PIUS XII POPE
Sacred College of Cardinals elect Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli Pope
The Cardinals elected Eugenio Pacelli the
262nd Pope on his sixty-third birthday, March 2,
1939. He received sixty-one out of the sixty-two
votes because he did not vote for himself, and was
elected Pontiff. After serving the Church under four Popes
(Leo XIII, St. Pius X, Benedict XV and Pius
XI) for almost two decades, on March 2,
1939 Eugenio Pacelli took the name of Pius XII and
was entrusted with the keys of supreme jurisdiction
given to the Prince of the Apostles: "Thou art Peter
and upon this rock I will build My Church" The bells
of Saint Peter's pealed on March 12, 1939, as the
eyes of countless people turned toward the balcony.
Dressed in a white cope and wearing a silver,
gem-studded mitre on his head Pope Pius XII
appeared. Cardinal Nicola Canali removed the
mitre. Cardinal Camillo Caccia-Dominioni replaced
it with the papal tiara and prayed: "Receive the tiara
adorned with the three crowns and know that you
are the Father of princes and kings, the Sovereign of
the world, and the Vicar on earth of our Savior Jesus
Christ, to Whom is honor and glory, now and forever. Amen."

Pope Pius XII wearing Papal Tiara
Pope Pius XII's coat-of-arms showed the symbol
of peace: a dove with an olive branch. His motto
indicated peace to be a fruit of justice: Opus justitiae
pax (Is. 34, 17). His first radio message to the world
was, "Peace, gift of God, desired by all upright men,
the fruit of love and justice.." He was a man of peace.
Immediately after his election, Pius XII issued a
call for a peace conference of European leaders.
Documents show that in a last minute bid to avert
bloodshed, the Pope called for a conference involving Italy, France, England, Germany and Poland.
Pius XII's peace plan was based on five points: the
defense of small nations, the right to life, disarmament, some new kind of League of Nations and a
plea for the moral principles of justice and love.
Through his public discourses, his appeals to governments, and his secret diplomacy, he was engaged
more than any other individual in the effort to avert
war and rebuild peace. His request went unheeded.
Pius XII then met with the German Cardinals
who had been present in the recent conclave, in
order to ascertain the real situation of the Church in
Nazi Germany. These meetings provided him with
direct proof and information that motivated the content of his first encyclical, Summi Pontificatus.
Dated October 20, 1939, this encyclical was a
strong attack on totalitarianism. In it, Pius XII singled out those governments, who by their deification of the state, imperiled the spirit of humanity. He
spoke about restoring the foundation of human
society to its origin in natural law, to its source in
Christ, the only true ruler of all men and women of
all nations and races.
In this encyclical Pius XII reprimanded: "What
age has been, for all its technical and purely civic
progress, more tormented than ours by spiritual
emptiness and deep-felt interior poverty?" The
world had abandoned Christ's cross for another [the
Swastika] which brings only death. The consecration of the world to Christ the King celebrates "a
penetrating wisdom which sets itself to restore and
to ennoble all human society and to promote its true
welfare." Indeed, Pius XII's encyclicals, discourses
and radio messages clearly assert that the only solid
foundation for social order is the law of God.
On the eve of World War II, the international position of the Vatican was dangerous and difficult. The
anti-Semitic decrees enacted by Mussolini in 1938 were
causing bitter conflicts between Italy and the Holy See.
As a diplomat, Pius XII saw war approaching
and instructed the papal representatives to
Germany, Italy, France, Poland and England to learn
whether mediation by the Pope would be considered. He tried to awaken in world leaders the full
realization of what they were about to do.

Pope Pius XII prays for peace
On August 24, 1939 he gave each papal representative the text of a speech asking them to convey it
to their respective governments. That evening he
read the speech to the world: "The danger is imminent, but there is still time. Nothing is lost with
peace; all can be lost with war. Let men return to
mutual understanding! Let them begin negotiations
anew, conferring with good will and with respect
for reciprocal rights..."

Pope Pius XII making radio appeal for peace
During the North African campaign a boatload
of Allied wounded arrived in Italy for hospitalization and imprisonment. A Vatican representative
boarded the boat and distributed message forms
among the soldiers who immediately filled, signed
and addressed them. Within weeks after their capture the families of these American soldiers received
information sent airmail by the Vatican to the
United States. A wounded son of an Episcopalian
family in Washington, DC, was listed by the War
Department as missing, because the Nazis had
failed to report him to the International Red Cross as
captured. The soldier was convalescing in a hospital
in Italy, where a Vatican official found him. A Baptist
family in Kansas, as an expression of gratitude for
news that their son was a war prisoner and not
dead, sent the Holy Father their weekly tithe of
twenty-two dollars. Communicating with their families, the Vatican described details of injuries,
deaths, internment, and photographs of the resting-
place or turned over to the office of the American
charge d'affaires the belongings of soldiers. This was
a sad, yet consoling work of mercy.

Requests for information from every country in the world
On September 1, 1939, Nazi tanks crossed the
Polish border. This was the beginning of World War II.
In his encyclical, Summi Pontificatus (October 27, 1939),
Pius XII condemned Hitler's actions. On December 28,
1939, the Pope paid a ceremonial call on King Victor
Emmanuel Ill and Queen Elena at the Quirinal Palace.
The visit was to return that made by the King and
Queen a week earlier, and also to demonstrate the
Vatican's support of Italy's neutrality
Historical records show that Pius XII acted as
a link to the British government for a number of
German dissidents desiring to overthrow Hitler.
The Pope went beyond his usual caution, and
maintained these contacts until the German
invasion of Denmark and Norway in April 1940.
The following month, when the Germans invaded the Low Countries, the Pope sent telegrams to
the leaders of these besieged nations with his
prayers for their deliverance. Soon after,
Mussolini joined Hitler. When Nazis occupied
Rome in September 1943, the Pope endeavored
to save as many Jews as possible. He immediately issued directives to all convents and monasteries to open their doors to protect Jews.
Meanwhile, Pope Pius XII invited Jews and other
refugees to join the Vatican Palatine Guards. In a
few months, their number increased from four
hundred to four thousand.
Everywhere in Europe, persecuted people, the
Jews especially, appealed to Pius XII. When some
five hundred Jews embarked at Bratislava on a
steamer for Palestine, their ship tried to enter the
seaport of Istanbul, but was refused permission to
land. Captured by an Italian patrol boat, the Jews
were imprisoned in a camp at Rhodes. One of the
prisoners managed to appeal to Pius XII for help.
Thanks to the Pope's intervention, unknown to the
Axis, the refugees were transferred to an improvised camp (Ferramonti- Tarsia) in Southern Italy,
where they were found safe three years later, in December 1943.
Pius XII's pontificate left a lasting mark
on the history of the Catholic Church.
His life was one of action, inspired by
profound piety. Understanding the weaknesses of
humanity, the Pope brought consolation, peace and
encouragement everywhere. Striving to bring men
closer to Christ, Pius XII instituted numerous liturgical reforms: the evening Mass, the new Eucharistic
fast regulations and increased lay participation in
liturgical functions. The Eucharistic Liturgy was the
source from which Pius XII drew strength and
wisdom to lead the world.
Pius XII has been called the "Pope of Mary" for
his great devotion to the Mother of God, evidenced
in the infallible definition of the Assumption. In his
prayer to Our Lady of the Assumption, Pius XII
asked her to turn her eyes "toward this world, held
in the clutch of wars, persecutions, oppression of the
just and the weak. And from the shadows of this vale
of tears, we seek in your heavenly assistance and
tender mercy comfort for our aching hearts and help
in the trials of the Church, and of our fatherland.
Comforted by our faith in future resurrection, we
look to you, our life, our sweetness and our hope."
The consecration of Russia and of the whole world to
the Immaculate Heart of Mary, the solemn proclaiming of the Marian Year, the institution of the feast of
the Queenship of Mary, and the proclamation of the
Centenary of the Apparitions of Our Blessed Lady to
St. Bernadette were also made by Pius XII.
Even as a young man, Eugenio Pacelli showed
interest and concern in nature and for all God's creatures. This affinity continued when he became Pope.
At the farm in Castelgandolfo, he would walk about
simply enjoying the presence of the animals, especially the sheep, which he often gently touched.
Later, when he was in the Vatican he would take
brisk walks each day beneath the cypresses and
pines, pausing to admire the beautiful flowers in the
Vatican gardens.

Pope Pius XII pets sheep at Castelgandolfo
Though as Pope he would usually eat his meals
alone, that changed somewhat one day after the
papal gardener found a helpless bird, which had
been injured in the garden. Knowing the Pontiff's
love for nature, the gardener brought the bird to his
apartment. Pacelli was fascinated, helped nurse the
bird back to health and decided to keep it in his
apartment. He named her Gretel. As soon as she
was fully recovered, she was given several companions. While the Pope ate, the birds were released
from their cages. Twittering, the birds would perch
on his shoulder or on the table where they had their
own small dishes of seeds. Thereafter at mealtime
he was vicariously back in the natural world he
knew in the summers of his youth.

Pius XII blended casualness with dignity and
many times ignored Vatican protocol during the
papal audiences. The story goes that, on some occasions, people filled with repentance would tremblingly ask to go to confession. Always a priest and
aware of divine grace at work, the Holy Father never
failed to step to a corner with the penitent sinner and
grant him absolution, while others waited in awe.
Pope Pius XII at Various Audiences
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In those days, women admitted to a papal audience had to wear long-sleeved, high-necked black
dresses with a mantilla and a veil. A young woman
newspaper correspondent during World War II was
in a hurry, so her male companions smuggled her
past guards to the great Consistorial Hall where the
Pope would receive them. But when instructed to
form a circle, the conspirators were forced to expose
the young lady. As the guards were rushing her
away, the Pope entered and signaled them to let her
stay. He repaid her brashness with the gentle comment: "Ah, we see you are an American."
Screening for a general audience was not very
intense. In fact, many ladies were not aware they
had to dress according to protocol. One day, when
asked to kneel, a young girl in culottes and wedgies
and harlequin glasses refused. "I got a coat on - isn't
that enough? I'm not a Catholic! Why should I
kneel?" Everyone was embarrassed.
As the Pope arrived, the girl continued to abuse the
guards. Suddenly the scene changed. The Pope
approached her gently; she burst into tears on her knees.
He comforted her and stretched forth his hands to raise
her up, but she shook her head and begged his blessing.
Pope Pius XII blessed her and the rest of the assemblage.
A few days after the liberation of Rome,
Lieutenant General Mark Clark, Commander of the
Fifth Allied Army, paid his respects to the Pope: "I
am afraid you have been disturbed by the noise of
my tanks. I am sorry." Pius XII smiled and replied:
"General, any time you come to liberate Rome, you
can make just as much noise as you like."
Leo Longanesi, a renowned Italian journalist and
publisher, was indignant over the anticlerical campaigns against the Church. One day he suggested to
the Pope that a particular day be designated when all
Italian newspapers in Italy would print the full story
about the charitable works of the Church during
World War II. Pius XII responded: "Only God must
be testimony to what is done for our neighbor!"
Although Pius XII would not publicize his own
good deeds, others have. It suffices to mention a
recent story which is part of the official Italian war
record (
International Herald Tribune, October 22,
2001). This information is one of the many examples
of Pius XII's actions on behalf of Jewish refugees.
From 1943 to 1945, Leonardo Marinelli was a
commander in the Royal Finance Guard in the
Aprica internment camp, located in northern Italy.
His Diary records an entry for September 12, 1943.
The Pope sent Giuseppe Carozzi, a young Italian
priest to Marinelli requesting that 300 Jewish
Yugoslav internees be given permits to Switzerland.
Despite strict Nazi orders forbidding Jews, prisoners of war, or anyone who had not joined
Mussolini's northern Italian puppet Republic of
Salo from crossing the border, Marinelli complied
with the Pope's wishes. During the next four days as
the group crossed the border, guards were seen
"carrying bags for some of the fugitives."
Later, Marinelli himself was placed in an internment camp by the Nazis. He escaped. In his testimony to the Finance Guard high command in July
1945, Marinelli confirmed what he had written in
his Diary.
Pius XII reaffirmed the rights of the family, the
rights of parents to supervise their children's education, and the rights of conscience, stressing the fundamental unity of all mankind under the fatherhood
of God.
When there was danger that Rome would be
involved in serious fighting between the Allied and
German troops, the Pope went to the Church of
Saint Ignatius Loyola. He remained on his knees
throughout the night, praying before the sacred
image of the
Madonna del Divino Amore. Joining
the Pontiff as he prayed for peace were the clergy
and faithful of Rome. The city of Rome was saved!
Pius XII was a minister of peace in a warring
world. When he was told that Stalin inquired about
the number of divisions in his army, he said: "You
may tell my son Joseph he will meet my divisions in
heaven." That was Pacelli's secret. Even of Stalin he
could say "my son." And mean it. He spoke many
languages, but the only language that inspired others, was the language of his heart.
Claims that Pope Pius XII never instructed religious to protect Jews during the war, are contradicted by the Chief Rabbi of Rome, Israel Anton
Zolli.
Israel Zolli, the Chief Rabbi of Rome, was converted to Catholicism
Israel Zoller was born in Brodj, Galizia, on
September 17, 1881. His family name was italianized to Zolli. They were Polish Jews and had been
Rabbis for four centuries. In 1920 Israel was named
Rabbi of Trieste which then belonged to the
Austrian-Hungarian Empire. He also held the
Hebrew Language and Literature Chair at the
University of Padova. In 1940 he was deprived of
this position by the Fascists and sent to Rome as
Chief Rabbi.
The American Hebrew in New York published an
interview with Rabbi Zolli on July 14, 1944. Having
been hidden in the Vatican during the German occupation of Rome, he emphatically stated: "The
Vatican has always helped the Jews and the Jews are
very grateful for the charitable work of the Vatican,
all done without distinction of race."
After the war, Rabbi Zolli converted to
Catholicism and wrote his memoirs,
Before the Dawn
(1954), claiming to have witnessed a vision of
Christ, who called him to the faith. The voice he
heard said: "You are here for the last time." It was
Yom Kippur.
Zolli devoted an entire chapter in his memoirs to
the German occupation of Rome and praised the
Pope's leadership: "... The people of Rome loathed
the Nazis and had intense pity for the Jews. They
willingly assisted in the evacuation of the Jewish
population into remote villages, where they were
concealed and protected by Christian families.
Christian families in the heart of Rome accepted
Jews. There was money in the treasury for the support of destitute refugees thus hidden. The Holy
Father sent by hand a letter to the bishops instructing them to lift the enclosure from convents and
monasteries, so that they could become refuges for
the Jews. I know of one convent where the Sisters
slept in the basement, giving up their beds to Jewish
refugees. In face of this charity, the fate of so many
of the persecuted is especially tragic."
Refugees in makeshift shelter at Castelgandolfo
Rabbi Zolli is the most important non-Catholic
witness to the role of Pius XII in wartime Italy during the Nazi occupation and persecution of Jews. A
biblical scholar whose courage and integrity cannot
be challenged, Zolli was hidden in the Vatican. His
wife and his twenty-year-old daughter Miriam were
hidden in a convent. They were eye-witnesses of the
deportation of Rome's Jews by the Gestapo in 1943.
Zolli asked to be received by the Pope. The
meeting with Pius XII took place on July 25, 1944.
Notes by Vatican Secretary of State Giovanni
Battista Montini confirm the fact that on July 23
Rabbi Zolli addressed the Jewish Community in
the Synagogue and publicly thanked the Holy
Father for all he did to save the Jewish Community
of Rome. His talk was transmitted by radio. On
February 13, 1945, Rabbi Zolli was baptized by
Rome's Auxiliary Bishop Luigi Traglia in the
Church of Santa Maria degli Angeli. Present for the
ceremony was Father Agostino Bea, the Pope's
confessor and future protagonist during the
Council with regard to the dialog between religions. In gratitude to Pius XII, Israel Zolli took the
name, Eugenio. A year later his wife and daughter
were also baptized.
Miriam recalls the prophetic words of her
father about Pope Pius XII: "You will see, they will
blame Pope Pius XII for the world's silence in the
face of the Nazis' crimes!" She insists that her
father never abandoned his Judaism: "He felt he
was a Jew who had come to believe in the Jewish
Messiah."
In his book,
Antisemitismo, Rabbi Zolli states:
"World Jewry owes a great debt of gratitude to Pius
XII for his repeated and pressing appeals for justice
on behalf of the Jews and, when these did not prevail, for his strong protests against evil laws and
procedures."
Zolli, who found shelter in the Vatican during
the war stated: "No hero in all of history was more
militant, more fought against, none more heroic
than Pius XII in pursuing the work of true charity!...and this on behalf of all the suffering children of
God."
Throughout his papacy. Pope Pius XII was
almost universally, regarded as a saintly man, a
scholar, a man of peace, a tower of strength, and a
compassionate defender and protector of all victims
of the war and genocide that had drenched Europe
in blood. At the end of the war Western nations paid
tribute to his efforts on behalf of the oppressed.
When Pius XII died, Jews praised him for his help
and were among the first to express sorrow and
gratitude for his solicitude during the Holocaust.
Pope Pius Lying in state at Castelgandolfo
Documentary evidence and the testimony of his
contemporaries prove that Pius XII was a committed defender and protector of the victims of war and
hatred which drenched Europe in blood. Pius XII
ordered the Congregation of the Holy Office to issue
a formal and explicit condemnation of the mass
murder going on in Germany in the name of
improving the race. The decree was published on
December 6, 1940, in
L'Osservatore Romano. At the
end of World War II, western nations paid tribute to
Pius XII's efforts on behalf of the oppressed. When
he died in 1958, the Jewish communities of Europe
praised him for his help and expressed sorrow and
gratitude for his solicitude during the Holocaust. In
the 1960s, there began a campaign of vilification
against Pius XII. Today, his detractors continue to
claim that he lacked courage, human compassion
and a sense of moral rectitude. Hostile attacks by the
media replace the historical record that showed him
as a great leader.
Immediately after his death, the
world at large proclaimed Pope Pius XII worthy of the title, Saint.
Referring to Pius XII's sanctity in his letter to Margherita
Marchione (February 22, 2001), Bernard Tiffany quoted the following letter
from Padre Pio's secretary, Reverend Dominic Meyer, OFM, Cap.: "Padre Pio
told me he saw the Pope in Heaven during his Mass. And many miracles have
been attributed to His intercession in various parts of the world. Pictures
of the Pope have been printed with a prayer for His beatification. But so
far I have not seen any with the prayer in English (June 30, 1959)."
In his Diario, one finds a confirmation of the above statement.
When Pius XII died on October 9, 1958, Padre Pio was consoled "by a vision
of the former pontiff in his heavenly home," according to Padre Agostino. A
more recent confirmation of this event comes from Pius XII's niece,
Marchesina Elena Rossignani Pacelli, to whom Padre Pio repeated the same
words. On May 19, 2002, Elena Pacelli confirmed this statement.

