XII in April 1945 and expressed gratitude for the pope's role in rescuing Jews and safeguarding children across multiple countries. That September, Dr. Leon Kubowitzki, representing the World Jewish Congress, personally thanked the pontiff in Rome and facilitated a $20,000 donation to Vatican-linked charities in recognition of efforts to save Jews from persecution. These assessments, drawn from direct participants, contrasted with later scholarly debates, prioritizing verifiable outcomes such as halted deportations—e.g., via papal protests and negotiations with German officials—over public rhetoric. No significant contemporary Jewish critiques of Pius XII's approach emerged in 1944–1945; instead, such evaluations affirmed the effectiveness of discreet, high-risk strategies in a context where overt condemnations had previously endangered more lives.

Post-War Pontificate and Global Challenges

Reconstruction of Europe and Anti-Communism

In the immediate aftermath of World War II, Pope Pius XII prioritized humanitarian aid to facilitate Europe's physical and social reconstruction, coordinating Vatican resources to address widespread devastation, displacement, and famine. The Pontifical Commission of Assistance, established under his direction, distributed millions in relief supplies through Catholic networks, focusing on refugees, orphans, and returning prisoners of war across Italy, Germany, and Eastern Europe. By 1946, the Vatican had channeled aid equivalent to substantial financial commitments, including food, medicine, and clothing, often sourced from American Catholic donors responding to papal appeals. A notable instance of targeted assistance occurred in 1946, when Pius XII sent fourteen trucks loaded with food items to the Cardinal of Cologne for distribution among ethnic Germans expelled from Eastern territories and facing acute hardship in the British occupation zone. These efforts extended to rebuilding infrastructure, with Vatican funding supporting the repair of over 1,000 churches and schools in war-ravaged dioceses by 1950, emphasizing not only material recovery but also the restoration of moral order through Catholic social teachings that promoted subsidiarity and private property as bulwarks against totalitarianism. Pius XII's broadcasts and messages urged European leaders to integrate Christian ethics into economic policies, influencing the ideological framework for initiatives like the European Coal and Steel Community, which he praised for fostering unity against ideological division. Parallel to reconstruction, Pius XII mounted a vigorous anti-communist campaign, viewing Marxism-Leninism as an atheistic ideology inherently incompatible with Christianity due to its materialist denial of transcendent truth and its historical record of suppressing religious freedom. Building on empirical evidence of communist regimes' persecution of clergy and believers—such as the arrest of over 10,000 priests in Eastern Europe by 1948—he warned that communism's expansion threatened the fragile post-war order. In Italy, where communist militants numbered around two million by 1949, papal directives mobilized clergy to oppose the Italian Communist Party's influence, contributing to the Christian Democrats' electoral victories that preserved democratic governance. The apex of these efforts was the Holy Office decree of July 1, 1949, personally approved by Pius XII and promulgated publicly on July 13, which imposed latae sententiae excommunication on Catholics who professed communist doctrine, propagated its materialistic atheism, or affiliated with communist parties. This measure, justified by communism's intrinsic opposition to divine law and its tactical infiltration of Catholic groups, aimed to alert and unify global Catholic resistance, effectively barring communists from sacraments and ecclesiastical roles. Pius XII reinforced this stance in encyclicals like Ad Apostolorum Principis (June 29, 1958), which condemned the communist regime in China for subordinating the Church to state control and persecuting bishops, underscoring the causal link between atheistic governance and the erosion of human rights. These actions, grounded in the Church's doctrinal commitment to theism and empirical observations of communist atrocities, bolstered Western Europe's ideological defenses during the Cold War's early phases.

Relations with Emerging Nations and Decolonization

During the post-World War II surge in decolonization, Pope Pius XII emphasized detaching Catholic missions from colonial entanglements to bolster evangelization in transitioning societies. In his encyclical Evangelii praecones of June 2, 1951, he directed missionaries to adapt to indigenous cultures, foster native clergy, and eschew alignments with colonial regimes that could undermine the Gospel's reception. This stance reflected a pragmatic recognition that colonial associations risked alienating local populations amid rising nationalism, though Pius XII avoided outright endorsements of rapid independence to preserve ecclesiastical stability. The Holy See extended diplomatic overtures to newly sovereign states, including early recognition of Indonesia's independence in the late 1940s, influenced by figures like Archbishop Albertus Soegijapranata, who advocated for Vatican support during the struggle against Dutch rule. Similarly, on July 6, 1949, Pius XII addressed India's ambassador, voicing aspirations for the nascent republic's prosperity and stability under democratic governance. These gestures aligned with broader efforts to localize Church structures, as seen in the elevation of Asian and African prelates; notably, Pius XII appointed Uganda's Laurean Rugambwa as Africa's first native cardinal in 1953, amid expanding hierarchies in decolonizing regions. In Africa, where independence movements gained momentum—such as Ghana's in 1957—Pius XII's Fidei donum encyclical of April 21, 1957, underscored the continent's missionary exigencies, citing explosive Catholic growth (from 2 million adherents in 1939 to over 10 million by 1957) and urging European dioceses to dispatch 2,000 additional priests to counter secular and communist threats. Church spokesmen, invoking Pius XII's guidance, pressed colonial authorities for "fair and progressive political emancipation" to Africans, framing it as consonant with natural rights and evangelistic imperatives. Pius XII's framework integrated anti-communist vigilance with decolonization, viewing emerging nations as battlegrounds against atheistic ideologies; he sustained ties with powers like Portugal and France to mitigate Soviet influence, while pragmatically accommodating Africanization of local churches post-independence. In North Africa, Evangelii praecones principles navigated tensions during Algeria's war for liberation (1954–1962), prioritizing interfaith coexistence and mission continuity over partisan alignment. This equilibrium preserved Catholic footholds amid flux, though it drew criticism from both anticolonial radicals and conservative colonialists for perceived equivocation.

Engagement with International Organizations

During the post-war period, Pope Pius XII facilitated the Holy See's observer participation in several United Nations specialized agencies, including UNESCO and the International Labour Organization (ILO), to promote Catholic social teachings on human dignity and labor rights amid global reconstruction efforts. This engagement reflected a pragmatic approach to supranational bodies, emphasizing their potential to foster peace and humanitarian aid while subordinating them to universal moral law derived from natural rights, rather than atheistic ideologies prevalent in some member states. On 27 June 1949, Pius XII delivered an address to the inaugural World Health Assembly in Geneva, commending the World Health Organization's (WHO) foundation as an expression of "just human sentiment" for international collaboration on health, but insisting that such efforts must prioritize spiritual and ethical dimensions over purely materialistic views of human welfare. He urged assembly delegates to recognize health not merely as physical well-being but as integral to the soul's salvation, warning against initiatives that might undermine family structures or promote eugenics under the guise of progress. Pius XII extended similar outreach to other UN-affiliated entities. In a 24 April 1956 address to the United Nations Coordinating Committee for Public Information, he stressed the intellectual and moral rigor required for disseminating accurate data on international affairs, positioning the Church as a complementary force to secular diplomacy by advocating truth grounded in objective reality over propaganda. Through the Pontifical Mission for Palestine—later evolving into broader UN liaisons—the Holy See coordinated Catholic relief services with UN agencies, providing aid to refugees and war victims while maintaining ecclesiastical independence from political entanglements. In annual Christmas messages, such as that of 1948, Pius XII voiced aspirations for the United Nations to evolve into a "full and effective instrument" for collective security and arbitration, contingent on adherence to subsidiarity—preserving national sovereignty against over-centralization—and rejection of totalitarian threats like communism, which he viewed as antithetical to genuine international order. This stance balanced endorsement of multilateralism with critiques of the UN's limitations, including Soviet veto power and ideological imbalances, prioritizing causal mechanisms of peace rooted in Christian anthropology over utopian federalism.

Ecclesiastical and Liturgical Reforms

Curial Reorganizations and Canon Law Updates

In response to the growing influence of secular ideologies and the need for structured lay apostolate, Pius XII issued the apostolic constitution Provida Mater Ecclesia on February 2, 1947, formally recognizing secular institutes as a new canonical form of consecrated life. This measure allowed the faithful to bind themselves to the evangelical counsels while remaining in the world, unbound by the cloistered or communal obligations of traditional religious orders, thereby addressing a gap in the 1917 Code of Canon Law, which had previously limited canonical states of perfection to religious institutes. Pius XII also clarified sacramental discipline through the apostolic constitution Sacramentum Ordinis of November 30, 1947, defining the matter and form of holy orders as the imposition of hands accompanied by the specific ordination prayer, while declaring the tradition of instruments (porrectio instrumentorum) non-essential for validity. This resolved ambiguities in canon 811 of the 1917 Code arising from historical variations in rite and custom, ensuring uniformity in priestly ordination across the Latin Church. To promote frequent reception of the Eucharist amid modern work demands, Pius XII approved a decree from the Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office on January 6, 1953, reducing the Eucharistic fast from midnight to three hours prior to Communion for solid foods and one hour for non-alcoholic liquids, with exceptions for the ill and laborers. This adaptation of canons 807 and 858 was extended and confirmed in the apostolic constitution Sacram Communionem of March 23, 1957, which standardized the three-hour rule for solids universally while permitting water and medicine at any time, thereby increasing lay participation without compromising reverence. Regarding the Roman Curia, Pius XII effected targeted adjustments rather than wholesale restructuring, establishing the Pontifical Commission for Latin America in 1958 under the Congregation for Bishops to coordinate missionary efforts and episcopal appointments in response to post-war demographic shifts in the Americas. He also oversaw minor emendations to the 1917 Code's text via motu proprio, ensuring procedural alignment with evolving pastoral needs, though comprehensive codal revision was deferred.

Promotion of Liturgical Renewal

Pope Pius XII advanced liturgical renewal primarily through his 1947 encyclical Mediator Dei, the first papal document dedicated to the sacred liturgy, which endorsed the liturgical movement's emphasis on the faithful's active participation while grounding it in Christocentric theology and cautioning against archeologism or private innovations. The encyclical, issued on November 20, 1947, portrayed the liturgy as the public worship of the Mystical Body of Christ, urging clergy to foster lay understanding via instructions, homilies, and simplified rites without altering essential forms. It explicitly supported restoring ancient practices where pastorally beneficial, such as evening celebrations for certain feasts, and promoted frequent Communion integrated with liturgical prayer. Building on this foundation, Pius XII implemented concrete reforms, including revisions to the Easter Vigil in 1951 and a comprehensive Holy Week Ordo in 1955, which shifted the Vigil to its original evening hour, simplified Palm Sunday processions, and restored elements like the Passion reading in multiple languages for broader accessibility while preserving Latin as the normative tongue. These changes, prepared by a pontifical commission, aimed to recover the catechumenal character of baptismal rites and enhance communal participation, drawing from patristic sources and early manuscripts. To facilitate devotion, he reduced the Eucharistic fast from midnight to three hours in 1953 via the apostolic constitution Christus Dominus and further to one hour in 1957, excluding water and medicine, thereby encouraging more frequent reception of the sacraments. Pius XII also institutionalized the movement through scholarly initiatives, such as sponsoring international liturgical congresses, including the 1956 Assisi gathering where he hailed the renewal as a providential work of the Holy Spirit manifesting in ecclesial life. He directed the establishment of commissions for liturgical research, emphasizing fidelity to tradition amid post-war pastoral needs, and approved vernacular translations of propers for private recitation to aid comprehension, though insisting on Latin for public worship. These efforts, continuing the trajectory from Pius X's Tra le sollecitudini (1903), sought to counteract devotional individualism by reorienting piety toward the Church's official prayer, influencing subsequent developments without anticipating the scale of post-conciliar changes.

Expansion of Priesthood and Religious Orders

During Pope Pius XII's pontificate from 1939 to 1958, the Catholic Church witnessed marked numerical expansion in the priesthood and religious orders, driven by post-war recovery, missionary zeal, and targeted initiatives to foster vocations amid a global Catholic population growth from approximately 300 million to over 500 million faithful. This period saw heightened emphasis on clerical formation and recruitment, contrasting with later declines, as evidenced by surges in ordinations and seminary enrollments despite wartime disruptions. In the United States, diocesan priests rose from 33,540 in 1939 to 50,813 by 1958, representing a 51.5% increase, while religious priests also grew, with over 2,500 new ordinations recorded in the late 1950s alone. Seminaries proliferated from 209 to 516 institutions, a 246% expansion, accompanied by more than a 200% rise in seminarians, reflecting robust vocational response to papal appeals. Globally, similar patterns emerged, particularly in mission territories, where Pius XII's 1957 encyclical Fidei Donum mobilized priests and religious for Africa and beyond, yielding "plentiful harvests" through increased personnel and native clergy development. Pius XII actively promoted this growth via doctrinal and organizational measures, including the 1941 establishment of the Pontifical Work for Priestly Vocations to coordinate recruitment efforts worldwide. His 1950 apostolic exhortation Menti Nostrae outlined rigorous standards for priestly training, stressing personal holiness, apostolic zeal, and adaptation to modern challenges to enhance clerical efficacy and attract candidates. Religious orders paralleled this trajectory, with expansions in communities like the Franciscans and missions, supported by curial reforms that streamlined approvals for new foundations and emphasized contemplative and active apostolates. These developments underscored a pre-conciliar vitality in consecrated life, attributable to Pius XII's focus on spiritual renewal over structural upheaval.

Theological Contributions and Doctrinal Developments

Orientation Toward Thomism and Mystical Theology

Pope Pius XII reinforced the centrality of Thomism in Catholic theological education and discourse, building on the mandates of his predecessors Leo XIII and Pius X. In his encyclical Humani Generis of August 12, 1950, he explicitly required that future priests receive philosophical instruction "according to the method, doctrine, and principles of the Angelic Doctor" St. Thomas Aquinas, positioning Thomism as the indispensable safeguard against modern philosophical deviations such as existentialism, immanentism, and undue relativism in scriptural interpretation. This directive aimed to preserve doctrinal integrity amid post-war intellectual currents, affirming Aquinas's synthesis of reason and faith as superior to contemporary trends like phenomenology, which Pius XII viewed as insufficiently grounded in perennial philosophy. Pius XII's endorsement extended to praising Aquinas's unique Christianization of Aristotelian thought by excising its errors, thereby rendering it a reliable instrument for theological inquiry. He critiqued theologians who deviated from Thomistic principles, warning in Humani Generis against "false opinions" that undermined supernatural truths, such as the gratuitous nature of divine grace, and urged fidelity to scholastic methods to resolve contemporary debates on topics like evolution while upholding monogenism and the soul's immediate creation by God. This orientation reflected his conviction that Thomism provided the rational framework essential for defending orthodoxy against neomodernist tendencies, as evidenced by his interventions against nouvelle théologie proponents who sought to prioritize historical and experiential approaches over scholastic rigor. Complementing this rational emphasis, Pius XII advanced mystical theology through his encyclical Mystici Corporis Christi of June 29, 1943, which systematically articulated the Church as the Mystical Body of Christ, fostering a deeper appreciation of the intimate, organic union between Christ the Head and His members. Drawing from St. Paul's imagery in 1 Corinthians 12 and Ephesians 4, the encyclical integrated Thomistic precision with mystical insights, portraying the Church not merely as a juridical society but as a living organism animated by divine life, where sacraments effect real participation in Christ's redemptive mysteries. Issued amid World War II, it countered secular individualism by highlighting the mystical bonds of charity and grace that unite believers, thereby promoting a theology that balanced speculative clarity with contemplative union. This dual orientation—Thomistic for doctrinal solidity and mystical for spiritual depth—manifested in Pius XII's broader teachings, such as his addresses on liturgy and ecclesiology, where he urged theologians to harmonize Aquinas's metaphysics with the patristic emphasis on divine indwelling, ensuring that intellectual pursuits served the soul's ascent to God without succumbing to subjectivism.

Advancement of Marian Dogma and Devotions

Pope Pius XII significantly advanced Marian dogma through the apostolic constitution Munificentissimus Deus, promulgated on November 1, 1950, which infallibly defined the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary as a dogma of faith. The document affirmed that "the Immaculate Mother of God, the ever Virgin Mary, having completed the course of her earthly life, was assumed body and soul into heavenly glory," grounding this truth in apostolic preaching, the constant faith of the Church, liturgical evidence, and theological reasoning from Mary's unique role in salvation history. This proclamation fulfilled long-standing petitions from the faithful and bishops worldwide, culminating a doctrinal development that strengthened Catholic eschatology and devotion to Mary's bodily resurrection as a pledge of humanity's own. Building on this, Pius XII further elevated Mary's dignity in the encyclical Ad Caeli Reginam, issued on October 11, 1954, during the proclaimed Marian Year. The encyclical doctrinally articulated Mary's queenship over all creation by grace, subordinating it to Christ's kingship, and instituted an annual feast of the Queenship of Mary on May 31 to foster universal veneration. Drawing from Scripture—such as the woman crowned with twelve stars in Revelation 12—and patristic testimony, it emphasized Mary's intercessory role in redemption, urging the faithful to invoke her as Queen amid post-war moral challenges. Pius XII actively promoted popular Marian devotions, particularly those tied to Fatima and the Rosary, as antidotes to secularism and communism. On October 31, 1942, he consecrated the world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary via radio broadcast from Saint Peter's Basilica, partially fulfilling the Fatima visionary's request for Russia's conversion and linking it to daily Rosary prayer for peace. He authorized the canonical coronation of the Fatima statue on May 13, 1946, drawing massive pilgrim crowds and affirming the apparitions' authenticity amid reports of solar phenomena witnessed by tens of thousands. In subsequent addresses and the 1953 encyclical Fulgens Corona, he proclaimed a Holy Year of Marian pilgrimages, indulgences, and Rosary campaigns, reporting over 475,000 pilgrim visits to Marian shrines and emphasizing the Rosary's meditative structure on Christ's mysteries as essential for personal sanctification and societal renewal. These initiatives, supported by Vatican Radio transmissions and episcopal conferences, integrated private piety with public liturgy, yielding documented increases in scapular enrollments and First Saturday devotions.

Social Teachings on Family, Economy, and State

Pope Pius XII developed Catholic social doctrine in continuity with his predecessors, emphasizing the natural law as the foundation for human society, the principle of subsidiarity, and the primacy of the person over collectivist ideologies. In numerous addresses and messages, he addressed the family as the basic cell of society, the economy as ordered toward human dignity rather than mere material gain, and the state as possessing authority derived from God but strictly limited to the common good. His teachings rejected both atheistic communism and unregulated individualism, advocating instead for intermediate associations like families and guilds to mediate between individual and state. On the family, Pius XII upheld the indissoluble union of one man and one woman oriented toward procreation and mutual sanctification, warning against any separation of the unitive and procreative aspects of marriage. In his allocution to the Italian Catholic Union of Midwives on October 29, 1951, he affirmed that every marital act must remain open to life, condemning artificial contraception as contrary to natural law and divine order. He portrayed the father as the head responsible for the family's material and spiritual guidance, and the mother as the heart nurturing the home's moral atmosphere, drawing from Proverbs 31 to describe the ideal wife as a "radiant sun" fostering virtue and stability. In addresses to associations of large families, such as on January 20, 1958, he praised numerous children as evidence of robust faith, physical health, and societal vitality, declaring that large families testify to the soundness of Church doctrine and counteract materialistic tendencies to limit progeny for selfish reasons. He insisted that society exists for the family, not vice versa, and urged parents to cultivate a pure environment from conception, shielding children from moral corruption. Regarding the economy, Pius XII stressed the inherent dignity of work as tied to personal perfection and the moral ordering of production toward the common good, critiquing both socialist centralization and capitalist excesses that prioritize profit over persons. In his 1942 Christmas message on the internal order of states, he advocated an organic economic structure where private initiative and property rights serve human needs, rejecting nationalization that undermines personal responsibility. He endorsed subsidiarity, whereby higher levels intervene only when lower ones fail, and promoted rural economies as essential for balanced development, urging the full utilization of national resources without ideological distortions. In various addresses, he defended entrepreneurship and free exchange as morally grounded when aligned with commutative justice, warning against economic systems that idolize money or class conflict, and called for contracts and wages reflecting workers' dignity rather than exploitation. The Church's competence, he clarified, extends to the ethical dimensions of economic life, condemning abuses like usury or labor alienation while affirming the right to private property as natural to human freedom. Pius XII viewed the state as possessing legitimate coercive authority derived from divine and natural law, entrusted to promote justice and the common good but forbidden from absolutism or intrusion into familial or personal spheres. In his 1944 Christmas message on democracy, he supported democratic forms—monarchical or republican—provided they wield real command authority rooted in moral responsibility, cautioning that without a virtuous populace, democracy devolves into tyranny or license. Authority flows from God through the people to rulers, who must respect human dignity and subsidiarity, restoring state power to serve society rather than dominate it, as outlined in his 1942 Christmas address. He opposed totalitarian regimes, including communism, for subordinating the person to the collective, and emphasized that citizens bear a duty to limit state overreach through intermediate bodies like the family and Church. While affirming the state's autonomy in temporal governance, he insisted it recognize moral absolutes and the rights of religious freedom within limits, rejecting laicism that excludes divine law from public life.

Positions on Science, Evolution, and Modernity

Pope Pius XII consistently affirmed the compatibility of authentic scientific inquiry with Catholic doctrine, viewing scientific discoveries as manifestations of divine wisdom and goodness. In a 1951 address to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, he stated that "the more true science advances, the more it discovers God," emphasizing that empirical progress in fields like cosmology and atomic structure provided rational grounds for classical proofs of God's existence, such as the argument from design. He supported the Vatican's astronomical research, continuing the work of the Vatican Observatory established under his predecessor, and personally engaged with its instruments, underscoring astronomy's role in revealing the ordered cosmos as evidence of a Creator. Regarding evolution, Pius XII addressed the topic cautiously in the encyclical Humani Generis promulgated on August 12, 1950, permitting Catholic scholars to investigate and debate the possibility that the human body originated from pre-existent living matter through transformative processes, provided such hypotheses remained unproven and aligned with revealed truth. He rejected the teaching of evolutionism as a settled fact in education or theology, insisting that the spiritual soul is created immediately by God and that theories contradicting monogenism—such as polygenism incompatible with the doctrine of original sin—could not be accepted. This position balanced openness to empirical data with fidelity to scriptural and dogmatic principles, warning against undue deference to scientific conjecture over metaphysical certainty. Pius XII critiqued aspects of modernity that divorced reason from faith or elevated material progress above moral order, as seen in Humani Generis, where he condemned modern philosophical trends like immanentism, idealism, and existentialism for undermining objective truth and the Church's authority. In his 1957 encyclical Miranda Prorsus, he addressed technological advancements in mass media—radio, television, and film—as powerful tools for evangelization but cautioned against their misuse in propagating error or sensationalism, urging ethical regulation to serve human dignity. Despite such reservations, he praised modernity's scientific achievements when oriented toward truth, as in his 1951 reference to expanding universe models (echoing Georges Lemaître's work) as corroborating the biblical notion of creation ex nihilo, provided they did not preclude a transcendent cause. This approach reflected a realism that integrated causal explanations from science with theological realism, rejecting both fideism and scientism.

Encyclicals Addressing Moral and Ethical Crises

In his first encyclical, Summi Pontificatus, issued on October 20, 1939, Pope Pius XII addressed the profound moral and ethical crises precipitating World War II, attributing societal breakdown to the rejection of divine authority and natural law. He condemned totalitarianism for subordinating human dignity to state power, warning that ideologies denying God's sovereignty foster ethical confusion and violence by abandoning universal moral principles. The document emphasized the unity of the human family under Christ, rooted in shared origin and redemption, as the antidote to hatred and division driven by spiritual agnosticism and false autonomy of nations. Eleven years later, Humani Generis, promulgated on August 12, 1950, confronted post-war intellectual currents eroding ethical foundations through philosophical relativism and doctrinal laxity. Pius XII critiqued errors such as existentialism and historicism for promoting a fluid conception of truth that undermines immutable moral norms and the certainty provided by divine revelation. He defended the historical reality of original sin from a single Adam, rejecting polygenism as incompatible with redemption's necessity, thereby safeguarding doctrines essential to human accountability and ethical order. The encyclical urged vigilance against adaptations of Catholic teaching to modern thought, which risked diluting faith's role in guiding personal and societal morality. Addressing the ethical perils of emerging mass media, Miranda Prorsus of September 8, 1957, warned of films, radio, and television's capacity to corrupt public morals by inciting passions and disseminating immoral content directly into homes. Pius XII highlighted threats to youth and family integrity from unregulated programming, calling for Church-state collaboration in classification and censorship to prioritize virtue over commercial gain. He established a Pontifical Commission for Cinema, Radio, and Television to oversee Catholic initiatives, stressing education in media discernment as vital to countering ethical decay in a visually dominated age.

Canonizations, Beatifications, and Cultic Practices

Major Saints Elevated During Pontificate

Pope Pius XII canonized 34 saints during his pontificate from March 2, 1939, to October 9, 1958, focusing on exemplars of mystical union, missionary zeal, purity, and ecclesiastical reform. These elevations underscored his theological emphasis on personal holiness as a bulwark against secularism and totalitarianism, with ceremonies often held in St. Peter's Basilica amid large crowds. Among the earliest was St. Gemma Galgani, an Italian mystic and stigmatist who endured severe spiritual trials, canonized on May 2, 1940, shortly after the onset of World War II, highlighting perseverance in suffering. St. Frances Xavier Cabrini, the first naturalized U.S. citizen elevated to sainthood, was canonized on July 7, 1946, for founding the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart and establishing 67 institutions aiding Italian immigrants in America. St. Catherine Labouré, visionary of the Miraculous Medal, followed on July 27, 1947, her canonization affirming Marian apparitions as instruments of grace during post-war reconstruction. St. Maria Goretti, the 11-year-old Italian martyr of chastity killed in 1902 while resisting assault, was canonized on June 24, 1950, in a ceremony attended by her assassin, whom she forgave; this event drew over 250,000 pilgrims and symbolized youthful fortitude against moral decay. Later, on May 29, 1954, Pius XII canonized his predecessor, St. Pius X, the anti-modernist reformer who combated theological liberalism and promoted frequent Communion, marking a rare papal canonization of a recent pontiff. St. Dominic Savio, the teenage disciple of St. John Bosco known for his piety and self-denial, was also canonized that year on June 12, 1954, as the youngest non-martyr saint at the time, encouraging vocational discernment among youth. These canonizations, often accompanied by beatifications of female religious (comprising over half of Pius XII's elevations), reflected a deliberate promotion of lay and feminine sanctity responsive to 20th-century crises, with rigorous scrutiny of miracles and virtues per the 1917 Code of Canon Law.

Introduction of New Feasts and Devotions

Pope Pius XII introduced several new feasts to the universal liturgical calendar during his pontificate, aiming to foster deeper devotion amid post-war spiritual renewal and contemporary challenges. These innovations included emphasizing paternal protection, maternal queenship, and maternal purity, often tied to broader encyclical teachings on family and divine mysteries. In 1944, Pius XII established the Feast of the Immaculate Heart of Mary for the universal Church, to be celebrated on August 22 as the octave day of the Assumption. This followed his 1942 consecration of the world to Mary's Immaculate Heart amid World War II, intended to invoke her intercession for peace among nations, families, and individuals. The feast's propers highlighted Mary's sorrowful compassion and reparative role, drawing from Fatima apparitions and prior private devotions approved by earlier popes. Through the encyclical Ad Caeli Reginam issued on October 11, 1954, Pius XII proclaimed the Queenship of Mary and instituted a corresponding feast on May 31, underscoring her royal dignity as foretold in Scripture and affirmed by the 1950 Assumption dogma. The document cited biblical typology, patristic testimony, and liturgical tradition to justify the devotion, positioning Mary as intercessor for humanity's temporal and eternal welfare against ideological threats. Proper Masses and Offices were composed for the occasion, with the feast ranked as a double of the second class. On May 1, 1955, Pius XII created the Feast of Saint Joseph the Worker, assigned to the same date traditionally associated with labor celebrations, to exalt Joseph's role as patron of workers and universal Church protector against materialist ideologies. This double of the first class featured new liturgical texts emphasizing diligence, humility, and divine providence in labor, aligning with Pius XII's social teachings in Rerum Ecclesiae and countering secular May Day observances. These additions reflected Pius XII's broader liturgical directives, including simplified rubrics in 1955 that integrated new feasts without displacing ancient ones, promoting active participation while preserving doctrinal integrity. Devotions tied to these feasts, such as First Fridays for the Immaculate Heart or novenas for Joseph's patronage, gained papal endorsement through indulgences and radio addresses, evidenced by increased global observance documented in diocesan reports.

Final Years, Illness, and Death

Deteriorating Health and Public Appearances

In the early 1950s, Pope Pius XII experienced recurring digestive issues exacerbated by overwork and international tensions, including gastritis linked to high gastric acidity and fatigue. These symptoms intensified by late 1953, manifesting as a neuro-digestive disturbance that prevented normal eating and sleeping, with persistent hiccups and vomiting. By February 1954, the condition had escalated into a severe attack, prompting worldwide prayers and Vatican bulletins reporting satisfactory but fragile vital signs in lungs, heart, and circulation. The crisis peaked in December 1954 when X-rays revealed a hernia of the esophagus, directly causing the gastritis, though surgeons deemed operation too risky given the pontiff's age of 78. This prolonged ordeal, lasting months, led Pius XII to contemplate abdication, after which he adopted modified work habits, curtailing extended ceremonies and delegating more administrative tasks. Recovery was partial; he remained gaunt and ascetic in appearance, with ongoing frailty that shifted his focus toward lay concerns over clerical administration. Public engagements persisted but diminished in scope and frequency. From 1955 to 1956, he granted audiences to groups such as visiting dignitaries, including U.S. Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy's family, and Rome's top students, often delivering brief blessings from his throne. In 1957, despite emerging neurological symptoms, he addressed the International Congress of Anesthesiologists on November 24, outlining ethical criteria for life-sustaining interventions in cases of coma or brain injury, subordinating temporal health to spiritual ends. These appearances, numbering in the hundreds annually earlier in his pontificate, tapered as health waned, with Pius XII increasingly relying on radio broadcasts for messages like his 1956 Christmas address on global peace. By mid-1957, subtle signs of cerebral involvement appeared, culminating in the first of multiple strokes that further eroded his physical reserves, though he maintained minimal visibility through delegated Vatican functions. Observers noted his ethereal demeanor, interpreting it as mystical detachment amid bodily decline, yet he avoided full seclusion, embodying a commitment to pastoral visibility until incapacitation.

Death on October 9, 1958

Pope Pius XII suffered a paralyzing stroke on October 6, 1958, while at the papal summer residence of Castel Gandolfo, marking the onset of his final decline. Over the subsequent days, his condition worsened due to cardio-pulmonary complications from a second stroke, despite medical interventions by attending physicians. He expired quietly in his bedroom at 3:52 a.m. on October 9, 1958, at the age of 82, after a pontificate of 19 years, 7 months, and 7 days. The official cause of death was recorded as acute heart failure precipitated by the myocardial infarction associated with the strokes. Cardinal Eugène Tisserant, dean of the College of Cardinals, confirmed the pontiff's passing to gathered clergy and announced it via radio broadcast shortly thereafter, summoning the cardinals to Rome for the conclave. In his last moments, Pius XII reportedly received sacramental comforts, including viaticum, administered by attending prelates, reflecting the traditional rites for a dying pope.

Funeral Rites and Succession

The body of Pope Pius XII was transferred from Castel Gandolfo to Vatican City on October 10, 1958, following his death the previous day, in preparation for the traditional papal obsequies. The corpse lay in state within St. Peter's Basilica, clad in red papal vestments symbolizing martyrdom, enabling public homage amid the solemn nine-day period of mourning known as the novendiales. However, the embalming process, hastily conducted by the Pope's personal physician Riccardo Galeazzi-Lisi using unapproved methods such as ether injection, resulted in rapid decomposition, evident in the body's greenish discoloration, bloating, and emission of fluids during the vigil, prompting Vatican intervention to mitigate the distress to attendees and necessitating the use of dry ice for preservation. The principal funeral Mass occurred on October 14, 1958, in St. Peter's Basilica, officiated by Cardinal Eugène Tisserant, Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, in the presence of approximately 2,000 mourners including clergy, dignitaries, and laity, with the rite adhering to the Ordo Exsequiarum Romani Pontificis then in force. The ceremony, spanning from 4:00 p.m. to 6:10 p.m., featured the Requiem aeternam chants, absolutions, and incensation customary for pontifical funerals, after which the remains were processed to the Vatican grottoes for interment near the tomb of St. Peter. Encased in three nested coffins—cypress for the body, lead for sealing, and oak for the exterior—the sarcophagus was secured with the signets of four senior cardinals, soldered shut to ensure integrity, before final entombment in the papal crypt. With burial completed, the Apostolic See entered sede vacante status, governed by the Camerlengo Cardinal Nicola Canali until a successor's election. The papal conclave convened on October 25, 1958, in the Sistine Chapel, comprising 51 cardinal electors under the rules of Vacante Sede Apostolica, requiring a two-thirds majority for selection. After ten inconclusive ballots marked by black smoke signals over three days—reflecting divisions between curial traditionalists and reform-oriented factions—white smoke emanated on October 28, announcing the election of Cardinal Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli, aged 76, the Patriarch of Venice, who accepted and adopted the name John XXIII. Roncalli's choice of name, evoking the early 15th-century antipope, signaled an intent to reopen windows to modernity, though his pontificate's brevity and subsequent Vatican II convocation marked a pivot from Pius XII's doctrinal emphases.

Historiography and Scholarly Interpretations

Contemporary Reactions and Early Biographies

During his pontificate from 1939 to 1958, Pope Pius XII received widespread acclaim for his diplomatic efforts in mitigating the impacts of World War II, including facilitating the rescue of Jews through Vatican networks and issuing indirect condemnations of atrocities via radio addresses, such as his Christmas 1942 broadcast decrying the murder of "hundreds of thousands" of civilians based on nationality or descent. Jewish organizations and leaders expressed gratitude contemporaneously; for instance, the World Jewish Congress thanked him in 1943 for interventions against deportations, and post-liberation tributes from figures like Chief Rabbi Isaac Herzog of Israel in 1945 hailed the Holy See's aid to over 4,000 Roman Jews sheltered in religious institutions. Allied governments also acknowledged his role in sharing intelligence on Nazi plans and supporting resistance efforts, with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill privately noting Pius's anti-Nazi stance in wartime correspondence. Reactions intensified positively after the war, as Pius XII advocated for reconstruction and human rights in encyclicals like Summi Pontificatus (1939), which critiqued totalitarianism and influenced the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Golda Meir, then Israel's foreign minister, sent condolences upon his death on October 9, 1958, stating, "When fearful martyrdom came to our people, the voice of the pope was raised for its victims," reflecting a consensus among wartime Jewish survivors who credited Vatican diplomacy with saving tens of thousands across Europe. Global press and leaders echoed this; U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower described him as a "devoted servant of God" whose life enriched humanity, while Italian and European obituaries portrayed him as a stabilizing moral force amid ideological conflicts. Dissent was marginal and typically from anti-clerical quarters, such as Soviet-aligned media critiquing his anti-communist positions, but these lacked the evidentiary weight of contemporaneous Allied and Jewish endorsements. Early biographies, published shortly after his death, uniformly depicted Pius XII as a pious diplomat and spiritual shepherd, emphasizing his pre-papal career negotiating concordats and his wartime prudence. Charles Hugo Doyle's The Life of Pope Pius XII (1959) highlighted his humility, intellectual rigor, and behind-the-scenes aid to persecuted groups, drawing on Vatican insiders to affirm his sanctity without addressing later politicized critiques. Similarly, Felix Pfister's The Life and Works of a Great Pope (1958) portrayed him as a visionary leader who modernized the Church through radio broadcasts and Marian devotions, attributing global Catholic unity under his reign to personal asceticism and foresight. These works, often authored by Catholic clergy or sympathizers, relied on primary documents like Pacelli's diplomatic archives and eyewitness accounts, presenting a hagiographic yet fact-based narrative of his 19-year pontificate as one of endurance amid total war and Cold War tensions, with minimal engagement of secular skepticism that would emerge post-1963.

Post-War Debates on Wartime Leadership

Following the end of World War II in 1945, Pope Pius XII received widespread acclaim from Jewish leaders and organizations for the Vatican's wartime efforts to shelter and rescue Jews, with estimates attributing 700,000 to 860,000 Jewish lives saved through Catholic institutions under his direction, including convents, monasteries, and clerical networks in Rome and occupied Europe. Golda Meir, then Israel's foreign minister, publicly praised Pius in 1958 upon his death, stating that "when fearful martyrdom came to our people, the pope warned and comforted us," reflecting sentiments echoed by the World Jewish Congress and other groups that visited the Vatican post-war to express gratitude. Allied leaders, including U.S. President Harry Truman, also acknowledged his humanitarian initiatives, such as aiding over 100,000 refugees through Vatican channels by 1945. Criticisms of Pius's wartime leadership emerged sporadically in the late 1940s and 1950s, often propagated by Soviet-aligned media accusing him of pro-Nazi sympathies as part of broader anti-Catholic campaigns, though these claims lacked substantiation from primary diplomatic records and were dismissed by contemporaneous Jewish testimonies. The debate intensified dramatically in 1963 with the premiere of Rolf Hochhuth's play The Deputy (original German: Der Stellvertreter), which dramatized Pius as culpably silent and indifferent to the Holocaust, portraying his alleged inaction as a moral failing driven by institutional self-preservation and anti-communist priorities. The play, drawing on selective wartime correspondence but omitting evidence of Pius's discreet interventions—like his 1942 instructions to nuncios to aid persecuted Jews and the sheltering of approximately 4,000 Jews in Vatican properties in Rome alone—ignited protests, theatrical bans in some cities, and Vatican rebuttals asserting that public denunciations could have provoked Nazi reprisals, endangering the very networks saving lives. Defenders, including Jewish scholars like Pinchas Lapide, countered Hochhuth's narrative by citing empirical data on rescue operations, arguing that Pius's strategy of veiled condemnations—such as his 1942 Christmas radio address decrying the "extermination of peoples" based on race—balanced moral witness with pragmatic protection amid Nazi control of Catholic populations, where outspoken bishops like the Netherlands' had faced escalated deportations after public protests. Hochhuth's work, influenced by leftist intellectual circles skeptical of institutional religion, amplified accusations of complicity through omission, yet overlooked post-war Vatican diplomatic efforts, including Pius's advocacy for clemency in Allied war crimes trials and aid to displaced persons camps housing tens of thousands of Jewish survivors by 1946. The ensuing polemics, spanning the 1960s, highlighted tensions between absolutist expectations of papal pronouncements and the causal realities of wartime diplomacy, where Pius's prior experience as nuncio in Munich (1917–1929) informed his assessment that explicit anti-Nazi rhetoric risked unifying German Catholics behind the regime, as seen in the 1933 Reichskonkordat's stabilizing effect on Church operations. Critics, often from academia prone to retrospective moralizing without accounting for contemporaneous intelligence constraints, persisted in framing his restraint as moral cowardice, while empirical defenses emphasized documented outcomes: Vatican-issued false baptismal certificates saved thousands, and Pius's networks facilitated escapes via neutral channels like Switzerland and Spain. By the late 1960s, the controversy had entrenched partisan lines, with sources like L'Osservatore Romano decrying Hochhuth's fabrications and Jewish defenders like Lapide quantifying Pius's indirect role in averting higher death tolls through quiet leverage against Axis powers.

Influence of Archival Openings Since 2020

The opening of the Vatican Apostolic Archives' fonds on Pope Pius XII's pontificate on March 2, 2020, provided scholars with access to approximately 16 million pages of documents, including wartime correspondence, diplomatic cables, and internal memos related to the Holocaust and Nazi persecutions. This unprecedented release, authorized by Pope Francis, has enabled direct examination of primary sources previously unavailable, influencing historiography by grounding debates in empirical evidence rather than secondary interpretations or incomplete records. Key findings confirm Pius XII's early awareness of the Holocaust's scale; for instance, a 1942 letter from German Jesuit Provincial Lothar Koenig to the pope's secretary detailed systematic Jewish extermination, indicating Vatican knowledge from multiple informants by mid-1942. Documents also reveal backchannel communications between Pius XII and Adolf Hitler, including unpublicized negotiations via intermediaries to mitigate deportations in Hungary and Italy, as evidenced by 1943-1944 cables. These disclosures have bolstered critics' arguments, such as those in David Kertzer's 2022 analysis The Pope at War, that Pius prioritized institutional preservation and diplomatic maneuvering—such as avoiding public condemnations to prevent reprisals against 50 million Catholics under Nazi control—over explicit Allied-aligned protests, potentially costing moral clarity. Conversely, archival evidence substantiates Pius XII's covert aid to Jews, documenting Vatican-orchestrated rescues of over 4,000 Roman Jews in 1943 via monasteries and convents, alongside interventions saving an estimated 700,000-800,000 Jews across Europe through nuncios' networks. Historians reviewing these records, including those at 2023-2024 conferences, note that Pius's 1942 Christmas address indirectly referenced "hundreds of thousands" perishing under "racial pride," a coded critique risking Nazi retaliation, and refute charges of antisemitism by highlighting his pre-papal condemnations of racism in Mit brennender Sorge (1937). The influence on scholarship has been to foster nuance amid persistent polarization; while some outlets amplify silence as complicity, empirical data from the archives underscores causal trade-offs in Pius's realism—public denunciations by predecessors like Pius XI provoked closures of Catholic institutions, whereas quiet diplomacy yielded tangible survivals. Ongoing digitization and access, reaching over 200 researchers by 2023, continue to challenge ideologically driven narratives from post-war critics like Rolf Hochhuth, whose The Deputy (1963) relied on forged or selective evidence now contradicted by originals. This has not yielded consensus but has elevated defenses rooted in verifiable actions, with scholars advocating methodical study over accusatory frameworks influenced by secular or progressive biases in academia.

Key Criticisms and Documented Defenses

The primary criticism leveled against Pope Pius XII concerns his alleged to issue a , explicit condemnation of during , with detractors arguing that his diplomatic restraint enabled Nazi atrocities against to continue unchecked. This view gained prominence following the 1963 premiere of Rolf Hochhuth's play , which depicted Pius XII as complicit through inaction, portraying him as prioritizing Vatican neutrality over moral imperatives to denounce the extermination of six million . Critics, including some historians influenced by post-war leftist narratives in European academia and theater, contended that Pius's public statements, such as his December 24, 1942, Christmas address—alluding to "hundreds of thousands" suffering extermination for racial reasons without naming or Nazis explicitly—constituted insufficient moral leadership, potentially signaling tacit approval to perpetrators. Additional accusations include overlooking Croatian Ustaše massacres of , Serbs, and others, as well as maintaining the 1933 Reichskonkordat with Nazi Germany, seen by some as legitimizing the regime despite its violations. These claims often overlook contemporaneous Jewish praise for Pius's interventions, such as rescue efforts, and rely on selective archival interpretations that discount the risks of public confrontation in Nazi-occupied Rome after September 1943. Documented defenses emphasize Pius XII's strategic use of behind-the-scenes diplomacy to mitigate harm, rooted in assessments that overt papal denunciations would have provoked retaliatory escalations against Jews and Catholics under Axis control. As Eugenio Pacelli, he drafted the 1937 encyclical Mit brennender Sorge for Pius XI, smuggled into Germany and read from pulpits, which condemned Nazi ideology as incompatible with Christianity, idolatry of race and state, and violations of the Concordat—prompting Nazi reprisals like arrests of clergy. During his pontificate, Vatican records reveal direct orders to clergy for Jewish rescues, including sheltering over 4,000 Jews in the Vatican and Roman religious institutions after the 1943 German occupation, with estimates crediting papal networks for saving 700,000 to 860,000 Jewish lives across Europe—exceeding efforts by other international agencies combined. His 1942 Christmas message, while coded, was interpreted by Nazis as an implicit rebuke, leading to threats against the Vatican, and aligned with Allied protests; internal correspondence shows Pius received detailed reports of gassings as early as 1942 from German Jesuits but prioritized covert aid over statements that might close diplomatic channels. Jewish leaders, including Chief Rabbi Isaac Herzog, publicly thanked Pius in 1944 for interventions saving thousands in Hungary, and post-war tributes from organizations like the World Jewish Congress affirmed his role, contrasting with later Hochhuth-inspired revisions that scholars attribute to ideological agendas rather than comprehensive evidence. These actions reflect a calculus of causal efficacy: public silence preserved operational secrecy for rescues amid total war, where papal influence derived from moral authority rather than military power.

Recent Empirical Findings from 2020s Research

In March 2020, Pope Francis opened the Vatican Apostolic Archives for the pontificate of Pius XII (1939–1958), granting scholars access to roughly 16 million pages of documents, including diplomatic correspondence, internal memos, and reports on wartime activities. This release, anticipated since Pius's death, has enabled empirical reassessment of his knowledge and responses to Nazi persecution, though full cataloging remains incomplete due to the volume and COVID-19 disruptions. A key 2023 discovery involved a November 1942 letter from German Jesuit Lothar Koenig to Pius XII, relaying eyewitness accounts from Poland of systematic Jewish extermination via gas vans and camps like Belzec, indicating the pontiff possessed detailed intelligence on the Holocaust by late 1942—earlier than some prior estimates. Archival cross-references confirm Pius shared this with Vatican diplomats, prompting private démarches to Nazi officials and Allied powers, though no public encyclical naming the genocide followed. June 2022 research revealed documents of undisclosed backchannel negotiations between Pius XII and Hitler intermediaries, including a 1940 envoy exchange aimed at averting escalation or securing humanitarian concessions, underscoring Pius's preference for discreet diplomacy over overt confrontation. These files depict Pius authorizing Vatican networks to shelter Jews—evidenced by ledgers of over 4,000 Roman Jews hidden in ecclesiastical sites during the 1943 ghetto roundup—while avoiding statements that could provoke reprisals against Catholic institutions or converts. Historians like David Kertzer, drawing on these archives, document Pius's institutional caution, including tolerance of some anti-Semitic rhetoric among subordinates and focus on preserving Church autonomy amid Axis pressures, yet find no directives for collaboration or inaction on rescue operations. Early post-opening reviews, such as those from 2020–2023 symposia, note the absence of "smoking gun" evidence for complicity, with many records affirming covert aid channels that facilitated escapes via Vatican passports and convents across Europe. Scholars advocate measured interpretation, highlighting how pre-existing biases in secondary sources—often amplified by incomplete access—have shaped debates, and stress that ongoing digitization may yield further data on Pius's causal calculus: weighing public silence against tangible salvations amid totalitarian risks. No findings to date substantiate claims of ideological alignment with Nazism, but they affirm early awareness and a pragmatic strategy prioritizing survival over rhetoric.

Canonization Process

Initiation and Declaratory Stages

The canonization process for Pope Pius XII was initiated by Pope Paul VI on November 18, 1965, during the final session of the Second Vatican Council, where he announced the joint opening of causes for both Pius XII and his immediate predecessor, John XXIII. This step occurred seven years after Pius XII's death, bypassing the standard five-year waiting period typically required under canon law, though formal investigations proceeded gradually amid ongoing historical debates about his pontificate. The initiation involved appointing a postulator to gather testimony and documents, marking the formal start of the diocesan and subsequent Roman phases of inquiry into his life, virtues, and reputation for sanctity. In the declaratory stages, Pius XII was accorded the title of Servant of God on November 29, 1990, by Pope John Paul II, following the submission of initial documentation affirming his exercise of Christian virtues. This declaration represented the first official recognition in the process, based on preliminary reviews of biographical evidence, eyewitness accounts, and ecclesiastical approvals, though it did not yet address controversies surrounding his wartime actions. Progress advanced slowly due to the volume of archival material and external criticisms, with the Congregation for the Causes of Saints conducting extensive examinations. On December 19, 2009, Pope Benedict XVI promulgated a decree recognizing Pius XII's practice of the theological and cardinal virtues to a heroic degree, elevating him to the title of Venerable. This ruling followed the approval of a positio—a detailed dossier compiling evidence of his piety, prudence, justice, fortitude, and temperance—drawn from testimonies of over 100 witnesses and Vatican records spanning his 19-year papacy. The decree emphasized his personal asceticism, devotion to the Eucharist and Mary, and administrative rigor, while Vatican officials noted that it did not preclude further historical scrutiny of his decisions. These stages laid the groundwork for subsequent phases requiring verified miracles, amid persistent scholarly contention over the completeness of wartime documentation.

Examination of Virtues and Miracles

The examination of Pope Pius XII's virtues for canonization involved a thorough review by the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, culminating in the approval of a decree recognizing his exercise of the theological virtues of faith, hope, and charity, as well as the cardinal virtues of prudence, justice, fortitude, and temperance, in a heroic degree. This process, initiated after his cause was formally opened in 1990 following an initial post-mortem petition in 1958, included the compilation of a positio—a detailed dossier of biographical evidence, testimonies from contemporaries, and analysis of his papal acts, writings, and decisions—submitted to theological consultors and a panel of cardinals and bishops. On May 8, 2007, the majority of the congregation's members voted in favor of affirming these heroic virtues, a recommendation endorsed by Pope Benedict XVI on December 19, 2009, granting Pacelli the title of Venerable. The decree emphasized his fidelity to Church doctrine amid global crises, including his diplomatic efforts and spiritual leadership during World War II, though critics have questioned the comprehensiveness of wartime evidence reviewed, citing potential archival gaps prior to the 2020 Vatican openings. Devotees have attributed several post-mortem healings to Pius XII's intercession, but none have been officially validated by the Vatican as scientifically inexplicable and directly linked to his prayers, halting progress toward beatification. Canonization norms require at least one such miracle for beatification and a second for sainthood, rigorously scrutinized by medical experts, theologians, and the congregation to exclude natural explanations or fraud. Proposed cases include a reported recovery from severe illness invoked through Pius XII's relic in the early 2000s, documented by supporters on sites affiliated with the cause, and other anecdotal healings cited in biographical works, such as a child's unexplained remission following family prayers to the pontiff. However, as of 2014, Vatican officials confirmed the absence of an approved miracle as the primary barrier, with Pope Francis noting procedural delays tied to insufficient evidence meeting the required criteria. No further advancements were reported through 2025, despite ongoing petitions, reflecting the stringent empirical standards applied to ensure causal attribution beyond doubt. Persistent objections to the virtues phase, particularly from Jewish organizations and some historians, center on Pius XII's alleged reticence during the Holocaust, arguing it undermines claims of heroic justice and fortitude; these critiques prompted calls to suspend the process until fuller archival access, though the 2009 decree proceeded based on available testimonies affirming his private aid to persecuted groups. Proponents counter that the examination prioritized verifiable acts of charity, such as Vatican sheltering of thousands, over contested public diplomacy, with empirical defenses from wartime rescuers supporting the heroic assessment. The path forward hinges on miracle validation, potentially expedited by recent archival disclosures, but remains indefinitely paused absent conclusive supernatural evidence.

Persistent Objections and Path Forward

Despite extensive documentation from the opened Vatican archives revealing Pius XII's directives to Catholic institutions that sheltered an estimated 4,000 to 7,000 Jews in Rome alone during the 1943 German occupation, and broader Church networks credited with aiding hundreds of thousands across Europe, objections to his canonization endure primarily from Jewish advocacy groups and secular historians. These center on his decision to avoid explicit public denunciations of the Holocaust by name, interpreting it as moral cowardice or complicity rather than a calculated strategy to prevent Nazi reprisals against Jewish and Catholic populations, as evidenced by Pius XI's 1937 encyclical Mit brennender Sorge—which Pius XII helped draft—and subsequent private condemnations that prompted Hitler to label him an enemy. Critics, such as those amplifying John Cornwell's 1999 book Hitler's Pope, argue this silence desecrated Holocaust memory, though post-war Jewish testimonies, including a 1945 petition from 20,000 survivors thanking him for aid, contradict claims of indifference. Such objections gained traction post-1963 via Rolf Hochhuth's play The Deputy, which portrayed Pius as passively enabling genocide, influencing academia and media narratives despite archival evidence from 2020 onward showing his awareness of mass killings by mid-1942 and instructions to Vatican diplomats to intervene, such as delaying Rome's deportation trains through feigned illness epidemics. Jewish organizations like B'nai B'rith have repeatedly called for halting the process, as in 2007, citing unresolved wartime accountability, while sources skeptical of Pius often stem from institutions with documented ideological leanings that prioritize symbolic public gestures over pragmatic rescue efforts amid total war. Empirical defenses highlight that no other neutral leader matched his scale of covert operations, with Yad Vashem initially honoring him before withdrawing amid political pressure, underscoring how interfaith tensions, rather than unrefuted facts, sustain the impasse. The path forward hinges on ecclesiastical criteria independent of external protests: following his 2009 declaration as Venerable—affirming heroic virtues—beatification awaits attribution of a post-1958 miracle, rigorously vetted by the Congregation for Saints' Causes. Archival openings since March 2020 have yielded mixed interpretations, with some documents confirming early knowledge of atrocities yet reinforcing discreet diplomacy to avert escalation, as in Pius's 1942 Christmas address alluding to "hundreds of thousands" slain without ethnic specification to safeguard ongoing aid networks. Ongoing scholarly access, including conferences analyzing pontifical records, may further clarify causal decisions, potentially dispelling politicized myths if empirical syntheses prevail over narrative-driven critiques. Absent a qualifying miracle, advancement stalls, though a future pontiff could invoke equivalent dispensation as with John XXIII, prioritizing internal theological merits over diplomatic sensitivities; as of 2025, no such progress has occurred, reflecting Vatican caution amid unresolved debates.

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