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JEWISH NEWS T-SHIRT 20300 Civic Center Dr. Southfield, Mich. 48076-4138 NAME This offer is for new subscriptions only. Cur- rent subscribers may order the T-shirt for $4.75. Allow four weeks delivery. ADDRESS CITY (Circle One) (Circle One) ZIP 1 year: $26 2 years: $46 Out of State: $29 Enclosed $ ADULT EX. LG. ADULT LARGE ADULT MED. CHILD LARGE CHILD MED. CHILD SMALL L 14 STATE J FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1988 Christ, is designated to speak for the sanctity of life." But the pope remains silent and thus, for Hochhuth, becomes "an accessory to murder." This shattering production stresses the interaction of politics, morality and religion and, according to the playwright, the influence of the last two fails at one par- ticular focal point — the silence of the pope. "A depu- ty of Chirst who sees these things and . . . wastes even one day in thought, hesitates even for an hour to lift his anguished voice in one anathema to chill the blood of every last man on earth — that Pope is . . . a criminal." Portraying the historical events, Hochhuth has a Car- dinal speak to the famous Kurt Gerstein when the Jews of Rome are besieged "under the Pope's very windows": "Now even the Pope must condemn you before the whole world! . . . You're forcing the Pope publicly to take note of those crimes . . ." But here is the pope's response to the crimes against the Jews: "We are — God knows it — blameless of the blood now be- ing spilled. As the flowers in the countryside wait beneath winter's mantle of snow for the warm breezes of spring, so the Jews must wait, praying and trusting that the hour of heavenly comfort will come. We who are assembled in Christ's name will pray . ." This near-concluding speech sounds like a dramatist's stylized, rhetorical, theological exag- geration. Surely, Hochhuth has here gone too far in his caricature of the pope — but for one historical detail: it was, in fact, an actual speech delivered by Pius XII and reprinted in the pro Vatican newspaper Osservatore Romano on October 25, 1943! Hochhuth has only substituted the word "Jews" for "Poles" in the original — just as the pope was in fact speaking of the Jews. Pope Pius could not have dissuaded Hitler from carry- ing out the Holocaust. But if Hitler was the motor, the necessary factor for the murder of the Jews, he was not sufficient for its execu- tion. It took millions of civil servants, bureaucrats, workers, soldiers, doctors and countless others to perpetrate a continent-wide crime. A significant percentage of those people not to mention the millions more who were indifferent, silent bystanders, were practicing Catholics. Papal records disclose that Vatican sources possessed the most detailed information about the deportations and mass murders almost as soon as they had begun. Had the pope in 1941 or 1942, in- structed his officials all over Europe to do what he finally charged them to do in 1944 in Hungary, more Jewish vic- tims might have been saved. Individual Catholics did rescue Jews; an estimated 4,000 priests were killed in concentration camps. The voices they heard were still, small ones inside of them. They did not hear the voice of the spiritual leader of their church — publicly silent, publicly creating a moral vacuum. Whether or not the pope grieved over the treat- ment of the Jews, his silence was taken for assent. It has been argued that the pope's principal obligation is to his own constituents. Con- The extermination apparatus argued that Europe would be made "clean of Catholics," too. cerned for the well-being of thirty million German Catholics, Pius XI signed the infamous Concordat with Hitler in 1933, Pius XII re- mained silent and appeasing for the same reasons. Perhaps, too, Nazi anti- Communism lured both pon- tiffs into silence. }hit ultimately, their political, not moral, failings rested in abandoning their own people, too. Eichmann directed Department IV-B-4 of the SS administrative bureaucracy. Section IV was the Gestapo, department B dealt with "sects," and IV-B-1 was the office in charge of Catholics. Section IV-B-4 was the office that dealt with Jews. As Hochhuth pointed out in his postscript to "The Depu- ty," Himmler, an avid student of the Jesuit order and in par- ticular of Ignatius Loyola (Hitler is reputed to have call- ed Himmler "my Loyola"), wrote, "we shall not rest un- til we have rooted out Chris- tianity." The very bureaucratic structure of the extermina- tion apparatus argued that after it became "Judenrein," Europe would be made "clean of Catholics," too. Perhaps, had the Germans been able to continue the war, after suc- cessfully disposing of Hungary's Jews, that would have been Eichmann's next task.