Sunday 28 May 2000

  How Churchill plotted to win the support of 'Hitler's Pope'
By Chris Hastings

  WINSTON CHURCHILL asked Britain's most prestigious Roman Catholic family to
lobby the Vatican during the Second World War in a bid to persuade it to
abandon its support for Adolf Hitler.
Previously undiscovered documents found by The Telegraph show that ministers
asked Lord Fitzalan, the uncle of the then Duke of Norfolk, to urge the Pope
to denounce the Nazis and support the Allied cause. The 1940 papers reveal
the frustration of the British government in the face of the Pope's refusal
to attack the fascist powers of Germany, Italy and Japan.

The discovery of the letters in the Public Records Office, south-west London,
will embarrass the Vatican, which is currently seeking to canonise Pope Pius
XII, who has been dubbed "Hitler's Pope" because of his failure to speak out
against Nazism. They also undermine the arguments of papal apologists who
claim that the Allies understood the reasons for the Pope's silence because
they appreciated he was in an impossible position.

One letter to Lord Fitzalan from Lord Halifax, the former Foreign Secretary,
contrasts the valuable contribution made by British Catholics to the war
effort with the Pope's continued silence on the issue. Lord Halifax warned
Lord Fitzalan that the Pope's policy of appeasement was leaving Catholics
outside Britain with the impression that a Europe dominated by Hitler was the
Pope's preferred outcome to the war.

He wrote: "If the Catholics of, say, Belgium, Holland and France could be
persuaded that somehow Nazism was reconcilable with their religious faith and
moral outlook, then a potentially powerful centre of resistance to Nazi plans
of domination would be removed."

Lord Halifax asked Lord Fitzalan to secure a papal denunciation of Hitler or,
failing that, a statement in praise of the Allies from another influential
Catholic body. He wrote: "It would be presumptuous in me to suggest His
Holiness should make further pronouncements or when he should do so . . .
However, Catholics everywhere need to be strengthened by authority in their
resistance to Nazi blandishments, and have their conviction of the necessity
of an Allied victory renewed or reinforced." Significantly, Lord Halifax
mentioned that he had chosen not to write to Vatican diplomatic
representatives.

The Telegraph has discovered copies of diplomatic telegrams in which the
Foreign Office, through its papal envoy, Francis D'Arcy Goldolphin Osbourne,
attacked a number of Vatican initiatives, such as the decision to ban any
mention of Germany from official radio broadcasts.

One FO note stated: "Whatever pressure may have been exercised on the
Vatican, His Majesty's Government cannot but regard the decision reached as
deplorable and one which is not consistent with the best interests of the
Vatican itself. What in the day of triumph for justice and fair-dealing will
be the feeling of Catholics the world over towards the church if it can be
said of it that after at first standing against Nazi paganism it eventually
agreed by its silence to assist in discrediting the principles upon which it
is founded?" Thousands of Catholics, including members of the clergy, were
tortured and murdered by the Nazis because of their direct opposition to
Hitler's regime.

Owen Chadwick, whose book Great Britain and the Vatican During the Second
World War remains a definitive work, said: "This is an interesting and
significant find. The letter to Lord Fitzalan is particularly valuable
because it proves that there was genuine concern about the Vatican's stance.
Some apologists for the Pope have tried to claim that the Allies hyped up
their concern in diplomatic communications because they knew Nazi spies were
reading their mail."

The current Duke of Norfolk, a prominent Catholic who is a second cousin to
Lord Fitzalan, said: "I am personally unaware of the approach to Lord
Fitzalan. You have to remember I was in the Forces at the time and would have
been busy with other things. It is not something I would like to comment on
while the debate about Pius XII is still at a very sensitive stage. The
extermination of the Jews was horrible and savage but there are those that
argue that Pius was in an impossible position."

Lord Fitzalan, a former Conservative MP and Viceroy of Ireland, died in 1947.

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