Pius XII and The Jews.
Pius XII and The Jews.
VATICAN L' OSSERVATORE ROMANO JEWS POPE PIUS XII VATICAN BOOK
Transgressing orders from superiors changes the ancient Latin adage into its
opposite: Ubi minor maior cessat. One paradoxical example of this can be found in newly-
released Vatican documents.
During the Second World War, Bishop Ján Voitaššak, the bishop of Spiš with Nazi
sympathies, was offered the position of State Councillor by the Slovak government. For his
role, the bishop should have refused, but instead, he accepted, asking the consent of Pope
Pius XII only ex post facto.
This is just one of the episodes in the book “Pius XII and the Jews” (Milan, Rizzoli, 2021,
in bookstores in Italian as of 12 January) written by Johan Ickx, Director of the Historical
Archives of the Section for Relations with States of the Vatican Secretariat of State.
The book opens a new era of studies on the pontificate of Pius XII, with an insight into
what Ickx calls Le Bureau (the title of the French edition of the book). The title refers to the
first Section of the Secretariat of State responsible not only for international relations but
also, in an increasingly dramatic way, for the vicissitudes of the many Jews who, during the
Second World War, turned to the Vatican for help, support, advice and protection.
The Bureau knew these facts and knew that Germany boasted numerous imitations.
Slovakia, for example, had chosen a totalitarian path: “Baptized or not,” said Minister Mach,
“all Jews will have to leave.” German pressure then induced the Hungarians to hand over to
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the Germans those Jews who tried to cross the border from Slovakia.
The Slovakian bishops wrote a collective denunciation fully supported by the Pope. But,
even in this case, the opposite of the old adage was true: “The trouble is that the president of
Slovakia is a priest,” wrote Msgr. Tardini. “Everyone understands that the Holy See cannot
keep Hitler in line. But that it cannot keep a priest in check, who can understand that?” Ubi
minor maior cessat.
The stories told in this book must therefore be understood as stories of people fleeing,
but also like stories of attempts, made with human strength and human limitations, to save
these fleeing lives. In this way, some superficial theses, even some recent ones, put to rest
allegations of anti-Semitism of the Curia under Pius XII.
The existence of the series “The Jews”, which Ickx calls “The list of Pius XII”, is “tangible
proof of the interest shown in people who, because of racist laws, were not considered
ordinary citizens, whether they were Jews or baptized Jews.” It is not possible here to cite all
the “Jewish cases” of which the Vatican was notified. But, it can be said that the documents
clearly show, as Ickx writes, that the Vatican’s efforts were aimed at “saving every single
human being, regardless of colour or creed.” Two very significant episodes prove this, among
those enumerated by the book’s author.
Saving lives
The first is found in the chapter entitled “Brief History of a Pitiful Case”.
It regards the couple Oskar and Maria Gerda Ferenczy, Austrian Catholics of Jewish
origin, who emigrated from Austria after the Anschluss. Along with their daughter Manon
Gertrude, they moved to Zagreb, assisted by the Archbishop of the city, Msgr Stepinac. But in
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1939 the local authorities, already leaning toward Nazism, reject all foreign Jews, converted
or not, at the Italian border. The Ferenczys go to Opatija, in the province of Rijeka.
At the height of her misery and despair, Maria Gerda wrote her first letter to Pius XII, in
which she confessed to having sold her Bible for a piece of bread, and of her unsuccessful
search for a passport to emigrate. The documents inform us that Pius XII personally read the
letter. But, how to help the woman and her family? She had not expressed any wishes.
Monsignor Dell'Acqua was invested with this “most pitiful case” and the bishop of Fiume,
Monsignor Camozzo, was asked to take an interest in the Ferenczys. The situation worsened
at the end of 1939 when the Ferenczys risked being handed over to the German authorities
and deported to Poland.
In a second letter to the Pope, Maria Gerda begged him to avert the danger and
renewed her request for help to emigrate. Once again, Dell'Acqua was invested with the
matter and wrote a second time to Camozzo, who mysteriously had not replied to the first
letter. Now, he was ordered to ask the Italian authorities for an extended residence permit for
the Ferenczys. Inexplicably, Camozzo remained silent.
With tragic foreboding, Maria Gerda wrote a third letter to the Pope, renewing her
appeals. “From the Historical Archives,” Ickx informs us, “it emerges that the Bureau did not
stop following her case.” The situation precipitated with the arrest of Oskar Ferenczy and his
transfer to a prison in Fiume. Upon learning the news, the Vatican instructed Dell'Acqua to
prepare a letter for the Jesuit Tacchi Venturi, a privileged interlocutor of the Italian
authorities. Meanwhile, on August 7th, Ferenczy learned from the Superior of the Sisters of
Our Lady of Sion that visas for Brazil were perhaps available at the Vatican.
Maria Gerda then prayed by letter to the Pope to obtain visas for her family. The matter
once more to Dell'Acqua's attention. In the meantime, a subsidy of eight hundred liras was
sent to the Ferenczy family. But the Brazilian Embassy to the Holy See had the final say on
visas. The Bureau intervened and finally, on August 19, 1940, Cardinal Maglione was able to
tell Maria Gerda Ferenczy that the visas had been granted. The worst seemed to have been
overcome. However, once in Rio De Janeiro, the head of the family, Oskar Ferenczy, was
prevented from disembarking because his visa was deemed invalid. It was the ship's chaplain
who telegraphed the news to the Bureau, asking it to intervene. The Holy See immediately
sent a cable confirming the validity of the visas to the Brazilian authorities. Thus began a new
life for the Ferenczys.
This case is an example “of how baptized Jews found themselves literally trapped and
crushed between their two identities” since, as the racial laws became more stringent, “the
distinction between Jews and baptized Jews was lost.”
Another symbolic episode is in the chapter entitled “Brief history of a common man and
an eight-year-old girl”.
The ordinary man (according to his self-definition) was Mario Finzi, who worked in the
Bologna section of Delasem (Delegation for the Assistance of Jewish Emigrants). In August
1942, Finzi wrote directly to Pius XII, asking him to intervene with Christian charity “to save a
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poor eight-year-old creature threatened by the hatred and ferocity of men.” She was Maja
Lang, a little Yugoslavian girl who had a seventeen-year-old brother, Wladimir, who was
under house arrest in a villa owned by the real estate developer Alfonso Canova, in Sasso
Marconi. Wladimir had asked Finzi to save his little sister. The family had been arrested in
Croatia and the little girl, with an expired permit to stay in Hungary with an aunt, risked being
taken back to the Croatian border. Aware of the risks Maja was running, Finzi devised a plan
that he submitted directly to the Pope: to ensure that the child reached Italy to be reunited
with her brother Wladimir.
But, to obtain this, the Holy See would have to interact directly with the Italian Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, which could have alerted its representative in Budapest. “Holy Father, I know
that what I dare to ask of you is no small matter,” wrote Finzi to Pius XII, “but to operate in a
Christian manner in a world that in such a large part is the negation of Christ is not an easy
task for ordinary men.”
The Vatican wasted no time. Having received the necessary instructions, in January
1943, Father Tacchi Venturi succeeded in obtaining from the Italian Ministry of the Interior a
residency permit allowing little Maja and her parents to stay in Sasso Marconi. The order from
the Italian authorities appeared in time to save the life of the entire family. But, at a certain
point, the traces of little Maja are lost.
Unfortunately, Maja died in the Lager, according to the archives of Yad Vashem. “In any
case,” writes Ickx, “her case sheds light on an interesting perspective.” Namely, that “Dr Finzi
of Bologna considered Pope Pius XII the only authority still capable of successfully
intervening in such a complex and surprising humanitarian case.” Mario Finzi, a young
“common man” with a heart of gold, was arrested and deported to Auschwitz but was later
liberated before dying an early death due to an illness contracted in the Lager. The Langs
returned to Yugoslavia in 1945, eventually moving to Israel three years later. “Together with
the local heroes of Sasso Marconi, whose memory is honoured by Yad Vashem [Alfonso
Canova is amongst the “Righteous among the Nations” editor's note], and an ordinary Jew,
Mario Finzi, a victim of Nazi terror, Pius XII and the Bureau saved a family.”
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