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- Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- **** ****
-
- Edited by E. Haldeman-Julius
-
- THE BLACK INTERNATIONAL No. 7
-
- THE PIOUS TRAITORS OF BELGIUM AND FRANCE
-
- HOW THE PREACHING OF PEACE FIZZLED OUT,
- AND WHY
-
- by Joseph McCabe
-
-
- HALDEMAN-JULIUS PUBLICATIONS
- GIRARD -- : -- KANSAS
-
-
- **** ****
-
-
- CHAPTER
-
- I The War in the West ................................ 1
-
- II Norway "Not a Catholic Country" .................... 8
-
- III The Treachery of Leopold ........................... 14
-
- IV France Recovers its Faith and Losses its Honor ..... 19
-
- V The Amazing Folly of the Catholic Bloc .............. 25
-
-
- **** ****
-
- Chapter I
-
- THE WAR IN THE WEST
-
- Those of us who know the ways of Popes watch our papers
- cynically for the first signs of a change of heart in Immutable
- Rome. In the first year of a war the Pope is on the side of the big
- battalions, or, in the language of modern war, the Panzer
- divisions. How could a nation like Great Britain expect a Pope to
- declare its cause just if it had only a score of good fighting
- planes and hundreds of thousands of hospital beds and coffins ready
- when it launched its thunderbolt? In the second year the Pope
- becomes the Great Neutral, very eloquent in telling the virtues of
- peace to a world which hardly needs that assurance. In the third
- year he becomes the Arbiter of Right and Wrong. He find's that
- there are limits to the world's leniency and the Catholic layman's
- docility.
-
-
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- The time has come for the third phase. The German system is
- ominously stretched, and expert ears listen for the first crack.
- Italy, disillusioned and beggared, would hang out its tattered
- flags if it heard of the death of Mussolini and Hitler. Japan sees
- the great American fleet looming on the horizon. All the little
- parasite dictators and Quislings tremble in their dishonored homes.
- Through the world surges the first flush of confidence in three
- years . . . So we begin to hear strange things from those spokesmen
- of the Vatican -- the Radio, the Osservatore, and the publicity
- bureau -- which can be quoted later as evidence of the Pope's
- sentiments or lightly dismissed as "unauthorized," as the
- circumstances require.
-
- The latest to hand reminds us how in a world which permits
- Catholics to intrigue in every newspaper office and every political
- lobby the Pope can command respectful attention for any
- eccentricity, audacity, or mendacity he cares to perpetrate. Myron
- C. Taylor, whose secret proceedings under cover of his unofficial
- office the American public might find it interesting to
- investigate, recently spent a week in Lisbon on his way from the
- Pope to the President. Under the devout dictator Salazar Lisbon,
- not many years ago a great Liberal center, has become an important
- international outpost of the Vatican. Representatives of Spain,
- Vichy France, Germany, and the Church breathe its air with lordly
- freedom. It was, therefore, not very surprising that shortly after
- Mr. Taylor's departure the London Times had this paragraph, which
- a British writer welcomed with the reminder that "good hearty
- laughs are hard to come by in these days," from its Lisbon
- correspondent:
-
- "High ecclesiastical sources throw one clear ray of light on
- the Pope's attitude to the war. His Holiness in private episcopal
- audiences has drawn an important distinction between the Nazi and
- Communist systems. His public discourses have implied the obvious
- truth that the philosophy behind each is fundamentally anti-
- Christian, but in private he has repeatedly said that, whereas
- Nazism is almost entirely evil in its inspiration, Communism has in
- it certain elements of natural good which, even if utterly
- perverted, still exist. Bolshevism is in some sense a corruption of
- the virtues of brotherly love and self-sacrifice, whereas Nazism is
- a direct and untrammelled manifestation of hatred and greed."
-
- I venture to think that if the reader has not seen that
- passage before but has read some books of this series it leaves him
- breathless. By comparison the passage in which the Archbishop of
- York tried a week later to emulate his Brother in Christ seems
- almost rational. He said:
-
- "So far as I understand the economic system of Russia, as it
- was when the invasion began, I see little or nothing in it with
- which a Christian needs to quarrel" (London Evening News, November
- 13).
-
- If we had not the Pope's words (alleged) to compare with this
- we should call it a luscious example of the kind of thing that
- bishops alone are permitted to say. The essential aim and operation
- of the Russian economic system is to share the wealth which the
- people of Russia produce, without one iota of exploitation of
-
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- colonies or subject nations, amongst the producers, and with
- immeasurably stricter justice than could be found in Britain or
- anywhere else; and Dr. Temple, who has paid attention to the ethic
- of social and economic arrangements for thirty years, ought to know
- it.
-
- But his boldness in suggesting that it is not quite on the
- Christian level pales beside that of the Pope. For years Pacelli-
- Pius has showered upon the entire Russian system every epithet that
- a man in his position is supposed to know. In a comprehensive word
- it is "satanic." The Catholic world was taught to close its eyes
- and shudder at the word Bolshevism and to regard the Nazis as the
- Teutonic Knight whom God had chosen to destroy it. Now we are asked
- to believe that while in public the Pope merely pointed out the
- "obvious truth" that both systems are anti-Christian in private he
- always acknowledged that Bolshevism was perverted virtue -- that is
- to say, virtue without a Catholic basis -- and Nazism unreservedly
- corrupt.
-
- I need not point out to my readers that this is false. The
- language which the Vatican has used about Bolshevism for years,
- much of which I have quoted, condemned it vitriolically, on moral
- and social grounds, as destructive of the social order and of
- civilization, productive of vice, and stifling to personality. It
- was almost the only justification of his eight years' courtship of
- Germany and his silence while the entire German Catholic Church
- applauded those "victories" of the Nazis, which the Pope is now
- said to have regarded always as successes of greed and hatred, that
- one day they would destroy Bolshevism and so save civilization.
- That there is no other country in the world in which the Pope's
- alleged ideals -- Peace, Charity, and Justice -- have been more
- cherished and carried out in practice than in Russia I will show in
- a booklet on the Vatican's relations to that country. But there is
- a growing acknowledgment today that it is the classic land of
- "brotherly love and Self-sacrifice." What shall we say of this
- moral oracle of 200,000,000 people who, when he is supposed to be
- correcting an earlier estimate of Russia, still puts it on a lower
- level than Italy, Spain, Portugal, or Brazil?
-
- If we were to accept this Lisbon report of the Pope's words as
- genuine most of us would reflect, with a shrug of the shoulders,
- that what these high ecclesiastical authorities say seems to be of
- no interest to us common folk with our simple notions of
- truthfulness and plain speech. On the other hand, since we must at
- least regard it as a move on the part of the Black International we
- should say that it will make Goebbels look to his laurels. From
- 1917 to 1924, while the rest of the world cursed Russia, the
- Vatican courted it. From 1926 to 1941 when Russia emerged from the
- raw conditions of the civil war and the famine and won increasing
- respect, the Vatican cursed it and called for its destruction. Now
- that Catholic armies unite with the armies, of "hatred and greed"
- to destroy it the Roman Church puts out tentative suggestions of a
- return to the early courtship. It is one of a hundred indications
- given in these books that the Black International has only one aim
- -- the recovery or enlargement of its wealth and power -- and one
- code of action, the ecclesiastical code. All this talk about social
- interests and the cause of civilization is eyewash.
-
-
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- Can we suppose that, as will probably be said presently,
- recent events have opened the eye's of the Pope? What events? Has
- something happened recently that is worse than the ruin of Spain,
- Austria, Abyssinia, Czecho-Slovakia, Albania, Poland, Norway,
- Denmark, Holland, Belgium, and France? Remember that in not one
- single instance of these exhibitions of greed and sadistic cruelty
- has the Pope said that that was their character. Half of this
- foulness had been perpetrated before the end of 1939 yet the Pope
- just then elected to pay Mussolini's royal vassal and spy, the King
- of Italy, more gorgeous compliments than any Pope had paid in Rome
- since Italy began to have Kings. In the Christmas season the king
- and queen -- probably wearing the Golden Rose he had given her as
- Empress of Abyssinia -- had visited him, with rich presents, in the
- Vatican. A few days later, not in compliance with Papal custom but
- defying all precedent in his anxiety to do honor to the degraded
- pair, he travelled across Rome to the Quirinal and exchanged the
- most cordial Christmas greetings and compliments in the opulent
- throne-room of the palace.
-
- At that time, in pursuance of a policy jointly agreed upon
- between Germany and Italy, the Poles and Polish Jews were writhing,
- half-starved, bloodily scourged, amidst the ruins of their homes.
- The Pope knew it. He proved repeatedly daring 1940 that in spite of
- all German efforts to cut his communications with the country, he
- continued to receive, doubtless through Swedish Catholics, news
- from Poland! We remember his warm protest when, in 1940, German
- soldiers and Gestapo men began, under official orders, to castrate
- them by the thousand's. You surely remember how the Vatican
- protested that the operation was not in accord with Catholic
- theology!
-
- And just about that time the First Murderer came in for his
- share of the compliments. The Vatican Radio announced joyously that
- one of the vilest of the Nazi group, Ribbentrop, a man for whom the
- aristocratic Pope must have felt a personal as well as moral
- repugnance, was coming to visit the Pope, and, as I show elsewhere,
- there was a month of hard bargaining, although Hitler met Mussolini
- a few days after Ribbentrop's visit and they decided upon and began
- the enslavement of the entirely innocent democracies of Norway,
- Denmark, Holland, and Belgium. We will consider later whether the
- plot was communicated to the Pope like those of the Irish and the
- Spanish rebellions, but it went through with all its savagery
- whether he agreed or no, and the Huns were already making a vast
- shambles of the roads of France when the Pope "extended his
- paternal love to the German and Allied armies." It is said even
- that he did not use the word Allied but Vatican officials felt that
- it was expedient to add it.
-
- We shall come later to discuss the very difficult question of
- the relation of the Black International to the betrayal of Belgium
- and France. Let us first get quite clear the fact that, whatever
- Pius XII knew in advance about the German program -- there is high
- authority for saying that Ribbentrop told him of it -- the
- execution of which he never condemned, there is no question
- whatever of his being ignorant at that time of the motives, and the
- men. When he enjoyed a royal reception at Budapest in 1938 he
- recalled according to a profoundly admiring Catholic writer in the
- British Quarterly Review (January, 1940, p. 109), some words of
- Pope Pius XI:
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- "I thank God day by day that he has made me live in this time
- . . . good and evil are locked in a gigantic struggle, and nobody
- has the right to be merely an onlooker at this momentous hour."
-
- Strange language for the Great Neutral! But what was the
- struggle at that time, and what was Pacelli's contribution?
-
- The struggle which the Pope envisaged in 1938 was not the
- traditional struggle of religion and irreligion, virtue and vice.
- That had, from the clerical angle, continued for decades and not
- suddenly became "gigantic"! The symptoms of a new and formidable
- struggle were the brutal destruction of the liberty of Spain by
- rebels, mercenaries, Nazis, and Fascists: the destruction of the
- liberty of Austria: the destruction of the lives and property of
- tens of million's of Chinese: and the destruction of liberty in
- most of the Republics of South America. These were all parts of one
- struggle; the attempt of privilege and power to crush new liberties
- that had been won and extinguish new claims of justice. We know
- well on which side the Pope was. For him it was a struggle of
- Bolshevism and Authority, and no group of bankers or corrupt
- politicians had been more willing than he to enlist the services of
- these new forces which called themselves Nazism and Fascism. But
- was their evil character, their motivation in hatred and greed,
- hidden from him?
-
- He was crowned Pope, as I said, on March 12, 1939. Fifty
- princes of royal blood, Catholics boast, stood round his throne on
- the balcony outside St. Peter's when the tiara was put upon his
- head with the usual formula, very fittingly spoken in a dead
- language:
-
- "Receive this tiara of three crown and know that you are the
- Father of Princes and Kings, the Governor of the Earth, the Vicar
- of Our Savior Jesus Christ."
-
- American papers, in the accounts sent by their Catholic
- correspondents, smilingly explained away this Father-of-Kings and
- Governor-of-the-Earth business. A quaint old Roman fashion of
- speaking. It certainly was not to Pius XII and the field-marshals
- of the Black International who surrounded him as he sat, tall,
- straight, emaciated, his large black eyes shining in his long
- olivetinted face. They had awarded him the crown precisely because
- he believed this -- because he was a churchman who would, as the
- Jeromes and Bernards of old had commanded, walk over the body of
- his mother to do his clerical duty. And no other cardinal knew the
- world he was to govern as well as he did. Catholic writers boast
- that he read the chief papers daily of Italy, Spain, Portugal,
- Germany, France, England, and South America: which probably means
- that he read all the passages blue-pencilled by secretaries. He had
- lived twelve years in Germany and had travelled in twenty
- countries.
-
- It is nonsense to pretend that he did not know the real
- character of his allies, the Nazis, Fascists, semi-Fascists, and
- the greedy Japs; and whether it be true or false that in October,
- 1941, he authorized the statement that he had always recognized
- this foul character, we want to know -- not as a matter of
-
-
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- curiosity but because it is a vital point in our indictment of the
- Black International -- why not a single word of this kind, not a
- single warning to the world about the nature of the forces that
- were preparing to enslave it, was uttered before October, 1941, if
- it was even then uttered. It was not possible for an honest man to
- doubt that character after 1939: to profess a doubt any time after
- the summer of 1940 required the peculiar heroism of a Lindbergh or
- a De Valera. The facts are known but let me, for a reason which
- will appear in a moment, quote this passage from the authentic
- account by a British soldier of what he saw in Belgium in 1940. He
- was taken prisoner and like tens of thousands of other prisoners
- had to walk afoot to a camp hundreds of miles away because the
- trains eastward were wanted for wounded, for officers returning to
- carouse, and for their immense quantities of loot. The guards had
- whips and laid them upon the captives "whenever they felt like it,
- just to show us and the Belgians who was boss." Any captive who
- accepted an apple or a bit of bread -- they were starving -- from
- a Belgian was shot or bayonetted. He goes on:
-
- "Sometimes they'd make us run through the villages holding our
- hands above our heads, cracking the whip all round the column. They
- gave us no food. They were shooting all the time, for sport and to
- show off, at anything that happened to be about -- cats, dogs,
- hens, men, and women -- anything that came handy, and they were
- hitting right in the head every time. After they'd shot a man
- they'd pat their Tommy-gun affectionately and wink at us. They
- treated the old women and children worse than they did us . . .
- These soldiers were all young ones. The older soldiers, who'd seen
- the last war, were different -- less like crafty wild animals --
- much more human altogether, and they don't seem to get the gangster
- idea of warfare."
-
- So they had acted in Poland, the Italians in Abyssinia, and
- soldiers and airmen of both armies in Spain; and this repulsive
- blend of civilized savagery and looting was fouling eight countries
- in Europe at the time when the Pope "extended his paternal love" to
- the German soldiers and Cardinal Schuster visited barracks in Italy
- and "distributed blessed medals to bring luck to the Italian
- armies."
-
- The point I wish to make clear here is that the Pope, like
- every bishop and priest in Germany, had known for years that the
- men were being trained for precisely this kind of "warfare," and it
- would be preposterous to ask us to believe that his eyes were first
- opened in the year 1941. Notice in the above passage the
- distinction between the young and the old soldiers. It was
- customary in the last war to call the Germans "the Huns." While
- pointing out that it was the Kaiser who stupidly gave occasion for
- this by telling his men, when he sent an expedition to China, to
- "behave like Hun's". I never used the word; though, as the
- Kolnische Zeitung itself mildly observed, they had done "many
- regrettable things" in Belgium. The German military order of
- Schrecklichkeit (intimidation) naturally led to such things. But
- there had been a far more serious corruption of the German mind,
- especially of German youth, from 1933 to 1939, in preparation for
- the present war, and any man who suggests that Pacelli was not
- thoroughly acquainted with a system of debasement which was
-
-
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- described with disgust by educationists and sociologists in every
- country must mean that his vaunted knowledge of German and Germany
- or his deep interest in the world's welfare and the causes of war
- are mythical. Dorothy Thompson and others described it (in Assault
- on Civilization) as early as 1934, see Prof. Schuman: Hitler and
- the Nazi Dictatorship (1936) and other American works. It is
- needless to say that it incurred no censures for the Black
- International throughout Germany, which continued to woo Hitler,
- the arch-corruptor.
-
- Its basic principle was Hitler's declaration (the title of the
- last chapter of Mein Kampf), "What is Necessary is Right", which
- Rosenberg expressed as, "Right is what Aryans consider Right."
- Since these new moral legislators had by 1933 the fully developed
- idea of an Aryan conquest and exploitation of Europe and for this
- a vast and completely ruthless army was "necessary", they
- immediately converted the entire educational system -- in the
- broader as well as the narrower sense -- into a scheme for making
- callous fighters. The training began in the cradle. Every German
- female capable of child-bearing was to bear -- in time government
- officials said publicly that it did not matter if she was not
- married -- and was to make her children war-minded as soon as
- possible. One fool, the kind of fool whose writings the Nazi Party
- subsidized, told the mother to watch eagerly for the first gleam of
- the starlight of battle in the little Aryan eyes. Hitler himself
- ordered mothers to talk war and choose war-toys "until the brain of
- the smallest child glows with the prayer: God Bless our weapons."
- The boy not yet in his teens swaggered about with "Blood and Honor"
- on his knife and learned to shout as early as possible because, as
- one educationist said, shooting makes a youth "calm and cold-
- blooded". In school he chanted with his little pals: "We were born
- to die for Germany."
-
- It was far worse in the secondary (high) school the course
- which began at an earlier age than in any other country. For six or
- seven years boys and girls were drenched with the vilest Nazi
- sentiments Science was little more than a perversion of the
- teaching of genetics to instil racial pride and selfishness. The
- whole curriculum, such as it was -- Hitler turned educationist and
- said the aim was to "make bodies sound to the core" -- was
- prostituted. So rapid was the debasement of education that in a
- list of 28 countries in the Year Book of Education in 1938 Germany
- was fourth from the bottom. Hundreds of thousands of youth's
- trained in these, schools are in the army today -- or dead -- for
- they are accepted, if strong, from the age of 17, and 700,000 will
- pass to the army, submarines, and Luftwaffe in January, 1942. But
- this intensive training in Nazi aims is not enough. Hundreds of
- thousands of both sexes were selected for special free maintenance
- and training in the Castles of the New Social Order (age 15 to 25),
- Adolph Hitler Schools, Napoli (National Political) Schools. Here
- the future Gestapo and male and female agent's, for home or abroad
- received perfect physical training and what must frankly be called
- a training in callousness and brutality. In the universities the
- old type of professor was extinguished or, in too many cases,
- turned into a hypocrite. Nazi youths of the most brazen type ruled
- the classrooms and the lecturers.
-
-
-
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- Education in the broader sense -- the whole environment for
- communicating ideas or sentiments -- was equally captured and
- debased. Everything -- books (authors, publishers, and book
- sellers), the press, radio, the theater, concerts, all lectures,
- pageants, etc., down to village dances -- came under a Kultur
- Kammer with Goebbels as President and a colossal staff and
- representatives in every village. Prizes were offered for the best
- -- most hysterically Nazi -- books, and the callowest youths became
- great writers. One man composed a Lord's Prayer to Hitler. An
- aristocrat, Ritter von Taub, edited a Book of Popular Songs
- including monstrous hymns to Hitler. It is enough to recall a line
- of the famous "Horst Wessel Song: "How high Horst Wessel towers
- above Jesus of Nazareth". The youth, a vile character, had lived on
- the earnings of a whore -- but he had been heroically callous and
- brutal.
-
- This drenching of the mind of Germany for six years before the
- war, the most massive and effective illustration possible of the
- truth of the modern science of social psychology -- that there is
- no "mind" or "character' other than the sum of what such influences
- as I have described put into a child or man -- has been well known
- for years to every educationist and moralist in the world, and
- certainly to every priest in Germany. And education was the same
- during all these years, if less ably controlled, in Italy and
- Japan, the other countries allied with the Vatican, I still wait to
- hear of a Catholic apologist who wall claim that Pacelli-Pius was
- not acquainted with it.
-
-
-
- Chapter II
-
-
- NORWAY "NOT A CATHOLIC COUNTRY"
-
-
- These were the men, these dynamic automata of a thoroughly
- depraved force, whom the Pope saw set out, with the blessing of the
- German hierarchy, in the spring of 1940 for the speedy conquest and
- looting of western Europe and (they thought) the reduction of
- England by a ruthless massacre of its citizens, as a necessary part
- of the preparation for that campaign against Russia which the Pope
- so passionately desired. How far this was the condition of the
- German people generally does not properly concern me here but the
- reader may care to hear what impression in this regard a very
- extensive and varied literature has left on my mind. Let me point
- out first that the account of German miseducation which I have
- given relieves us from accepting the worst estimates of the
- character of the German people. That they are a tainted stock and
- must be treated accordingly is pseudo-scientific rubbish. Such
- sentiments as the above were during many years before 1932 confined
- to a miserable minority. In spite of all its misfortunes Hitler did
- not sweep the country with his gospel of hatred and greed. He
- needed the aid of monstrous lies, of very heavy subsidies from the
- capitalists and of the cooperation of the, Church. I gave the
- figures elsewhere.
-
-
-
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- The correct attitude to face the problem of Germany is,
- therefore, to ask whether all or what proportion of its people were
- mentally and morally poisoned by this system which in its monopoly
- has no parallel since the destruction of the medieval Church and in
- its force, owing to modern science, has not the feeblest analogy in
- any other period of history. The answer to that question is at
- present impossible. In the spring of 1933, we saw, less than half
- the adults of Germany voted for Hitler. The regime of brutal
- intimidation and elimination, and of national bribery (the world is
- our oyster), of corruption of the young, and of the influence and
- bold successes won by the indolence or cowardice of the democracies
- began at once, and further millions must have been attracted. At
- the outbreak of the war a leading Socialist refugee said that
- three-fifths of the nation supported Hitler without reserve one-
- fifth applauded his successes but disliked him and much of his
- work, and one-fifth, the core of the old Socialist and Communist
- bodies, were secretly and bitterly anti-Nazi. The extraordinary
- Nazi successes since then have probably won over large numbers. In
- the summer of 1941 we would hardly estimate that one-fifth of the
- people were anti-Nazi, and Ambassador Dodd, though not quite
- consistent in his Diary, generally agrees. But a distinction on
- paper between Nazi and anti-Nazi does not correspond to
- psychological reality. Already millions who were carried away by
- the rapid successes in West and East must be wavering or returning
- to sanity in view of the news from Russia. What is most painful is
- the spectacle of certainly the overwhelming majority of the Germans
- applauding such foul victories, but, besides that millions of them
- have the moral lead of the Black International on whom they have
- been taught to rely in such matter's, we have the consolation of
- feeling that what miseducation could do in six years sound
- education can undo. The idea that aggressiveness and covetousness
- are "in the blood" is a superficial conclusion of literary men who
- know no science and distort fragments of history.
-
- However, we have here to confine ourselves to the relation of
- the Black International to the wave of barbarism that now rolled
- over Western Europe and at one time seemed to have a chance of
- completely engulfing it. Here we distinguish between the German
- hierarchy and the Vatican: not because, as Catholics pretend, the
- Vatican has or may have no responsibility for the former, but
- because the case against the black army in Germany itself is easily
- settled whereas it is too early to expect clear evidence on the
- latter. Indeed, since the invasion of Poland automatically made the
- Catholics of the British Empire enemies of Germany and in a very
- large measure involved the sympathies of the 15,000,000 Catholics
- of America the Vatican had now to proceed with the utmost caution.
- Of the attitude of the German Black International I have given
- abundant evidence elsewhere, but nobody disputes it. It was united
- and enthusiastic in supporting the war. From September, 1939, to
- the present hour no paper has quoted any German bishop saying or in
- the broadcast language hinting that these campaigns beyond the
- frontiers of the Reich were brutal conquests dictated by that
- hatred and greed which the Pope is now absurdly said to have
- discerned from the start. I quoted the heads of the Church cheering
- on the troops only a little more soberly than the Nazi press. I
- showed that when the final victory seemed to be in sight the
- prelates, assembled in full strength (as they rarely were),
- resolved to render solemn thanks to Hitler and his armies when the
- work was complete.
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- You may ask, as some Catholics ask about the Pope himself.
- What else could they do? If one replies that they might have done
- what some writer's of Germany (Thomas Mann, etc.) and many writers
- and other professional men of other countries did-express their
- disgust at the foulness and cruelty, sacrifice all they had, and
- fly from the debased country -- the retort will be that churchmen
- have sacred duties to their people which forbid such conduct,
- ardently as they desire to emulate it. One might justly ask whether
- the duty to remain with their people required that they should open
- their mouths in praise of the savagery and not at least have
- maintained a dignified silence. And if it is said that this would
- have brought some persecution upon their people we can point to an
- enormous Catholic literature in which it is said to be proof of
- the, holiness of the Church that priests and people everywhere
- suffered every type of penalty rather than bow to iniquity or
- injustice . . . But enough of this sophistry. The Nazi government
- never persecuted priests for virtue, but for vice; and, while some
- did go to prison for complaining of the government's invasion of
- the rights of the Church not one ever braved punishment by saying
- that the war was a campaign of greed. Nor does any sane man believe
- that if the bishops had given an honorable lead and won a
- consistent following the government would have shifted one-sixth of
- the nation, including one-sixth of the army, into concentration
- camps and aroused the anger of Catholics in Spain, Hungary, Italy,
- and South America. The common-sense reply is: The bishops knew that
- their people would not follow them. The Black International has no
- inflexible moral principles. It follows the crowd when it applauds
- a vile war as surely as when it rejoices over a royal birthday. The
- myth of its moral leadership, its value to civilization, is torn to
- shreds by the experience of the last ten years.
-
- It is well to remember, when Catholics airily reply that this
- is not a criticism of the Church but of local bodies of clergy,
- that the supposed beneficent influence of the Church on the world
- must be exercised mainly, if not entirely, by these local clergy.
- What, apart from his direction and control of their conduct, does
- the Pope do? He makes "allocqtions" and broadcasts addresses and
- issues letters, and the world takes no notice of them beyond paying
- them verbal compliments. How much influence in the world have all
- Pius XII's sermons on peace had? If any, it was bad: it fostered
- trust in Hitler and Mussolini. As to the Encyclicals, the more
- pretentious gestures of the Popes, even those on which American
- apologists have written whole libraries, like the Immortals Dei and
- the Rerum Novarum of Leo XIII -- we shall see presently why
- American Catholics have said so little about the Quadragesimo Anno
- of Pius XI, which the Vatican considers at least equally important
- -- had no influence whatever. The press was most generous in praise
- when they were issued, but there was not a journalistic expert on
- sound political or economic matters in the world who did not know
- that what was sound in them was borrowed by the Pope from the world
- and was already a platitude in social literature.
-
- The test of the moral usefulness of Popes is to see what they
- say or do when one of the local or national hierarchies under their
- control is corrupted by applauding iniquity or when a crime of
- world-proportions is committed which should be envisaged from an
- international angle. To discuss the first point would be waste of
-
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- time. The Pope lets his bishops in Italy, Germany, and Japan wave
- the blood-stained national flag as vigorously as schoolboys. And it
- is hardly necessary to say anything more on the second point until
- we come to the year 1940. The rape of Abyssinia, China, and Czecho-
- Slovakia and the barbaric treatment of the Jews were the
- outstanding crimes of that year. The Pope blessed the criminals.
- The new Pope was at once confronted with the crime of the invasion
- of Albania. He did the same. Those useful unauthorized agencies of
- the Vatican have put about the rumor that he urged the King of
- Italy to prevent it. Did the Pope not know, what all the world
- knows, that the King of Italy had as little power to prevent it as
- Lord Halifax has to emancipate India? In any case there is no
- evidence of such action.
-
- Then came the invasion of the West. I have shown two things in
- connection with this. The first is that it is impossible to doubt
- that the plan was previously communicated to the Pope. Ribbentrop
- has an hour's conversation with him on the eve of the Brenner
- Conference at which the plot is finally settled and the date for
- Mussolini to stab France in the back is fixed. Can one imagine any
- other reason for thus sending the Nazi Foreign Secretary -- for the
- first time, remember -- to the Vatican? The second point I have now
- made clear is that the Pope certainly knew the character of the men
- who directed the campaign and the soldiers who carried it out.
-
- I will suggest later what Germany wanted of the Pope --
- Ribbentrop was certainly not sent to secure the loyalty of the
- German hierarchy, which could be relied upon whatever crime was
- committed -- and what the Pope, though terribly anxious and
- nervous, hoped to get out of the invasion of the West. Here let us
- see what he did. The worst crime from the international ethical
- angle was the invasion of Norway, Denmark, Holland, and Belgium.
- France had, with Great Britain, declared war on Germany, and must
- expect attack. while these smaller powers had been lulled into a
- feeling of security by the most solemnly reiterated lies, and the
- invasion of them had to be excused by further monstrous lies. This
- treachery and the corruption by which the Germans weakened in
- advance the resistance to their superb Aryan warriors the Pope
- never censured.
-
- Since there was no hierarchy in Norway or Denmark the
- annexation of those countries does not concern us here. The reader
- will find it interesting, in fact, to compare the proportion of
- Catholics in the four countries first invaded with the Pope's
- attitude. Norway had only 2827 Catholics in a population of nearly
- 3,000,000. Hitler demanded on April 9 that the country be handed
- over to him, and, when this was refused, let loose the concealed
- troops and traitors that he already had in the country to paralyze
- opposition to the divisions he had on the way. The country
- distinguished itself by its heroic resistance to impossible odds
- when the blunder of its reliance on Nazi honor was realized and
- sustaining the struggle for two months and proudly resisting the
- invaders ever since. Compare the conduct of this least Catholic
- country in Europe to that of Belgium and France. The invasion of it
- was the most flagrant and significant aggression of which the Nazis
- had yet been guilty, for the excuses put forward were not even
- plausible. Ever since the beginning of the war, in fact, Norway had
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- protected German shipping in its coastal waters. But when the Pope
- was asked to denounce the outrage, one of his unauthorized
- mouthpieces explained that Norway had only 2,000 Catholics and he
- must think of the Catholics of Germany and not offend Hitler. I
- give the quotation presently. The only respect in which one could
- truly call the Pope the Great Neutral was in regard to the moral
- law.
-
- Denmark had only 22,137 Catholics in a population of
- 3,700,000. One might almost call it the second least Catholic
- country in Europe. It was a very happy, enlightened, and
- progressive little state, a significant contrast to Poland, Eire,
- or even Belgium (which, however, was only half Catholic). Of the
- deputies in its Folksting (Congress) 64 were Socialists, 31
- Liberals, 26 Conservatives, 14 Radicals, 3 Communists, and 11 the
- usual odds and ends Roman Catholic doctrine had no appeal whatever
- in that very free and stimulating atmosphere, so -- naturally --
- the Pope did not shed a tear over the repulsive treachery of the
- Nazis. As late as May, 1939, the Germans had signed a ten-years
- pact with the Danes, swearing that under no circumstances whatever
- would they use force against Denmark or injure it. As will be
- remembered, they gave the Danes no chance whatever to defend
- themselves, just taking the land over in a rush as it had a common
- frontier with Germany. Doubtless the Pope would, if anybody had
- taken the trouble to appeal to him, have explained that it was "not
- a Catholic country." We used to think that Popes were interested in
- ethics in all parts of the world.
-
- Holland, which during the Middle Ages had been under Catholic
- Spain, was in a different position. It had nearly 3,000,000
- Catholics to 5,000,000 Protestants and Freethinkers. Its rich
- colonial empire added to its importance, and although it was less
- progressive than Denmark and Scandinavia, it had 23 Socialist
- deputies amongst the hundred in its Congress. Catholics had 30. You
- will, therefore, not be surprised to learn that, when the Germans
- broke their pact with Holland and spread over the country with
- great brutality and treachery the Pope awoke. Defying Hitler and
- his watch dogs in Rome he sent a telegram of sympathy to the queen
- of Holland. But I doubt if Hitler minded. He knew that the Pope
- must be allowed to make these innocent little gestures sometimes to
- blunt the edge of Catholic criticism in America and Britain and
- give the Catholic press something to be enthusiastic about. The
- wording of the telegram was, in fact, very cautious. Its one
- approach to censure was that Holland had been invaded "against its
- wish and right." It rather reminds us of the timid sort of neighbor
- who venture's to say to a man who has savagely beaten a wife or
- child: "You shouldn't do that, you know." Dutch Catholics seem to
- have been quite satisfied, even proud of the splendid audacity of
- their Pope.
-
- Since it is as yet impossible to get evidence of the behavior
- of Dutch Catholics to the invaders, such as we get in the case of
- the traitors of Belgium and France, I leave the question open. They
- may, of course, have behaved quite differently from their
- coreligionists in France and Belgium. All that we know is that in
- face of this monstrous violation of the rights of small nations,
- about which the Pope is so concerned in his Five Points of Peace,
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- and of the honor of international agreements the Pope merely
- uttered a very mild word of protest when it involved a country with
- a large and rich body of Catholics. Whether the Black International
- had had anything to do with the pathetic blunders of the Dutch and
- Belgians in refusing until it was too late to concert measures of
- defense with the British and French we cannot say, and I decline to
- speculate.
-
- The fact that Poland had included a good deal of genuine
- German territory had given a shadow of an excuse for invading that
- country, yet the Pope, taking advantage of the fact Russia invaded
- it at the same time, had vaguely censured the behavior of the
- Germans (or both armies) in that country. The invasion of Norway,
- Denmark, and Holland had not an atom of excuse. It was the first
- defiant unveiling of the Nazi greed for the conquest and
- exploitation of Europe. American Catholics were greatly disturbed
- and pressed for a Papal condemnation. On April 12 the Vatican
- correspondent of the Herald-Tribune referred to this pressure and
- said that the Pope "declined to act" on the ground that "the Holy
- See cannot participate in a political movement which would only
- lead to further hatred amongst the belligerents."
-
- That piece of moral cowardice and sophistry did not satisfy
- people who had been reading all their lives that the Pope was the
- moral governor of the earth and an inflexible judge. On April 17
- the Vatican correspondent of the New York Times reported that the
- Vatican would be little concerned if the war spread to the Balkans
- because "no Roman Catholic country would be involved." He added
- that it was rumored in high Vatican quarters that through Myron B.
- Taylor the President had pressed the Pope to condemn the invasion
- of Norway and Denmark, and he was instructed by one of those
- conveniently anonymous mouthpieces of the Vatican to add:
-
- "While the Holy See strongly condemns Germany's action and has
- sponsored the attacks against the Reich in the Osservatore Romano,
- it is pointed out that there are only 2,619 Roman Catholics in
- Norway out of a population of nearly 3,000,000. Therefore, although
- the moral aspect is severely judged, from the practical viewpoint
- it is stated that the Holy See must keep in mind the 30,000,000
- German Roman Catholics in its activities."
-
- This muddled declaration -- "strongly condemning" Germany in
- one breath and explaining in the next why the Vatican must not
- condemn it -- and the letter of sympathy to the queen of Holland
- are all that the apologist for the Pope can quote. The above
- passage could, of course, if Germany had protested, have been
- explained away at once as unauthorized, and the telegram (after
- weeks of pressure) cannot be called a condemnation. If one phrase
- in it is so represented we must say that that kind of kid-gloved
- ruling of a world in which greed and brutality had become an
- appalling force is of no use whatever to the race. What sticks in
- the mind is the repeated statement that the Pope is deeply
- concerned only when a crime is committed against a Catholic country
- -- it injures the Church -- and that his moral censures must be
- trimmed in accordance with the interests of the Church. But even
- this position, whether or no you regard it as morally respectable
- and humanly serviceable, collapses when we come to study
- developments in Belgium and France. There we find the Black
- International really at work.
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- Chapter III
-
-
- THE TREACHERY OF LEOPOLD
-
-
- We come now to those parts of Germany's western offensive on
- which the mist still lies, and charges of cowardice and treachery
- and fiery denials shuttle back and forth amongst the Belgians and
- French themselves as vigorously as military men dispute the moves
- in the campaign. Here, on the face of it, we find it difficult to
- trace the action of the Black International, and recent writers
- give us little assistance. There is so general an agreement that
- there was base treachery to the cause of civilization that,
- journalists, essayists, and authors are more careful than ever not
- to "offend Catholics." Most of them, however, make one honest
- blunder which distorts the perspective. They take the conventional
- view that both Belgium and France are "Catholic countries". The
- effect of this is to give the reader the impression that the
- division of the country into supporter's of the traitors and
- opponents of their policy was just a split in a Catholic body and
- therefore the question of Church influence need not even be raised.
- This is entirely wrong, and when we correct it we see at once that
- the arch-traitors and their leading supporters, if not the main
- body of their supporters (which is obscure), are docile Catholics
- and their most bitter opponents. non-Catholics.
-
- Belgium require's a few words of historical explanation. Its
- Catholicism, like that of Holland, is largely due to its inclusion
- in the Spanish Empire in the later Middle Ages, and its energy was
- absorbed in a fight for freedom, in which patriotic priests joined
- (as in Ireland) with people, at the time when other northern
- countries were discussing religion and breaking away from Rome.
- Austria and France in turn ruled it to the French Revolution, when
- it declared itself an independent Republic. But at the fall of
- Napoleon the Council of Vienna put it under Protestant Holland, and
- the fierce struggle against that country to 1839, when it won its
- independence, hardened its creed. To this date the Belgians had had
- a splendid record of spirited self-assertion, but with the
- expulsion of the Dutch the Black International fastened upon the
- country, with the usual consequences.
-
- Further, Belgium contains two different peoples, and they are
- almost as antagonistic as the English and Irish. Though one's
- impression in travelling amongst them is that the Walloons in the
- south (including Brussels and the great manufacturing towns) are a
- volatile Latin people and the Flemings, in the northern half are
- closer to the Dutch, all are really of Teutonic stock, but the
- southerners, whose daily speech is French, are naturally more
- French in culture while the mainly agricultural Flemings are heavy,
- backward, and priest-ridden. I lived amongst them for a year and am
- not here repeating the impressions of literary travellers, but
- these few preliminary lines will suffice for my present purpose.
-
- By the opening of the present century Belgium, of which it
- was, and still is, said in our works of reference that "the great
- majority of the population are Catholics", was permeated with
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- skepticism of the French type. French literature had a free run in
- the French-speaking half of the country, and from the middle class,
- which was for the far greater part anti-Papal, this revolt was
- spreading rapidly to the urban workers. I found it extensive even
- in some rural districts. In my special research (The Decay of the
- Church of Rome) in 1909 I found that the Church had about 4,500,000
- members and had lost about 2,500,000. The Black international
- dreaded the new urban industrial conditions, as the Catholic
- leaders now do in France and the Vatican does everywhere. They mean
- the growth of free and informed discussion. And when, after the
- war, Socialism and Communism spread amongst the workers as
- Liberalism had spread in the professional classes, the Church began
- a struggle for life.
-
- The absurdity of the conventional statement that Belgians are
- "for the most part" Catholics is positively proved by the electoral
- statistics, which here, as in the case of pre-Fascist Italy, pre-
- nazi Germany, and pre-Franco Spain afford decisive evidence as to
- religion; and the fact that this was true in the democratic era and
- ceased with it will give you another indication whether it is true
- that Pius XII is "a great admirer of democracy", as American
- Catholic writers say. At the last election (1939) the country
- returned 73 Catholic deputes, to whom we may add 17 Flemish
- Nationalists and 4 Rexists. Against these there were 61 Socialist
- deputies, 33 Liberay (very anti-clerical), 9 Radicals, and 9
- Communists. In other words explicitly anti-clerical candidates were
- returned by much more than half of the adult community. Even the
- Senate had only 61 Catholics out of 150.
-
- At the previous election (1936) the number of Catholic
- deputies had been reduced from 79 to 63, and a candid Catholic
- French writer in the (Catholic) Revue des Deux Mondes (June 15,
- 1936) gives an interesting explanation of this. There had been a
- grave financial scandal in which the Church had been "very guilty."
- In order to "increase its strength and enrich some of its members"
- it had "embarked upon sordid speculations." It is an old and
- familiar clerical story. It was chiefly the Rexist Party that had
- reaped the advantage at the polls of the exposure of this Scandal.
- The Rexists are the followers of a young Belgian Catholic Leon
- Degrelle, who marked out a path for his political ambition by
- raising the banner of what we may call Christian Socialism, or that
- milk-and-water blend of Socialist rhetoric about capitalists (while
- defending capital) and Catholic abuse of Socialists which the late
- Pope recommended in an encyclical that we will analyze in the last
- chapter. By 1939, as the above figures show, Degrelle had lost a
- good deal of the ground he had won, but he and his movement must be
- taken into serious account. His ideal was Mussolini's Corporative
- State, as modified in the Pope's Encyclical, so he was patronized
- both by Mussolini and the Vatican. He used an Italian broadcasting
- station to weaken the Belgian government by his abuse and to appeal
- for "a joint effort of Italy and Belgium to bar the way of
- Bolshevism." The usefulness of the movement to Germany is obvious,
- and today Degrelle is very active under the Germans and in
- cooperation with them.
-
-
-
-
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- The above figures reflect a distracted and disunited country
- which the unified might of Germany would easily devour unless it
- kept up its old alliance with France and Britain, which had saved
- it in 1918. This Leopold the Traitor prevented. On his own
- initiative he had in 1936 renounced all Belgium's military
- alliance's and pledged the fate of his country on the veracity and
- honor of Adolph Hitler! Belgium still had a large army, but, though
- the men are brave enough, its poor quality had been seen in the
- last war. It is the fairly equal division of parties and the
- influence of the Church that permitted a neurotic monarch of poor
- intelligence to assume such power. The country had alternated for
- years between Liberal and Catholic rule, and with the rise to power
- of the Socialists it had Seen some unhealthy coalitions. Many
- Liberals, as usual, supported even the Church they hated against
- the threat of Socialism, but the Socialists themselves entered an
- almost unique feature of political life -- into a coalition with
- the Catholics against the capitalists. I remember discussing the
- matter in 1924 during a merry dinner on the Boulevard Michel in
- Paris with the Socialist leader Denis and a group of French
- Freethinkers. Denis laughingly said that they would make a deal
- with the devil if they could get anything out of it, I reminded him
- of the proverb: He who sups with the devil needs a long spoon.
- Today Socialism is extinct in Belgium and the Church and the
- Rexists rule in the ruins under their German master.
-
- This is the true perspective in which one has to see the
- question of the Belgian treachery. It would be well also for
- Americans to investigate closely, if they can, the movement of
- their Catholic ambassador at Brussels, Cudahy. It was stated in the
- British press he visited Berlin and the Vatican, then had a few
- days with Kennedy in London, before returning to America to make a
- defense of Leopold. There is little doubt that Roosevelt and
- Churchill intend to make it one of the terms of the final
- settlement that Leopold shall be returned to his throne. No one has
- charged them with an intention to see that the rights of the
- Socialists and Communists also are restored.
-
- What are the known facts about the great betrayal? After
- refusing until the last moment to allow his military chiefs to
- concert a plan of defense with the French and British experts,
- Leopold, when the invasion began, appealed to them for help. We
- know now that neither French nor British armies were properly
- equipped to meet the mechanized German divisions, though the
- preparation of these had taken years, but, while there is a great
- deal of controversy about the campaign, it is the conviction of
- some leading experts that even when the Germans had thrust through
- to the sea the position of the Belgian, French, and British armies
- in Belgium was not hopeless. There is fair agreement that lack of
- ability and energy in the higher command of each was as detrimental
- as the lack of heavy equipment. The most significant pact is that
- it was the conviction of the Belgian cabinet that the situation was
- not hopeless.
-
- We next have the admitted fact that on May 27, Leopold,
- without consulting his ministers, entered into negotiations with
- the Germans for a surrender. They at once closed on him, and at 4
- a.m. on the 28th, while the troops slept and the Allies had no
-
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- suspicion what Leopold was doing, he signed the betrayal of his
- army. It is further a well-known fact that the Belgian ministers,
- who were in France, issued a statement on the 30th to the effect
- that the King's act was illegal and unconstitutional -- in fact the
- Belgian Constitution did not recognize any royal document as valid
- unless it had also the signature of a minister -- and they deposed
- him.
-
- The evil consequences of this act cannot be exaggerated. To
- the King's plea that further sacrifices, by his people were useless
- a Frenchman might retort in a famous line of the great tragedian
- Racine who, when one character, excusing a fault, asks, "What else
- could they do?", replies "They could die." It is, however, not
- necessary here to discuss that. Leopold's treachery to his Allies
- and to Civilization was greater than his betrayal of Belgium. It
- left a large British army suddenly isolated and fatally weakened,
- and the men had to abandon all the equipment which it had taken 18
- months to prepare and run in disorder for Dunkirk, where the lives
- of most of them were saved by a memorable piece of heroism. Leopold
- nearly had to answer for 100,000 or more British lives, for it was
- mainly the destruction of the British army that he had -- one is
- inclined to say sold -- to the Germans; and he knew it. The further
- consequences were even worse but will be considered later. The
- treachery confirmed the defeatists in high French military quarters
- and led to an even more disgraceful apostasy from the ideals of
- civilization.
-
- Leopold and his Catholic Supporters in Belgium today, protest
- that he did send word of his intention to his Allies. He had sworn
- not to make a separate peace and is uneasy on this point. It is
- undisputed that no such message reached either the French or the
- British. Reynaud, broadcasting on the same day and branding
- Leopold's act as one "without precedent in history", made this
- clear. But it is not disputed. The question we ask ourselves is not
- whether Leonold sent a message which the Germans intercepted but
- whether he was stupid enough to fancy that they would not be on the
- watch for any communication. The man is, like most European kings,
- of such poor intelligence that one would not be surprised to learn
- that he handed a message to the Germans who kindly promised to
- deliver it. But the whole story is so improbable that we may prefer
- to think that Leopold's clerical advisers recommended him to lie
- for the good of the Church. This would be nearer the millionth than
- the first time in history.
-
- But how shall we estimate whether he is likely -- there is, of
- course, no evidence -- to have acted under clerical influence? A
- Catholic king has two separate groups of counsellors: his ministers
- and bishops. We know that he did not consult the former, who were
- hundreds of miles away. The latter were in Belgium, and this was
- just the kind of issue on which they were apt to be consulted. His
- dilemma was whether conscience overruled his oath to observe the
- Constitution. It is the business of priests to solve such problems
- in a Catholic Court. One of the first to defend the king was the
- bead of the Belgian Church, Cardinal von Roey. In a pastoral that
- he ordered to be read in every church he endorsed Leopold's act
- (London Times, June 18, 1940). The telegram which the Pope sent him
-
-
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- was before the betrayal and merely sympathized with him on the
- invasion of his county, "against its right and wish" and trusted it
- would one day recover its Independence: the least the Pope could do
- in face of an outraged world.
-
- That the Osservatore, which could be repudiated as
- unauthorized, went further and charged the Germans with having
- opened "a pitiless war of extermination conducted in defiance of
- the laws of war" does not impress us. The Vatican was at that date,
- as I will explain more fully later, trying to drive a bargain with
- the Nazis and almost became bold, or at least less cowardly. It
- published British and French war-news in the Osservatore (to the
- great financial profit of that paper, as no other Italian paper was
- allowed to do so), and the Fascist press howled that the Pope was
- "the ally of the Jews, the Freemasons, the democracies, and the
- English Protestants." But it very quickly lost this honorable
- position (New York Times, May 18 and 21). Mussolini cracked his
- whip, and the Vatican obeyed. A week later the Rome correspondent
- of the most respected British daily, the Manchester Guardian (May
- 24), reported: "The National Socialist State has, it seems, been
- able to read an understanding with the Catholic leaders." There had
- been another plum-promises in regard to the Church in Poland,
- Bohemia, etc. -- for the good boy. At that date, as all the world
- knows, the juggernauts of Germany were plowing red furrows in the
- masses of Belgian and French fugitives. The flower of Hitler's
- training colleges in chivalry were treating old women and war-
- prisoners with the brutality which I have described. The traitors
- and quislings were getting out their swastika flags. And the Pope,
- as I have already quoted, sent his "personal affection" to the
- German soldiers.
-
- The larger question, what benefit the Pope might expect to
- derive from a German victory in the west, must be postponed until
- the final chapter, after we have considered what happened in
- France. Belgium today is Catholic, beggared, and dishonored. It
- lives by making tanks and bombs for use Against England and Russia
- and food for Germans who keep their fat while Europe starves.
- Degrelle has reached his miserable ambition. Having looked to
- Mussolini instead of Hitler he at first thought it prudent to fly.
- The Germans came to an understanding with him, and he manages to
- accommodate the social-political teaching of the Pope's encyclical
- to the merciless exploitation of the country by the Germans. His
- paper Le Pays Riel urges Belgians to "forget past quarrels" and
- piously endure their new slavery. His party is the only one
- permitted in French-speaking Belgium. Over the rest of it the Black
- International and the Gestapo wield a benevolent control and there
- is less sabotage than in any other conquered country.
-
-
-
-
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- Chapter IV
-
- FRANCE RECOVERS ITS FAITH AND LOSES ITS HONOR
-
- There is no more pathetic chapter of recent history than the
- fall of proud France from its earlier position as one of the
- leading powers of modern civilization. It had led the advancing
- nations of the world from the days of Voltaire to 1918. The
- movement of intellectual emancipation which began in Voltaire,
- Rousseau, and Montesquieu and broadened into the period of the
- Encyclopaedists culminated in the Great Revolution that lit the
- world. French idealism had already enkindled the revolutionary
- flame in America. Now its light awakened a fever for reform in
- England, Italy, and Spain and transformed Latin America. In the
- long and terrible reaction which followed the fall of Napoleon
- France still led. Its revolutions of 1830, 1848, and 1870 are
- milestones in man's laborious climb, back to the height of 1790. It
- again led the world in the complete secularization of the state,
- and, while priests mournfully predicted that this would lead to
- degeneration, the nation fought with all its old vigor and heroism
- when the test came in 1914, After 1919 every friend of France saw
- a change. Scandals multiplied, the old vitality was squandered in
- domestic quarrels, and when the test again came France, to the
- stupefaction of the world, promptly raised the yellow flag and
- bought peace with dishonor.
-
- Is it a mere coincidence that this period of degeneration,
- 1919 to 1939, is the only period in modern French history in which
- you will find a Catholic claim of a great religious revival? In
- 1909 I proved that there were not more than 6,000,000 genuine
- Catholics in a total population of 39,000,000. The only serious
- criticism. came from the distinguished French Protestant Scholar,
- Sabatier, a high and very impartial authority on religion, who
- wrote me that there were in France at that date no more than
- 4,000,000 genuine, or as the French say practicing, Catholics. The
- war of 1914-1919 brought Alsace-Lorraine, with more than 1,000,000
- Catholics back to France. This very natural development had the
- unforeseen consequence of compelling the French government, which
- had contemptuously ignored the Vatican and been heavily scolded by
- it for 20 years, in increasing the power of the priests to a
- remarkable extent. The Alsace-Lorrainers wanted independence, not
- absorption in France, and the chronic unrest of the provinces,
- fostered by the clergy, gave the Vatican one of its usual
- opportunities: we will keep Alsace-Lorraine docile for you if you
- will make concessions to the Church. As political security and
- economic prosperity are far more sacred things than either religion
- or irreligion the bargain was struck. Alsace and Lorraine had
- brought great wealth to French capitalists and, on the other hand,
- they were the weak spot in the heel of France if, or when, the
- German war of revenge opened.
-
- From 1880 to that time no French politician had taken the
- Church into account. Catholic statesmen are as unknown in that
- period as Catholic scientists, philosopher's, economists, or
- historians of leading rank. Still in the period between the two
- wars every French statesman was a Freethinker, except the
- Protestant Waldeck-Rousseau, but even the most skeptical of them
- now showed an ostentatious respect of the Church.
-
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- I was at Athens in 1922 when the news came that the Turks in
- Asia Minor had inflicted on the Greeks the worst defeat they have
- suffered in modern history. I was in the British Legation when the
- Greek Foreign Minister secretly brought the news -- it was
- concealed from the public for four days -- and the secretary, a
- friend of mine, told me that the minister assured them that it was
- with French help that the Turks had made a sudden and overwhelming
- attack. When I repeated that in England the journalistic "experts"
- leered, and a few years later a Harvard professor whom I met
- assured me that, though he had himself suspected it, it was not
- believed in America. But as usual the truth came out and may be
- read partly even in the Catholic Teeling. The Vatican did not want
- the Greeks to get Constantinople, as they easily could have done --
- I had been a few days earlier with a large Greek army within a
- day's march of Constantinople which then had no Turkish troops --
- because that would enormously increase the power of the Greek
- Church in the East.
-
- This is one of a hundred instances of "the government of Jews
- and Freemasons," as Rome had called the French government for forty
- years, cooperating most respectfully with the Vatican. In 1925 I
- attended the Freethought Congress at Paris. The government frowned
- on it and it was a total failure. But the canonization of Joan of
- Arc brought out the freethinking politicians and officials in
- crowds to attend the gorgeous ceremonies. After the blunders of the
- fire-eating Catholic-cooperating statesmen of 1919-1924 the
- Radical's under Herriot got power and tried to recall the
- ambassador from the Vatican. The Church got the deputies from
- Alsace-Lorraine to rebel, and the wealthy Catholics, and even the
- peasants with fat stockings, held back their money from public
- funds and defeated a government which really represented the
- majority of the nation. So the truckling to the Vatican continued.
- The Czechs, as I have earlier explained, defied the Vatican and
- expelled its Nuncio. Rome turned to France, the alliance with which
- was vital to Czecho-Slovakia, and the Czechs had to yield. In
- return the Pope, to the scandal of good Catholics, heavily censured
- the Catholic-royalist body in France, on the ground that it
- detected heresy in the leaders, and seemed to relieve the French
- government of one of its embarrassments.
-
- I have in these booklets so severely to condense all matters
- referring to the period before 1936 that I must run the risk of
- giving the reader an inadequate impression. He should understand
- that the world-tragedy of today is far more surely the culmination
- of the miserable history of Europe from 1919 to 1936 than it is a
- consequences of the Conference of Versailles to which so many
- attribute it, and in no case is this clearer than in that of
- France. Free French writers have called the appalling conduct of
- the Vichy group "the Revenge of the Dreyfusards." The affaire
- Dreyfus is generally forgotten -- the attempt of Catholic military
- men and politicians in the last century to make a scapegoat of an
- innocent Jew, foiled by Zola and the anti-Catholic politicians --
- but it is profoundly true that what is happening in unoccupied
- France today is the revenge of Catholic generals and politicians,
- in the name of the Church and with the aid of the German bandits,
- on the men and the entire modern regime of life which have kept
- them in obscurity and impotence for more than half a century.
-
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- The preparation for that revenge covers the entire period from
- 1919, beginning with the prestige which the Catholic generals Foch
- Petain, and Weygand had won in the last war and the annexation of
- Alsace-Lorraine. Lorraine brought to French capitalists and
- bankers, one of the greatest iron-ore beds in the world and to
- French bishops a very substantial reinforcement. So these brother's
- in arms based the whole policy of France on the cry of the security
- of the country, the "sacred union" of all Frenchmen (or cessation
- of attacks on the Church), and close alliance with the Vatican.
- Since the French press was in those years no more disposed or free
- than the American and British to tell the truth about Rome, the
- French people never realized that from 1933 onward the Papacy was
- in close alliance with their deadly enemy across the Rhine, the man
- who had sworn in print to trample France in the mud and to reduce
- Britain to the status of a little island out on the Atlantic. The
- same planting of Catholics in high military quarters and in the
- diplomatic and civil service is taking place in the British Empire
- -- see the Catholic Who's Who as in France. It might be useful if
- some American writer were to make a corresponding inquiry on this
- side.
-
- But, as I said, although the most important material for
- judging the question of the Black International and the great
- French betrayal is found in the prewar developments, they must here
- be dismissed briefly. Let us say that the country was terribly
- enfeebled and its attention diverted by the passionate quarrels of
- half a dozen rival parties, or of men ambitious to lead parties of
- their own. The scandals in public life which occasionally occurred
- reveal no worse corruption than in America but they are more
- fiercely discussed. It was the dissipation of forces that chiefly
- counted. Even the sound progressive body of the people was split,
- in virtue of the old jibes about Socialism and liberty and the
- personal ambition's of politicians, into Radicals, Radical-
- Socialists, and Socialists. Read the appalling description of
- France in 1938 -- "like one in deadly sickness it neither moves nor
- speaks on the threshold of an agony", etc. -- in J.C. Maxence's
- Histoire de dexans 1927-1937 (1938).
-
- Two parties chiefly profited by the confusion, the Communists
- and the Catholic Royalists. The Communists made their usual mistake
- of encouraging pacifism because "the capitalist system was not
- worth fighting for" and of saying that the Church no longer needed
- watching. One wonders what they say in their ruin and misery today.
-
- Catholic-Royalism, which is the French form of Fascism, grew
- and became bolder every year. Teeling is quite wrong when he claims
- that the developments in France show that the Church had regained
- considerable ground, but his acceptance of a world-total of
- 330,000,000 (instead of about 250,000,000) Catholics shows that he
- has made no study of this matter. I have elsewhere shown that the
- estimates of French Catholic writers varied from five to ten
- millions, and that the best of them and the Catholic Denis Gwynne
- (resident in France) regard the latter figure as very excessive. If
- we split the difference and say 7,500,000 (in a total population of
- 42,000,000) we see that, taking into account the inclusion of the
- Catholics of Alsace-Lorraine, there has been no growth of the
-
-
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- Church since 1919. It is in power alone, in virtue of its intrigues
- and its high military members, that the position of the Church
- improved; and it is just in this respect that we look for its
- influence in the betrayal of the country.
-
- A small library has already been written on the military
- collapse of France. When we allow for the folly of the French, who
- would never submit to sufficient taxation to provide an army
- equipped like that of Germany, in trusting to the Maginot Line and
- leaving their northern frontier practically open and their very
- inferior equipment we still have, as most experts admit, a very
- serious situation to explain, The successive blunders -- Reynaud
- called some of them "unbelievable faults" in the Chamber -- cannot
- be discussed here. Shirer sums up all criticisms in the phrase:
- "France did not fight." He means, of course, not with its old fire,
- perseverance, and ability. When he explains that this was due to
- Communist pacifism in the ranks and defeatism amongst the higher
- officers we do not quite follow him. The Communists were a
- relatively small minority, and any Communist soldier who wavered
- would get short shrift.
-
- On the fact that there was something wrong in the higher
- command and that, specifically, Wegand and Petain showed deplorable
- weakness and defeatism the majority of impartial experts are
- agreed. As these soldiers, on whose verdict that a continuation of
- the war was hopeless the French government had to rely, and the
- bunch of admirals, generals, and politicians who at once emerged to
- support them are Catholics, as the immediate result of their
- assuming power by betraying the country was an intensification of
- the power of the Church, and as Blum, Reynaud, Daladier, and nearly
- all the non-Catholic statesmen were opposed to surrender, we very
- decidedly have a case for suspecting Church influence. Only the
- Vatican and Catholic countries like Brazil, Portugal, Spain, and
- Eire fully endorsed the surrender and support the Vichy group of
- traitors today. It is, in fact, only because the British and
- American Press dare not, for fear of their Catholic censors, even
- raise the question of Church influence or inquire into the
- significance of the rise to power of a Catholic group for the first
- time in 65 years that many are surprised at the suggestion.
-
- Let us examine what happened. At the critical phase, when
- Weygand, whose feeble appeals to the troops sufficiently show that
- he was something of a defeatist from the start, completely failed
- in his strategy and the Germans were rushing toward Paris, Reynaud
- for some obscure reason took two well-known Catholic defeatists,
- Baudoxiin and Prouvost, into the cabinet. What we shall see
- presently will suggest that this was due to the intrigues of Laval
- and other Catholics. A few days later (June 10) Italy delivered
- what Roosevelt called "the stab in the back," and French morale
- fell still lower. On the 12th Weygand reported that resistance was
- hopeless. Reynaud appealed frantically to America for help and
- Churchill, agreeing with him that the reply was unsatisfactory,
- consented to relieve France of its agreement not to seek a separate
- peace. Reynaud and the majority of the cabinet wanted to continue
- the war, but "the will to fight had departed from Marshal Petain
- and General Weygand, and their example was contagious." On the 16th
- Reynaud resigned, and the President asked Petain, "who responded
-
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- THE PIOUS TRAITORS OF BELGIUM AND FRANCE
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- with alacrity," to form a government nearly the Vichy group of
- today. At once the senile Marshal (aged 84) asked an armistice
- fatuously explaining to the Germans that the settlement would be
- "as between soldiers" who respected each other. Daladier, Delbos,
- Mandel, and other of the old ministers took ship from Bordeaux to
- Africa, intending to carry on the war from there, as the elementary
- dictates of French honor, when not diluted with piety, required.
- They were arrested and returned to France as prisoners. Petain
- signed what he incredibly called "hard but honorable" terms, and he
- and his gang moved to Vichy and began to spit epithets at the one
- power, Great Britain, that seemed to be left to face alone the
- appalling might of Germany reinforced by all the resources, except
- the fleet, of France and six other conquered lands.
-
- That is the summary, condensed, of events which we find in the
- most important and most impartial annual survey of contemporary
- history, the Annual Register. But I have reserved for special
- notice one part of the narrative. The thoughtful reader will, of
- course want to know how Petain, a man (as subsequent development's
- show) no more fitted for statesmanship than for teaching zoology,
- came to be chosen for the supreme position and his bunch of
- Catholic friends were waiting for his call. If I suggested that
- this crucial development was due to the intrigues of Catholics I
- should be accused of prejudiced imagination, but that is just what
- the Annual Register states.
-
- Laval a docile Catholic in good order at the Vatican and a
- thorough defeatist, was, it says, "the most responsible for French
- politics at this juncture," When the government transferred to
- Bordeaux he went there and, the Annual says, intrigued with all his
- energy to get "peace at any price". Reynaud, not a man of
- sufficient personality to meet so terrible a crisis and assailed by
- rumors of an entanglement of an unpleasant character, was worn
- down. Petain, on the other hind, was flattered to his teeth and
- persuaded "by Laval (who hoped to rule France through him) that he
- was called by God to save France. President Lebrun and Herriot were
- dissuaded from shifting the government to North Africa and
- conducting the war from there, and Mandel, Daladier, and others had
- to fly secretly to carry out the plan. Laval was taken into
- Petain's group and became, when the members of the Senate and
- Chamber (Congress's) voted themselves out of existence by 569 votes
- to 80 and made Petain dictator, Vice-Premier.
-
- In giving a summary above of indications of an increasing
- Church influence in France I postponed one item. On June 9, 1935,
- the Papal organ, the Osservatore Romano (quoted in Keesing)
- recalled with joy that for the first time in 70 years a French
- cabinet-minster was visiting the Pope and kissing his ring. He wore
- the insignia of the Order of Pius IX, which had been bestowed upon
- him by Pill's XI. He presented several sumptuously bound works of
- Catholic piety to the Pope, who gave his daughter a gold and coral
- rosary such as a Catholic maid would treasure for life. The Times
- (June 10) and other papers referred to the facts as another
- admirable symptom (like Mussolini's bargain with the Vatican) of
- the wise reconciliation of the secular and spiritual powers.
-
-
-
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- The devout pilgrim was Pierre Laval, who thus entered upon a
- friendship with the Secretary of State, Cardinal Pacelli. Laval is
- now so universally loathed that our papers will not even mention
- that he is a Catholic, much less recall his Papal decorations and
- his close Vatican connection. Pacelli, a year or two later,
- returned the visit. He was the first Papal Legate to be received in
- Paris since 1814, and he was very royally received. And at the
- following New Year's Day there was a fresh Papal decoration for
- Laval, and one even for the freethinking Prime Minister.
-
- If any readers still hesitate about the share of the Black
- International in the betrayal of France let us consider what
- happened. The French hierarchy at once at the surrender ordered
- their people to support Petain. The Pope, who mediated in the
- settlement with Italy, sent Petain a personal message and a letter
- pointing out to the French bishops that the new situation made
- possible "a reawakening of the entire nation." The Osservatore
- surpassed itself, hailing "the dawn of a new radiant day not only
- for France but for Europe and the world" (Catholic Herald, July
- 12). As all the world which was not Catholic-Fascist or under the
- lash of the Gestapo considered the new day one of dishonor for
- France and of evil augury for the world Cardinal Hinsley, head of
- the Church in Britain, was compelled to ask what the Great Neutral
- meant by this. The article, it was explained, was not authorized.
- Even under Hinsley's nose, in his Catholic Herald, the jubilation
- at the Catholic victory broke out. A writer said that "all that is
- vital in the soul of France, purified and glorified in heroic
- suffering, can look out once more upon Europe with a clear
- Christian purpose". Next week Hinsley had to explain to an outraged
- England that that was not authorized. but the paper continued (see
- editorial October 11, etc.) to rejoice, more discreetly, that the
- action of France had promoted the plan of a Catholic bloc and had
- inaugurated "a big and vital movement." Could anything but the
- interest of the Church inspire such glorification of cowardice and
- treachery in a British paper?
-
- Then the senile wreck, too dense or too pious to sense his
- dishonor, began to set up the New Order in France. For the grand
- (if exaggerated) cry of "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity" that had
- once roused the world and was now blotted but as a blasphemy Petain
- mumbled his new trilogy,"Work, Family, Country." Religion first.
- The beetles, male or female, waddled back to the schools and
- institutions from which they had been banished, with great profit,
- for 50 years; the text-books were rewritten under Petain's personal
- supervision -- surely a unique spectacle! -- and all non-Catholic
- teachers (in a country with 45 million non-Catholics to 7 million
- Catholics) were expelled or turned into hypocrites. This
- development went so far that the Germans had to make Petain modify
- it to prevent riots. Women were shut back in the Middle Ages, and
- favor, even ordinary justice, shown only to parents with at least
- three children. And the good workers were to be meekly organized on
- the lines of the Papal encyclical which I will analyze in the next
- chapter and the employers educated in that beautiful Catholic
- spirit of paternal kindliness to their helpless employees which
- had, of course, been seen everywhere until this modern atheism and
- the urban industrial conditions which begot it arose in the
- nineteenth century. French bankers and capitalists, who are now
-
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- falling over each other and fighting truculently to get fat jobs
- under the Germans -- are, in fact, now making fortunes by making
- armaments for use against Britain and Russia -- smiled at the old
- fool and his priests but encouraged him. No more Socialism or
- Communism in France.
-
- I do not care to enlarge further on the spectacle of a great
- nation that has been betrayed into misery and shame by a few
- priest-ridden leaders, but the consequences to the few nations that
- remained civilized were appalling. Soon afterwards I watched from
- my bedroom-window, five miles away, the most precious square mile
- of the city of London, with its historic treasures as well as its
- vast stores, dissolve in flames, and for weeks later I met the poor
- maimed folk who had left their dead in the cinders of their homes.
- It goes on. As I write Vichy is deliberating whether to put its
- fleet (contrary to the most solemn pledges) and its vast African
- empire at the disposal of Germany for the final destruction of
- civilization in Europe. And Papa Pacelli continues to bless Vichy.
- The one man in the miserable group whose sense of honor is not
- smothered by his piety, is dismissed as if this were a disgrace .
- . . France will yet -- next year, I venture to think -- rise again,
- shake in the wind the defiant tricolor that spells out its old
- trilogy, "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity," and prove to the dead
- traitors and their priests that it has lost neither its honor nor
- its vigor.
-
-
-
- Chapter V
-
-
- THE AMAZING FOLLY OF THE CATHOLIC BLOC
-
-
- What gain did the Black International think it would derive
- from the German conquest of Belgium and France? I have already
- established two points. First, as is made plain in every chapter of
- these booklets, no human consideration -- no thought of secular
- ruin and the "earthly" suffering of millions -- is allowed to stand
- in the way of the clerical ambition. We have seen it from Spain to
- Abyssinia, from Brazil to Vienna. The pretext is that men's
- "immortal" interests outweigh all these "temporal" disasters: the
- fact is that the protection or recovery of the power and wealth of
- the Black International comes first. Secondly, there is no room for
- doubt that the Vatican was warned in advance of the conquest of
- Belgium and France and the intervention of Italy. Ribbentrop was
- received at Rome, with much enthusiasm, the day before he was to
- join Hitler and Mussolini at the Brenner for the final endorsement
- of the plan of the conquest of the West. It is absurd to ask us to
- believe that Hitler was deeply concerned at such a moment to secure
- a friendly understanding of which he had not the least need, with
- the Pope about Church affairs in Poland and Bohemia. It is still
- more absurd to suggest that he wanted an assurance of the loyalty
- of the German Catholics, which was never in doubt whatever crime
- (not against the Church) Hitler committed. The Annual Register says
- that "according to Vatican sources" Ribbentrop had told the Pope in
- April that the German troops would be in Paris in June and in
- London in August.
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- The immediate gain of the Church is obvious. Socialism and
- Communism were just as dangerous to it in Belgium and France as in
- Spain, Austria, Germany, and South America, and a German conquest
- of the West automatically involved the complete destruction of
- them. It seems to me just as certain that the Vatican was promised,
- or foresaw, the seizure of power in France by Petain, Weygand,
- Laval, and Darlan and the setting-up of a clerical state. Think of
- the situation, as I have described it. Since 1875 French Catholics
- had not only never had power in France but had not had a single
- statesman until the black Laval wormed and bribed his way in. Now,
- in an hour of profound humiliation and misery, priests govern the
- men who govern France. The price of power never matters to the
- Papacy.
-
- But a further very important gain was that the transformation
- of France into a Catholic state provided a new, and most important
- unit for the Pope's plan of a bloc or League -- let us call it a
- League -- of Catholic powers. As far as I can trace, this idea of
- the Pope was born in the spring or early summer of 1940, which
- suggests further evidence that he knew of the coming degradation of
- Belgium and France. Slovakia was at that time added, as a Catholic
- state, to Italy, Spain, and Portugal. The Pope could have had no
- illusion about the value, on a world-scale, of Slovakia, Spain, and
- Portugal or the condition of Italy; and the usefulness of the
- Spanish-American Republics in a League with European anti-
- democratic countries was of still more doubtful value. The United
- States, that exasperating democracy that sent so much money to Rome
- but compelled its Catholics to profess such adulterated ideas of
- the faith, might have something to say. France, a first-class
- power, was a different proposition.
-
- These Catholic states were to be constructed on the lines of
- the Papal encyclical of the year 1931 Quadragesimo Anno. The title
- -- the title of an encyclical consists of the first two words of
- the Latin text -- means "In the fortieth year" and is an indication
- that if follows up the "great" encyclical (Rerum Novarum) published
- by Leo XIII in 1891. You may know how the world-press applauded
- that encyclical and how American apologists still quote it with
- pride. It went to the revolutionary length of saying -- in the last
- decade of the nineteenth century! -- that a worker must have "a
- living wage"; though the Pope, when asked by a Belgium prelate who
- was pressed by Socialists, declined to say what is a living wage.
- Pacelli, who was firmly in the Secretariat of State by 1931, seems
- to have thought that it was a good basis to build upon. I do not
- suggest that he wrote it, though to do so required no knowledge of
- economics. It is a very long and rambling document, mainly composed
- of the familiar solemn clerical platitudes about the wickedness and
- folly of the world and the deeper wisdom which the Church is ready
- to impart upon all questions if men will only listen.
-
- You may reflect that you never heard of this important
- pronouncement and would like to read it. Unless you read Latin of
- the modern Italian type I fear you will not be able to do so.
- Though it is intended for the whole world it is written in a dead
- language, so the Vatican meant each national branch of the Church
- to make a translation of it. I have heard of only two -- German and
- French. In Britain at least, no translation was published, and
-
-
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- there is only a booklet on it (Pope Pius XI and Social
- Reconstruction, 1936) which is a paraphrase intended to conceal its
- crudities. I can learn of no American translation. Strange, you may
- say, if this is the supreme effort of Pacelli and Pius XI on a very
- vital question and the document on which these new Catholic states
- expressly base themselves.
-
- It is not really strange. It is a manual of Catholic Fascism,
- blending features of Mussolini's Corporative State, the medieval
- guilds, and weird Vatican conceptions of modern life. Although
- Vichy France, Portugal, Slovakia, etc., appeal to it as their
- inspiration it says little about the political form of the state
- but clearly assumes that it will be a dictatorship. The main point
- is its solution of the larger problem, which is very simple. The
- desire of the workers to have unions is, the Pope is gracious
- enough to say, legitimate. But must not be democratic and
- independent. They must be "directed." The employers also must have
- associations -- you see the relation to Mussolini's idea -- and in
- case of a difference of opinion representatives of the two bodies
- must meet in Christian amity and come to an agreement. It reminds
- us of the British industrial experiment of Witney Councils, which
- had already been discovered to be useless before Plus XI, or
- Pacelli, recommended the idea as original and profound. The Pope
- does not say whether the workers or the employers are to have the
- marginal superiority or how, in case they are equal, a decision is
- to be reached. Such a deadlock, he supposes, cannot arise when both
- sides are Catholics. They then see everything in the light of pure
- justice.
-
- But there are incidental passages which made it all the more
- inadvisable to translate this gem of Papal wisdom for the workers
- of America. What for instance, would they say to this:
-
- "The workers, sincerely repressing all that feeling of hatred
- and envy which agitators in the social Struggle so cunningly
- exploit, will not only submit to but highly esteem the position in
- human society to which Divine Providence has assigned them (p. 104,
- Freiburg edition).
-
- It is exactly the kind of language which the bishops of the
- Church of England addressed to the workers a century and a quarter
- ago when they were agitating for the right to form unions. The
- worker who sees the marble bathing pools, the rich banquets, the
- spacious and luxurious homes of the rich on the screen must, when
- he returns to his dingy and uncomfortable home, repress that wicked
- feeling of envy and thank Divine Providence for giving him the $15
- or $20 a week job. To do otherwise leads to Socialism, and the Pope
- settle's the vexed question whether the Vatican no longer condemns
- Socialism. "No man", he says (p. 90) "can be a good Catholic and a
- good socialist," The priests did not care to let even British
- workers see that. As to Communism, it is "impious and wicked", not
- simply, as the Pope is now represented as saying, natural virtue to
- be condemned only because it has not a Catholic basis (in reality,
- a Catholic or priestly boss). There is to be no restriction on a
- man's power to make a fortune, but the rich must be generous to the
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- poor. At the same time the Liberal and very American doctrine of
- "free competition" is wrong. This is supposed to be a wise Catholic
- middle position between the two extremes in contemporary life: a
- wonderful example of that famous "wisdom of the Vatican".
-
- It obviously did not suit the American hierarchy to let the
- American public know that their Church condemned unrestricted
- individualism and free competition, but the blear-eyed Petain, like
- the sleek priest-ruler of Slovakia, the truculent dictator who
- protects privilege in Brazil, and the scheming Dr. Salazar of
- Portugal found it a useful doctrine. It is, as I said, Mussolini's
- Corporative State modified. You may choose to think that these
- innocent folk at the Vatican did not realize that Mussolini's
- scheme was mainly devised for the purpose of war -- to bring both
- the industrialists and the workers under the despotic control of
- the State. In any case the Pope puts the Church above the state. He
- blandly claims that it is "the supreme authority even in these
- economic matters." That also would hardly suit America, but old
- Petain would not blink if it claimed to be the supreme authority
- even in sanitary matters and sport. He had a vague idea that he
- could, on the lines of the Papal encyclical paralyze the great
- industries which by their urbanization and stimulation of the
- people had certainly promoted the growth of freethought. France was
- to be mainly agricultural once more, because peasants are less
- quick-witted and anti-clerical, and in such industries as were
- permitted the ascendancy of Catholics would be secured, not merely
- by the control of Church and State but by giving low wages to all
- men who were not married or had not at least three children. By
- long tradition, parents of three or more children in France were
- almost always Catholics.
-
- One would not say that the Germans smiled: they must have
- roared with laughter. The old fool would serve the immediate
- purpose, and their patronage of him and his insipid ideas could be
- put on their credit side at the Vatican, which was expected to give
- further help in the African Empire and the East. As I write the
- Germans seem to be about to dismiss Petain to some country cottage
- or home for the aged. The truth about him is breaking through the
- Catholic censorship. A series of articles in the Herald-Tribune in
- the summer of 1941 by the distinguished French dramatist Henri
- Bernstein punctured the Petain clerical legend. He proves that the
- "great soldier" was a defeatist in the war of 1914-1918 and wanted
- to abandon the English allies to the German's. His coreligionist
- Foch had to silence him. It appears even that he never was a great
- soldier and "the hero of Verdun." It was the priests who
- manufactured his reputation. As I said, for seventy years they had
- failed to get a distinguished representative either in
- statesmanship, science, philosophy, or history, so in the miserable
- prewar period., when they concentrated on pushing into power
- political creatures like Laval, literary journalists and soldiers:
- men who know nothing outside their special fields and are easy prey
- to the clerical sharp.
-
- Just about the time of the surrender of Paris even the German
- papers began to discus's with respect the idea of a Catholic
- League. Whether they or the Pope started it I cannot ascertain but
- it became an important item in their new program of friendly
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- understanding with the Vatican. Catholic papers in England and
- Eire, in Portugal, Spain, Spanish America, and Hungary -- and, I
- suppose. in the United States -- began to reflect the glory and joy
- of the new vision that lit the Papal mind. The great League would
- cross the seas and bring in the republics of South America.
- "Spaniards", Franco's newspapers said, "are the only ones entitled
- to look after Spanish America." Britain and America were saving
- Spain from famine and collapse, and its press was telling President
- Roosevelt that "his tutorship is unsolicited". Instead of a Nazi
- threat to the United States from Latin America there was to be a
- Catholic Fascist threat; and the main body of American Catholic's
- still praised Petain, Salazar, Franco, and De Valera. Germany
- hinted that this was not all. The Pope's eyes began to brighten at
- the prospect of Germany conquering the Balkans and destroying for
- him the ancient Greek, Russian, Serbian, and other "Orthodox"
- Churches which had defied the Papacy for more than a thousand
- years. This mighty League, pivoting on Italy, need not fear Hitler
- even if he had won his victory and then faced the Vatican without
- a mask.
-
- The Germans, I repeat, must have laughed. Now that Italy was
- sucked clean of vitality, or soon would be, the vast German force
- would, if necessary, cut through these Catholic powers as easily as
- the smaller armies of 1940 had cut through western Europe. When the
- time came Germany would take them all over into its servile empire,
- their people the helots who would grow food and hew out minerals
- for the German workers and industrialists. Any doubt of that after
- the terrific strain that the German onslaught has put upon Russia
- in spite of its mighty resources and superb heroism would be
- ludicrous.
-
- What would Germany then say to Roman Catholicism. It would
- disdainfully sweep aside all its trumpery Catholic-Fascist
- institutions. It would enter upon a real "persecution of religion"
- such as the modern world has not yet seen. If the Pope murmured
- about promises and agreements, the cynical Nazis would remind him
- how he was silent year after year when they made solemn agreements
- and tore them up. It would remind him how through years of
- corruption and dishonor, of bestial cruelty and ruthless
- aggression, he had been silent or friendly, solely because he
- thought it would ultimately profit his Church. Shall we have to
- write in another year or two that atheistic Bolshevism saved the
- Papacy as well as European civilization?
-
-
- **** ****
-
- Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
-
-
-
- The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
- hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
- and information for today. If you have such books please contact
- us, we need to give them back to America.
-
- **** ****
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- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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