Did Pius XII “go undercover” to save Jews?

From CNA:

Rome, Italy, Nov 4, 2011 / 06:00 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The Jewish New Yorker who has made it his life’s work to clear the name of Pope Pius XII of being anti-Semitic believes the wartime pontiff actually went undercover to save the lives of Jews in Rome.

Gary Krupp came across the evidence in a letter from a Jewish woman whose family was rescued thanks to direct Vatican intervention.

“It is an unusual letter, written by a woman who is alive today in northern Italy, who said she was with her mother, her uncle, and a few other relatives in an audience with Pius XII in 1947.” Next to Pope Pius during the meeting was his Assistant Secretary of State, Monsignor Giovanni Montini, the future Pope Paul VI.

“Her uncle immediately looks at the Pope and he says, ‘You were dressed as a Franciscan,’ and looked at Montini who was standing next to him, ‘and you as a regular priest. You took me out of the ghetto into the Vatican.’ Montini immediately said, ‘Silence, do not ever repeat that story.’”

Krupp believes the claim to be true because the personality of the wartime Pope was such that he “needed to see things with his own eyes.”

“He used to take the car out into bombed areas in Rome, and he certainly wasn’t afraid of that. I can see him going into the ghetto and seeing what was happening,” says Krupp.

Krupp and his wife Meredith founded the Pave the Way Foundation in 2002 to “identify and eliminate the non-theological obstacles between religions.” In 2006 he was asked by both Jewish and Catholic leaders to investigate the “stumbling block” of Pope Pius XII’s wartime reputation. Krupp, a very optimistic 64-year-old from Long Island, N.Y., thought he had finally hit a wall.

“We are Jewish. We grew up hating the name Pius XII,” he says. “We believed that he was anti-Semitic, we believed that he was a Nazi collaborator—all of the statements that have been made about him, we believed.”

But when he started looking at the documents from the time, he was shocked. And “then it went from shock to anger. I was lied to,” says Krupp.

“In Judaism, one of the most important character traits one must have is gratitude, this is very important, it is part of Jewish law. Ingratitude is one of the most terrible traits, and this was ingratitude as far as I was concerned.”

Krupp now firmly agrees with the conclusions of Pinchas Lapide, the late Jewish historian and Israeli diplomat who said the direct actions of Pope Pius XII and the Vatican saved approximately 897,000 Jewish lives during the war. Pave the Way has over 46,000 pages of historical documentation supporting that proposition, which it has posted on its website along with numerous interviews with eye-witnesses and historians.

“I believe that it is a moral responsibility, this has nothing to do with the Roman Catholic Church,” says Krupp, “it has only to do with the Jewish responsibility to come to recognize a man who actually acted to save a huge number of Jewish lives throughout the entire world while being surrounded by hostile forces, infiltrated by spies and under the threat of death.”

[…]

Read the rest of the fascinating story there!

Posted in Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged ,
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On this day in 1861: Gen. Stonewall Jackson

I have a priest friend who refers to all other motorists equally as “Jackson”.  A great idea, that, since it help you not to refer to all other motorists as “____”.   There is also a great old book called Father Smith Instructs Jackson. It is a great old “anonymous” name!

That said, when I saw “Jackson” on the rss of one of the sites I check daily, I thought I would share the link and tale.

From the Civil War Gazette for today, 4 November 1861.

General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson rose in his stirrups, raised his arms and addressed the men of the First Brigade, the Stonewall Brigade. Having saved the day at Manassas, their General, rising in popularity, rank and responsibility, was leaving them. Jackson had been given command of the Shenandoah Valley. The promotion, however, was bittersweet. While Stonewall was moving to the Valley, the Stonewall Brigade was not. Had the move been a request, rather than an order, Jackson would have stayed with his men.

But it was an order and on this date, he was before them, extolling their many virtues in a heartfelt farewell.

“You were the First Brigade in the Army of the Shenandoah, the First Brigade in the Army of the Potomac, the first Brigade in the Second Corps, and are the First Brigade in the hearts of your generals. I hope that you will be the First Brigade in this, our second struggle for independence, and in the future, on the fields on which the Stonewall Brigade are engaged, I expect to hear of crowning deeds of valor and of victories gloriously achieved! May God bless you all! Farewell!”

With that and with tears in his eyes, he departed to the sobbing cheers of his beloved soldiers. Jackson, along with aid “Sandie” Pendleton and Chief of Staff John T. L. Preston, boarded a train at the Manassas depot for Strasburg, which they reached after dark.

[…]

Read the rest there.

During a conversation with a friend yesterday, I was reminded that I was born less than 100 years after the end of the Civil War.  It wasn’t all that long ago, in the Grand Scheme Of Things.

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Herman Cain on Margaret Sanger, eugenicist/racist foundress of Planned Parenthood

Via Catholic Culture comes this:

Journalists ignore Margaret Sanger’s eugenic theories
November 03, 2011

When American presidential candidate Herman Cain denounced the eugenicist theories of Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood, liberal journalists rose to Sanger’s defense, claiming that Cain had distorted the record. Now Mollie Ziegler Hemingway of GetReligion observes that the journalists themselves were distorting the facts, concentrating on a single isolated statement rather than viewing the entire record of Sanger’s published works, which leave no doubt about her racism and the heavy influence of eugenic theory in her drive to cut down on births among the “lesser” races.

Fact checkers agree: Lay off Sanger’s eugenics! (GetReligion)

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Card. Law turns 80

WDTPRS notes with interest that today is the 80th birthday of His Eminence Bernard Card. Law, presently the Archpriest of St. Mary Major in Rome.  You may recall that His Eminence spent some time also as Archbishop of Boston.

As of today, His Eminence will not be able to vote in a conclave to elect a new Bishop of Rome in the case, quod Deus avertat, that should come to pass in Card. Law’s lifetime.

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New Swiss Bishop for diocese where SSPX seminary is located

This is from Phil Lawler over at Catholic Culture:

The Vatican announced one intriguing appointment yesterday. I hope that another significant appointment is announced tomorrow.

Father Charles Morerod was named on November 3 to become Bishop of Lausanne, Switzerland. A native of Switzerland, Bishop-elect Morerod is certainly qualified: he is secretary of the International Theological Commission and rector of Angelicum in Rome. But what makes his appointment particularly noteworthy is the fact that he was a member of the Vatican commission engaged in talks with traditionalists of the Society of St. Pius X. The Society has its headquarters in Econe, Switzerland–within the boundaries of the Lausanne diocese. [? Is Econe there?] So SSPX leaders in Econe can be assured that their local ordinary understands them well. This appointment looks like one more step by the Vatican to ease the path toward reconciliation of the SSPX.

I suspect that this new bishop will be friendly to the SSPX within the bounds of his diocese. Imagine the possibilities.

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CNA: Bishops blast Catholic governor of Illinois’s role in abortion award ceremony

From CNA:

Bishops blast Catholic governor’s role in abortion award ceremony
By Benjamin Mann

Springfield, Ill., Nov 3, 2011 / 05:59 am (CNA).- Illinois’ six Catholic bishops have deplored Catholic governor Pat Quinn’s role as the presenter of a “Pro-Choice Leadership Award” at an abortion advocacy group’s upcoming ceremony.

“We deeply regret the governor’s decision to present this award, which so closely associates him with a political action group whose purpose is contrary to the common good,” the six bishops said in a Nov. 2 statement released by the Catholic Conference of Illinois.

“With this action, Governor Quinn has gone beyond a political alignment with those supporting the legal right to kill children in their mother’s wombs, to rewarding those deemed most successful in this terrible work.”

An Oct. 27 e-mail from the abortion advocacy group Personal PAC announced that the Catholic governor “will present Jennie Goodman, Pro-Choice Leadership Award recipient, with the 2011 Award at its Annual Luncheon” on Nov. 17.

The announcement asks supporters to “join Personal PAC and over 1,000 other people in thanking Jennie for her courage and leadership on behalf of the women of Illinois!”

Personal PAC describes itself as a “political action committee dedicated to electing pro-choice candidates to state and local office in Illinois.”

Tickets prices for its 18th annual awards luncheon range from $150 to $5,000. Table service at the event is available at $2,500, $5,000, and $10,000 levels.

The Illinois bishops, including Chicago’s Cardinal Archbishop Francis E. George and Springfield’s Bishop Thomas J. Paprocki, quoted a 1994 statement of Blessed John Paul II in their reaction to Governor Quinn’s involvement.

The late Pope, they recalled, “asked in his ‘Letter to Families,’ ‘How can one morally accept laws that permit the killing of a human being not yet born, but already alive in the mother’s womb?’”

“Governor Quinn not only accepts these laws,” the bishops stated, “he promotes them and publicly presents awards to their advocates.”

“This approach is irreconcilable with any honest profession of the Catholic faith.”

The bishops said they would “continue to pray for (Quinn’s) conversion, and the protection of unborn human life.”

Meanwhile, they declared that “those acting in the manner of the governor” should not be honored “on Church property or at functions held in support of Church ministry.”

Previously, Governor Quinn drew a sharp response from Bishop Paprocki, for saying in November 2010 that his “religious faith” moved him to support a same-sex civil unions law.

On that occasion, Bishop Paprocki – whose diocese includes the state capitol – said the governor’s motivation was “certainly not the Catholic faith,” which “does not support civil unions or other measures that are contrary to the natural moral law.”

Posted in Dogs and Fleas, Emanations from Penumbras, Our Catholic Identity, The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
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QUAERITUR: Requesting Mass in Latin in the Ordinary Form

From a reader:

Can one use the provisions of Summorum Pontificum as the basis for
requesting that an occasional OF Mass be said in Latin? I want to have all my ducks in a row (i.e. asking an organist and cantor if they would assist, and, if needed, lining up another Priest to say Mass) before approaching my Parish Priest.

The provisions of Summorum Pontificum really pertain to the Extraordinary Form, rather than the Ordinary Form.

However, when reading the Holy Father’s introductory comments to Summorum Pontificum, and reading also Universae Ecclesiae, we have the sense that the Holy Father desires that there be greater continuity with our traditional liturgical forms also in the Ordinary Form.  I think that would have to include the use of Latin, which the Second Vatican Council mandated should be maintained at the liturgical language of the Latin Church.

The 1983 Code of Canon Law guarantees that priests can say the Ordinary Form in Latin.  The priest doesn’t need any permissions to do so.

It seems to me that you need to be persuasive and diplomatic in your quest for the Ordinary Form in Latin.  In a sense, because of Summorum Pontificum those who request the Extraordinary Form have a stronger footing.  Odd, no?

One of the problems I foresaw when Summorum Pontificum came out was that the use of Latin would be relegated to the older form of Mass nearly exclusively.  I feared that people who want “All that Latin and stuff” would be shoved off to the Extraordinary Form corner.  This is one of the reasons why I wasn’t terribly happy to learn that new editions of the Roman Missal with the new, corrected translation would have no appendix with the Latin texts for Mass.

This is another reason why I think it is unhelpful to use the term “the Latin Mass” to describe Mass in the older, traditional, Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite.  The language of liturgy of our Latin Church remains Latin, for both forms.

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It seems diocesan bishops can ordain using the older rite of ordination after all!

Here is something that merits attention.  As you might recall, the clarificatory document about Summorum Pontificum from the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei” entitled Universae Ecclesiae indicated that the Pontificale Romanum was to be used for ordinations only by those groups which had general permission to use the older books.  (cf. no. 31).  In other words, diocesan bishops couldn’t ordain their own men with it.

However, that appears not to be the case.  At the time Universae Ecclesiae came out, I opined that bishops could ask for permission the PCED to use the older form.

I saw this on Rorate:

On October 23, 2011 the Bishop of Frejus-Toulon, Msgr. Dominique Rey, ordained a new priest for his diocese using the 1962 Pontifical. The new priest, Fr. Jean Christophe Pelegri, was ordained by Msgr. Rey to the diaconate on May 11 of this year, only two days before the promulgation of Universae Ecclesiae.) A photo gallery is in the Picasa account of the Cathedral of Frejus-Toulon.

Msgr. Rey has been known to give the seminarians of his diocese the privilege of choosing the rite of their ordination, and it seems that Universae Ecclesiae will not put a stop to this practice, as had been earlier feared or predicted by some commentators. Earlier this year, 15 new priests had been ordained for the Diocese of Frejus-Toulon according to the liturgical books of Paul VI.

Interesting, no?

I suppose that the bishop sought permission to use the Pontifical to ordain a priest for his diocese and obtained it.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Drill, The future and our choices, Universae Ecclesiae |
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A reader’s first “Requiem Mass”

From a reader:

Having attended my first Requiem Mass yesterday I must say that I am absolutely shocked they got rid of it and replaced it with the current funeral Mass. Going to Mass last night and actually getting to pray for the souls of my relatives (as opposed to “celebrating their lives”) who died in the past few years made up for their distasteful funerals with inappropriate humour, instant canonizations, etc. Granted I didn’t enjoy getting all sad and weepy throughout and after, but I am so happy it was able to give me the peace I needed to quit being so angry over what transpired during their funerals.

Friends, please pray for the dead rather than merely “celebrate their lives”.

There is room for celebration, of course.  But what the dead really need from us, and what we in charity really need to do for them, is pray for them.

Strive especially in these first days of November to gain indulgences for your loved ones.

It is so very Catholic to pay attention to opportunities for indulgences and then make plans around them.

Your effort to obtain indulgences will also, necessarily, take you to the confessional.

Perhaps you priests out there could expand availability for confessions around those times when people can gain indulgences?  And perhaps talk about them from the pulpit and in the bulletin?

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, Our Catholic Identity, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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Question for seminarians

As we know, Universae Ecclesiae spoke to the need for Latin Church seminarians to know the Extraordinary Form.

I would appreciate notes by email from seminarians about what is going on in their programs of formation.  Use the CONTACT link on the top of this blog.

I will of course preserve your anonymity.

Cut and paste the following into the email subject line: SEMINARIAN on UE

UPDATE 3 Nov:

I have receive many emails from seminarians.  Keep them coming!  I may not respond but I read them all.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The future and our choices, Universae Ecclesiae | Tagged , , , ,
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