Chapter 15 THE VATICAN SAVES THE CATHOLIC WAR CRIMINALS OF CROATIA—ROMAN MONASTERIES AS THEIR ASYLUMS—THE CROATIAN HOLOCAUST MINIMIZED: The Vatican's Holocaust by Avro Manhattan from reformation.org
Chapter 15
THE VATICAN SAVES THE CATHOLIC WAR CRIMINALS OF CROATIA—ROMAN MONASTERIES AS THEIR ASYLUMS—THE CROATIAN HOLOCAUST MINIMIZED
Pope
Pius XII (1939-1958), who during the Second World War had secretly changed
sides, and had formulated a policy against World Communism, thus enlisting the
help of the USA as soon as the Nazi edifice began to collapse, took steps to
save many of those who had supported the Vatican before and during the War.
The top
Nazis, who had fallen into the hands of the Allies, were brought before the
Nuremberg Tribunal. Most of them were hanged. Several escaped. One of these was
Franz Von Papen, an official war criminal. Pius XII pleaded for him behind the
scene and Von Papen not only avoided death but after a few years was released.
Von Papen was the leader of the Catholic Party of Germany. At one time he had
been Chancellor. He had helped Hitler into
Therefore, when the Catholic leaders of the Catholic State of Croatia fled the country, they looked to the Vatican as a refuge. Many of them were helped in their escape by the local clergy or by ordinary Catholics. As we have already seen, Ante Pavelic, after many difficulties, managed to reach Rome where he absconded wearing the habit of a monk. When he was given a false passport and identity he sailed for South America, where he became active with the open support of the church. Minor war criminals from Croatia were received with a special cordiality, since they had one clear distinction that most other war criminals had not. The Croat refugees had supported a regime which had been inspired and blessed by the Pope. A Catholic Croatian State which, had Hitler won the war, would have become the model Catholic State of the Balkan regions.
One of the principal Catholic personalities to help Hitler into power was Franz Von Papen, leader of the Catholic Party of Germany, friend of E. Pacelli, the Papal Nuncio to Munich, later Pope Pius XII. When Chancellor of Germany, Von Papen tried to set up a Catholic-Nazi Coalition. It was he who persuaded Von Hindenburg to ask Hitler to form a Government. Once Hitler became first Chancellor of Nazi Germany, he made Von Papen his Vice-Chancellor (January 1933). Thus, the Leader of the German Catholic Party was second in command only to Hitler in Hitlerite Germany. Von Papen and Pacelli eventually negotiated for a Concordat in which Hitler pledged to support the Catholic Church, and the Catholic Church to support Hitler (June 1933). |
The
Croat refugees were given a privileged welcome by the Catholic authorities all
over Rome. They were given facilities which few had had. When the monasteries
and seminaries could no longer contain them, they were permitted to enter and
hide in several convents inhabited exclusively by nuns. At first, the sudden
increase in the number of the inmates surprised not a few people. Then, of
course, it was realized that the truth was not what it appeared to be. Innocent
observers had noticed that several so-called "nuns" were of rough
appearance, masculine demeanor and appeared to be unshaven. Then, following a
period which varied from weeks to months, the nunish populations decreased with
the suddeness with which they had originally increased. The false documents
enabled them to travel outside Italy, at which time they sailed to various
countries including Australia. The success and speed of their evacuation, and
lack of detection by certain authorities who should have known better,
indicated the efficiency of the Vatican campaign. It must not be forgotten that
many officials of the victorious government were devout Catholics. These, in
cooperation with the sundry national hierarchies, worked together to ensure the
safety of the fleeing Catholic Croat "refugees."
By the time
the Allies began to search for them, they had been dispersed out of their
reach. If many of them were still hidden somewhere in Europe, it was a
certainty that they were absconded in Catholic institutions in various
disguises and under the patronage of Catholic lay or religious authorities. The
genocide in Croatia, although of immense horror, however, did not get the
publicity which it should have. Its reality, while appreciated by the world at
large, was soon minimized. Except for those who had been personally or
collectively affected by it, it was almost forgotten by the postwar world. The
cause for such oblivion was due to various factors. First among these was the
general background of the postwar world which wished to forget the atrocities of
the conflict. But more than that, the oblivion of the Croatian massacre was
caused by the two most powerful lobbies in existence. That of the Jews and that
of the Vatican. Each competed with the other in minimizing the
General B. Mirkovich with the author. General Mirkovich played a paramount role during the Second World War, when Hitler was master of practically the whole of Europe and Great Britain stood alone. Upon Yugoslavia signing a pact with Hitler (25 March 1941), thanks to which Yugoslavia sided with Nazi Germany, General Mirkovich only two days later (27 March) overthrew the Yugoslav Government and abrogated its treaty with Hitler thus bringing Yugoslavia to the side of beleaguered England. Hitler's reaction was swift and ruthless. On the 6 April 1941 the Nazi Armies invaded Yugoslavia. The capital was bombed and the air force destroyed, thanks mainly to the treachery of Catholic Croat elements siding with the Nazis. Many Catholic lay members and clergy, mostly Croats, helped the Nazis and fought against their own Government. This they did in order to set up an independent Catholic State of Croatia once Yugoslav unify had disintegrated. As a reward for their treachery, Hitler granted the Catholic Croats autonomy under Nazi tutelage. While the rest of Yugoslavia was turned into Nazi-occupied territory, Croatia became an independent Catholic State, where the Ustashi leader, Ante Pavelic, assisted by Archbishop Stepinac and blessed by Pope Pius Xll, initiated the terrible reign of Ustashi terror.
Left to right: Avro Manhattan, the author, and Dr. Milosh Sekulich. Dr. Sekulich was the first messenger charged by the Orthodox Church of Serbia with bringing the news of the horrors then still being committed by the Ustashi to the knowledge of the Allies. Having managed to leave Nazi-occupied Yugoslavia (September 1941) he went to Turkey and then to Egypt. From there he made for the Sudan and then into the Congo, and finally to Lagos, Nigeria. After foiling an attempt to keep him there for the duration, he reached Portugal, followed by Ireland, finally reaching London. There he handed over the Appeals of the Orthodox Church and the first full documentation of the Ustashi crimes and Catholic forcible conversions. After the war Dr. Sekulich, General Mirkovich and the author held a meeting of the surviving victims of the Ustashi in London, England (20 May 1951). Amongst them was a survivor whose whole family and relatives, totaling twenty-five, had been burned alive in a barn near the village of Zijimet. He broke down while recounting the terrible scene he had witnessed. (See text and footnotes.) |
Hitler greets the Pope's Ambassador. The Vatican had been a secret, and at times even an open, if cautious, supporter of Hitler. Hitler had been helped to power by the Catholic Leader of the German Catholic Party, Franz Von Papen. When Hitler became Chancellor of Germany, be made Catholic Von Papen Vice-Chancellor, second in command in Nazi Germany only to Hitler himself. The German Catholic Party, in fact, by voting for Hitler in 1933, sent Hitler into power. Before and after then, the Vatican cooperated with the Nazis inside and outside Germany. The Catholic Hierarchy sent congratulatory greetings to Hitler and supported him fully. In this picture, there can be seen the Pope's Nuncio as he address" Hitler by saying (and of course he said it with the permission of the Pope himself), "I have not understood you for a long time. But I have worried for a long time. Today I understand you." This slogan was repeated for many years afterwards by the Vatican. The poster above urge the people—that is Catholics—to vote for Hitler at the next general elections. Many Catholic clerics supported him during the war, such as Mgr. Tiso, as mentioned elsewhere in this book. |
Croatian
victims. The first, by magnifying the number of Jewish victims of the Nazi
concentration camps; the second by saying that the Croatian victims had never
been very many, in fact that they had hardly existed. But just as anti-Semitic
forces denied the figure of the Jewish victims of the Nazi concentration camps,
to exculpate Nazi Germany, so did the Vatican follow the same tactic, to
exculpate the Catholic Croats and their supporter, the Catholic Church.
Many allies
played into the Vatican's hand by helping the minimization of the Croatian
atrocities. The most guilty were the American Catholic officers and officials,
not to mention the State Department, already working with Pope Pius XII, in
preparation for the oncoming Cold War.
The process
of "minimization" of the Croatian atrocities, curiously enough, had
started long before the end of the war. Indeed, soon after the atrocities were
reported to the Allies. The present author, sad to relate, had been one of the
earliest culprits. While broadcasting to the partisans of occupied Europe from
a secret station in England, he came across a man who had escaped from occupied
Europe specifically to report what was happening in Yugoslavia, or rather in
that part of Yugoslavia which had not been occupied by Hitler, namely in
Croatia. His name was Dr. M. Sekulich, a Serb and a member of the Orthodox
Church of Serbia. Dr. Sekulich had managed to go into occupied Greece, thanks
to the help of the Orthodox Church of Serbia which had recommended him to
members of the Greek Orthodox Church. From there he went to Turkey, and from Turkey
to Egypt. The Allies, according to him, then had helped him to sail to England.
He had been a firm supporter of Mirkovich who had been accused of having
collaborated with the Nazis. The British believed the accusation and then
became partially responsible for the execution of Mirkovich by Tito. The
accusation, it was later reported, had been made, between others, by Randolph
Churchill, the son of Winston Churchill.
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