Posted on 06/18/2008 1:59:53 PM PDT by kellynla
Today, Pope Benedict XVI is welcoming a group of Jewish Holocaust survivors. Arranged by the Pave the Way Foundation, the group will personally thank the pope for the Catholic Churchs intervention in saving their lives in Italy during World War II.
Catholic League president Bill Donohue addressed this event today:
Despite attempts by embittered ex-priests and seminarians, and others, to discredit Pope Pius XIIs heroic efforts in rescuing Jews during the Holocaust (as many as 860,000 were saved), the evidence is mounting that Pius was a Righteous Gentile. What is happening in the Vatican today is another reminder of just how great a man he was.
October 9 marks the 50th anniversary of Pius death. To mark this important event, the Vatican announced yesterday that a convention will be held November 6-8 to honor his work; a photo exhibit will be on display in the colonnade of St. Peters Square from October 21-January 6. Millions of Catholics hope that eventually Pius will be beatified and then canonized. The Catholic League certainly supports this process.
Those who disagree with this assessment have a lot of explaining to do. For example, the true test of the Catholic Churchs role in rescuing Jews was in Italy, and nowhere in Europe were more Jews savedfully 85 percentthan in Italy. Also, the chief rabbi in Rome during the German occupation, Emilio Zolli, once said that no hero in all of history was more militant, more fought against, none more heroic, than Pius XII. Indeed, Zolli was so moved by Pius work that he became a Catholic after the war, taking the popes name as his baptismal name.
Finally, todays meeting of Jewish Holocaust survivors thanking the pope for what the Church did to save their lives says it all. No amount of revisionism can change that.
ping
Ping for a big thank you to these wonderful people!
There’s one inaccuracy in Donohue’s press release, the oft-repeated claim that Rabbi Zolli became a Catholic because of Pius’s efforts to save Jews during WWII.
In his book, Zolli says he had decided to become a Catholic shortly before the War and the persecution started, but believed solidarity with his people required him to remain at his post until the persecution had ended.
He and Pope Pius were close friends, before, during, and after the War, and Zolli did take the baptismal name Eugenio (not “Emilio”) in honor of the Pope.
He and his predecessor were in a tough spot with respect to the Nazis, and did the best they could. Even with the Reichskonkordat, one church official said something like “With it we are hanged, without we are hanged, drawn and quartered.”
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