Goldhagen
and the Pope
by
Paul Gottfried
Having
received multiple responses to a controversial
opinion about the Goldhagen-Peretz connection, allow me to
offer these rejoinders to my critics. Contrary to the statements
of one reader, I did not express any categorical rejection of
taking military action against demonstrated terrorists. What I
pointed out in my comments are the different positions that advocates
of military action have taken since September 11. One perceptive
reader rightly inferred that I do not endorse the plan being proclaimed
by neoconservative journalists for a broad campaign against all
Muslim states that are unfriendly toward neocon interests or professed
ideals. But that is not the same as opposing any application of
force in response to terrorism, as should be clear from an essay
of mine that appeared in the most recent issue of Orbis.
Another critic faulted me for ignoring the fact that while Pius
XII protected many Jews, he "was a Satan" to the Serbs.
This point is exaggerated. Certainly Pius did not call public
attention to Serbian Orthodox minorities persecuted in Croatia
and Bosnia during the Second World War. Croatian Franciscans were
among the Nazi-sympathizers who incited violence against the Serbs.
Unfortunately there is a long history of nastiness between the
Eastern and Western churches; and it is hard to tell which side
has the edge. What should be mentioned on the other side is that
Orthodox nationalists cooperated with the Nazis in Poland, Ukraine,
and Rumania and brutalized Catholics and Jews in all of these
places.
In
Communist countries, State-appointed Orthodox clergy showed the
same lack of gumption as the Jewish rabbinate in standing up to
tyrants. While the Eastern church continues to hold a grudge over
the Fourth Crusade, it is alas all too easy to ignore one’s own
group’s moral failings. In the case of American Protestants who
have converted to the Orthodox faith, and many on the right have,
it may be best to stay out of this blame game entirely. There
is no good spiritual reason for taking over European ethnic hates
together with Orthodox theology.
Moreover,
it is foolish to think that disgruntled Orthodox Christians are
going to get mileage out of Goldhagen’s brief. He is beating up
on all of Christian civilization, by recycling and expanding the
already discredited charges against Pius XII. Neither he nor Marty
Peretz could give a wrap what Pius supposedly failed to do for
persecuted members of the Orthodox Church in Croatia. And it is
hard not to notice the connection between this free-swinging attack
and the progress of the anti-anti-Communist Left. One of the unfounded
proofs that Cornwell cites of Pius’s anti-Semitism and his supposed
softness on the Nazis is that the pope was obsessively afraid
of Communist takeovers in Europe.
In
Hitler’s
Pope that statement comes up repeatedly, to demonstrate
Pius’s proto-fascist and anti-Semitic personality. Supposedly
it was impossible for someone who feared that European Communists
would profit from the Second World War or who believed that Communism
posed a danger to Christian societies to rescue the Jews from
the Nazis. Though there was indeed a greater fear of Communism
than Nazism on the interwar European right, many conservative
Christians of the time, e.g., Pius XI, all of the Habsburgs, much
of the Prussian nobility, and even the anti-Semitic Polish National
Democrats, were strongly opposed to Nazis and Communists both.
Like
his predecessor, Pius XII not only expressed distaste for both,
but, to the consternation of Cornwell and the contemporary Left,
said perfectly correct things about the Communist danger. Note
that for the anti-anti-Communist Left and for victimologist Goldhagen,
one can never be sufficiently alerted to fascist and Nazi dangers,
which always lurk in Christian hearts and societies. Nor did anyone,
with the possible exception of Communists and Communist fellow-travelers,
do enough to save Nazi victims, seeing that all believing Christians,
by virtue of their beliefs, should be killing or at least encouraging
the extermination of Jews. At the same time, the anti-anti-Communist
Left is always suggesting, there are no Communist crimes or atrocities
that nice people would bother to criticize, save perhaps for the
failure of the Soviet authorities to allow Jewish dissenters to
bake matzos or the intolerance of Stalin toward more progressive
Communists, like the Trotskyists.
In 1998 the Socialist premier of France, Bernard Jospin, performed
the most horrendous act of Holocaust denial ever carried out in
his country. But since he did so to shield his Communist coalition
partners against the charge of fronting for Communist mass-murderers,
his depiction of European Communists as honorable "anti-fascists"
did not create much of a stir. At the time both the New York
Times and Le Monde expressed sympathy for Jospin, trying
to keep his coalition together in the face of rightwing anti-Communist
sniping. In France one can still be jailed for "a crime of
opinion," thanks to the Communist-Socialist left and its
right-center look-alikes, for claiming it was the Soviets, not
the Germans, who killed the ten-thousand Polish officers found
dead in the Katyn Woods. Thanks also to the prevalent anti-fascist
moral asymmetry, the media and the academy continue to honor Stalinist
toadies, Sergei Eisenstein and Ilya Ehrenburg, as great tormented
Soviet artists. Meanwhile, although this woman has already passed
her hundredth birthday, a non-Nazi filmmaker, Leni Riefenstahl,
continues to live in public disgrace for having made two films
for Hitler.
A
final criticism cries out for response, because it is so elliptical.
It is offered by a wannabe Goldhagen defender, who claims I would
not admit that John Calvin supported the execution of Spanish
free-thinker Michael Servetus (carried out in Geneva in 1553 after
Servetus had been expelled once before). I could not imagine why
I would deny this fact, but am also unclear about how this incident
bears on anything said in my last piece. To my knowledge, neither
Calvin nor the magistrates of Geneva, who arranged for the dispatching
of Servetus, a noisy anti-Trinitarian, occupied the See of Rome.
I certainly would have opposed the act, although it did produce
one positive side-effect. Thereafter no Protestant country would
inflict the death penalty on anyone specifically for heresy. Punishing
Catholics, as in England or Ireland, for suspicion of political
disloyalty was of course another matter.
January
25, 2002
Paul
Gottfried [send him mail]
is professor of history at Elizabethtown College and author, most
recently, of the highly recommended After
Liberalism.
Copyright
2002 LewRockwell.com
Paul
Gottfried Archives
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