| |
 |
|
Chapter 3
|
|
|
THE BIRTH OF A MONSTER: THE INDEPENDENT CATHOLIC
STATE OF CROATIA
By Avro Manhattan
|
The Yugoslavs were stunned. But not for long. Two
days later, on March 27, 1941, an anti-Nazi coup d'etat,
carried out by General Mirkovic, unsaddled the pro-Nazi Yugoslav
Government. While the rest of Yugoslavia celebrated the event in Zagreb,
circulars, full of threats, were found on the doors of Serbs. Pavelic,
who only a few days before had been relegated to the background,
suddenly found himself the centre of feverish activities. Orders were
conveyed to all the Ustashi, inside and outside Yugoslavia, to be ready
for action. Ustashi leaders from Germany and Italy moved at speed
towards the Yugoslav frontier. The German Army moved with them. On April
6, 1941, Hitler attacked the Yugoslav Kingdom.
Many of Pavelic's followers joined the Nazi invaders;
others directed their arms against Yugoslavia; still others turned plain
traitors—e.g. Colonel Kren, an active fanatic, a secret member of
Pavelic's army, an Ustashi who flew from Belgrade airdrome to give the
Nazi Air Force the secret location of all Yugoslav aircraft, with the
result that the Yugoslav war planes were destroyed on the ground by Nazi
bombers, which Kren directed. Thanks to Ustashi Kren's action, the whole
of the Yugoslav Air Force was thus annihilated in one single blow.
While Belgrade was still burning after the Nazi air
raids, Ante Pavelic addressed the Croats by radio: "Croat soldiers,"
were his words, "use all your weapons against all the Serbian soldiers
and officers. We are already fighting shoulder to shoulder with our new
Allies, the Germans and the Italians."
On April 7 the Yugoslav Government left Belgrade for
Montenegro. Two days later, on April 9, Vladko Macek, its
Vice-President, in his turn deserted it. Macek was a Croat, a Catholic,
and the leader of the Catholic Croat Peasant Party. Yet this individual,
while acting as the leader of that Party, and, indeed, as Vice-President
of the Yugoslav Government, was simultaneously plotting with Fascist
Italy for the disintegration of his country. As early as 1939 Macek had,
in fact, established contact with Mussolini, who had agreed to pay him
20 million diners to finance his bold Separatist plot—that is, to
destroy Yugoslavia in order to set up a Catholic Fascist State of
Croatia, as was subsequently disclosed by none other than the Fascist
Foreign Minister, Count Ciano.[1]
The Minister of Commerce, another Catholic, followed
Macek's example, soon imitated by a third Minister, who treacherously
and for a long time had been a secret member, not only of the Ustashi,
but also of Nazi Intelligence. He was, in fact, a liaison with the main
Nazi Intelligence Agent in Yugoslavia, D. Tomljenovitch, former Austrian
officer and a Catholic, to whom he passed details of all the secret
deliberations on defense which took place in the Yugoslav Cabinet, of
which he was a member.
Following all this, while Slavko Kvaternik, having
arrived in Zagreb from Italy, announced the formation of the Independent
State of Croatia, Macek incited his followers to recognize the New
State: "I invite all the members of the Peasant Party of Croatia to
recognize the change, to help the New Croatia, and, above all, loyally
to obey all its laws."[2]
Within a few days all the secret members of
Pavelic's Catholic terrorist organization within the civil
administration and the Yugoslav Army came to the fore, working havoc
wherever they appeared; and this to such an extent that they quickly
succeeded in paralyzing the prosecution of the war against Hitler.
Standing in sinister prominence among them all, the
Ustashi initiated vigorous fighting in the rear of the Yugoslav units;
while others within the Yugoslav Army carried out fifth-column
activities to such an extent that nothing could be done according to
plan. Ustashi officers like Colonel Kren fled to the Germans, to whom
they disclosed vital military information. Units of Macek's "Peasant
Guard" immediately became Ustashi units and disarmed units of the
Yugoslav Army. The widespread disorganization created by Catholic
extremists was such that it turned out to be one of the paramount
factors enabling the swift Nazi conquest of Yugoslavia.
This was confirmed by Lorkovitch, Minister of the
Foreign Affairs of the Independent State of Croatia, in full Parliament
(February, 1942):
It was thanks to the support of the Croat people
and of the Croat revolution, which have shortened the duration of
the war in Yugoslavia, greatly reduced the losses of the Germans and
Italians, and permitted, at the Eastern frontier of Serbia, the
death-blow to be given to Yugoslavia.[3]
The promotion of such a large treacherous body within
the country would have been impossible without the active cooperation of
the Catholic Church. Pavelic's terrorist bands, the Ustashi, had been
morally and financially encouraged and supported by her. Indeed, their
backbone had been formed by priests, monks, and even bishops.
Monasteries had been used as the clandestine headquarters of the Ustashi
long before the Nazi attack. Secret separatist and military activities
had been disguised for years under the cloak of religion. The Catholic
priesthood in Croatia, Herzegovina, and Dalmatia had repeatedly convoked
so-called Eucharistic Congresses which in reality were for extremist
political purposes (e.g. those held in Pozega as late as 1940, under the
fictitious name of Mary's Congregation). The sundry semi-military,
illegal terrorist movements were likewise screened by the mantle of
religion. Most of them were affiliated with Catholic organizations under
the direct supervision of Catholic Action, which was strictly controlled
by the Catholic Hierarchy—e.g. the Brotherhood of the Crusaders, with
about 540 societies and 30,000 members; the Sisterhood of the Crusaders,
with 452 societies and 19,000 members; the Catholic Student
Associations, Domagoj, and such like.
Most of the members of such religious organizations
were active in sabotage, acts of terrorism, and a good number of them
even participated in the treacherous disarming of the Yugoslav Army
following Hitler's attack. As soon as they came into the open, many of
them appeared transformed into Ustashi authorities, functionaries in
Ustashi commissions, heads of district councils, or even of
concentration camps. The President of the Great Crusaders' Brotherhood,
Dr. Feliks Niedzelski, was nominated Ustashi Vice-Governor of Bosnia and
administrative head for the Ustashi youth, while Father Grga Peinovic,
also a director of Catholic Crusaders, was appointed President of the
Ustashi Central Propaganda Office.[4]
Many of the priests of the Crusaders'
Brotherhood and of Catholic Action took or
 |
|
Archbishop Stepinac, Head of the Croatian
Hierarchy, welcomes Ante Pavelic at the opening of the
Ustashi Government in Zagreb, February 23, 1942. Stepinac was a steady, zealous and
efficient partner of Pavelic's Dictatorship. He supported
the Ustashi Government from the beginning until the end.
Indeed, even after Ustashi Croatia collapsed following
thedisintegration of Nazi Germany. Stepinac was not
only the Head of the Council |
|
of Croatian Bishops and of the Committee which
carried out a policy of forcible conversions, he was none
other than the Supreme Military Apostolic Vicar of the Ustashi Army.
|
When Ustashi Croatia fell in 1945 as a
result of the defeat of Nazi Germany and Pavelic had to run
for his life, Archbishop Stepinac, in a vain effort to save
the Regime, succeeded him as Head of Ustashi Croatia.
Stepinac ordered special ceremonies in all
the Catholic churches on Pavelic's birthday, and he
frequently invoked the blessing of God upon the Ustashi. |
gave military training, or were sworn officers of the
Ustashi formations—e.g. Father Radoslav Cilavas, a Franciscan monk, who
on April 10 and 11, 1941, disarmed the local gendarmerie, captured the
Post Office, and drew local plans to prevent the mobilization of the
Yugoslav Army; or Father Chaplain Ivan Miletic, who, in collaboration
with the Nazis, led bands of guerrillas against the Yugoslav Government.
In Herzegovina the centre of the Ustashi movement was located in the
Franciscan monastery and in the high school of Siroki Brijeg.
On the same day as the German Army had entered the
capital of Croatia, one of the chief Ustashi leaders, Kvaternik,
proclaimed the Independent State of Croatia (April 10, 1941), and, while
fighting between the Germans and the Yugoslav Army was still going on in
the Bosnian mountains, Archbishop Stepinac called on the leader of the
Ustashi and urged all Croats to support the New Catholic State. On that
very day the newspapers of Zagreb carried announcements to the effect
that all Serbian Orthodox residents of the new Catholic capital must
vacate the city within twelve hours, and that anyone found harbouring an
Orthodox would immediately be executed. On April 13 Ante Pavelic reached
Zagreb from Italy. On the 14th Archbishop Stepinac went personally to
meet him and to congratulate him on the fulfillment of his life-work.
What was Pavelic's life-work? The creation of perhaps the most ruthless
Fascist tyranny ever to dishonour Europe.
The establishment of Pavelic's dictatorship was rapid,
efficient, and ruthless. Immediately on his return he reorganized the
Ustashi throughout the New State by setting up local branches, known by
the names of Stozer, Logor, Tabor, and Zbir, through which he initiated
a veritable reign of terror. The objective of his systematic crimes of
murder, torture, pillage, and wholesale massacre was nothing less than
the total extermination of all non-Catholic, anti-Fascist elements in
the New State.
Simultaneously with the reorganization of the Ustashi,
Pavelic set up a political body modeled on the Nazi Gestapo and on the
Fascist OVRA, called Ustashka Nadzorna Sluzba (Ustashi Supervisory
Service), which exercised absolute control over the whole population.
This Ustashi Gestapo was composed of thirteen different types of police:
Ustashi Police; Intelligence Service; Defense Police; Security
 |
|
At the opening of the Ustashi
Parliament, Archbishop Stepinac, after offering special
prayers to God in a ceremony in the Cathedral, ordered the
singing of a solemn Te Deum, as thanks to the Almighty for
the establishment of the Ustashi Dictatorship.
|
|
On April 13, 1941, Pavelic
reached Zagreb. On the 14th, Archbishop Stepinac blessed
him.
|
At Easter, 1941, Stepinac
solemnly announced from Zagreb Cathedral the establishment
of the Independent State of Croatia.
On April 28, 1941, he issued
a Pastoral Letter, ordering the Croatian clergy to support
the new Ustashi State.
On June 28, 1941, Stepinac,
with other Bishops, visited Pavelic. After promising total
cooperation with him, Stepinac prayed for him. "We implore
the Lord of the Stars to give his divine blessings to you,
the leader of our people," were Stepinac's words.
In the photograph, Stepinac
accompanies Pavelic to the Cathedral steps after having
prayed for him and for the Ustashi. |
Service; Supreme Office for Public Order and Security;
County Police; Gendarmerie; Military Police; Defense Squads; Security
Service of the Poglavnik, a body-guard; Reserve Gendarmerie; Police
Guard; and Industrial Police. Parallel with this, Pavelic set up courts
extraordinary, entitled Prijeke Sud; Pokretni Prijeki Sud (Mobile
Courts); Izvanredni Narodni Sud (People's Court Extraordinary); and
Veliki Izvanredni Narodni Sud (Grand People's Court Extraordinary).
These courts, thirty-four in number, passed sentences after a procedure
which did not offer the defendant any possibility of defense. The
judges, all sworn Ustashi, condemned without examination of the charge,
on the basis of collective responsibility. The courts could
pronounce only death sentences, against which no appeal was allowed.
In addition to passing special legislation against
anyone who refused to accept the New Croatia, to permit police
organizations to arrest, deport, and execute at will, special tribunals
to condemn to death on the flimsiest of pretexts, and, indeed, to
mobilize the whole machinery of the State for legalized terror, Pavelic
terrorized by means of a Statutory Order "For the direction of the
Undesirable and Dangerous Persons to Compulsory Detention in
Concentration Camps," dated September 25, 1941. In virtue of this, the
Ustashi Supervisory Police could at will send "any undesirable persons
dangerous to public order...to compulsory detention in concentration
camps" (pares. I and 3). No appeal was allowed against any such
decisions.
Within the briefest of periods, Pavelic and his
Ustashi had become the arbiters of the freedom, the life, and the death
of all men, women, and children in the New State of Croatia, which in a
matter of weeks was thus converted into the most ruthless Fascist State
in the world, including Nazi Germany. Yet what was the attitude of the
Catholic Church when faced by such an abominable transformation? The
Catholic Church, represented by the Hierarchy and the Catholic Press,
following Stepinac's example, promptly initiated a feverish campaign of
praise for Pavelic and Hitler. A leader of the Crusaders wrote:
"God, who directs the destiny of nations and
controls the hearts of Kings, has given us Ante Pavelic and moved
the leader of a friendly and allied people, Adolf Hitler, to use his
victorious troops to disperse our oppressors and enable us to create
an Independent State of Croatia. Glory be to God, our gratitude to
Adolph Hitler, and infinite loyalty to chief Ante Pavelic."[5]
A few days later, on April 28, 1941, Stepinac issued a
pastoral letter, asking the whole Croatian clergy to support and defend
the New Catholic State of Croatia.
At Easter, 1941, Stepinac announced from the Cathedral
of Zagreb the establishment of the Independent State of Croatia, thus
giving the solemn sanction of Church and Vatican to Pavelic's work. On
June 28, 1941, Stepinac, with other bishops, went to see Pavelic. After
promising the wholehearted cooperation of the entire Hierarchy, the
Archbishop solemnly blessed Pavelic, as the leader of the Croatian
people: "While we greet you cordially as head of the Independent State
of Croatia, we implore the Lord of the Stars to give his divine
blessings to you, the leader of our people." Pavelic, it should be
remembered, was the same man who had been sentenced to death for
political assassinations: once by the Yugoslav courts, and once by the
French, for the murders of King Alexander and the French Foreign
Minister, Barthou.
In his hour of triumph Pavelic did not forget that all
those who had helped the birth of a strong united Yugoslavia had
contributed to the death of the Catholic Austro-Hungarian Empire, the
political pet gendarme of the Vatican, and, significantly enough, as a
belated tribute to the old Austrian-Vatican alliance in the Balkans, he
ordered the confiscation of the real property of "any persons who had
volunteered with the Allies against Catholic Austria-Hungary during the
First World War" (Statutory Order, dated April 18, 1941).
This last move, like numerous others of a more
tyrannical character, was followed with fascination by the Vatican,
where the murderer of King Alexander came to be regarded as a great
Catholic hero, blessed by none other than Pope Pius Xll himself, who
bestowed his paternal protection upon him and the New Croatian State.
That was not enough. Pius Xll, that holiest of all modern Popes, spun
some of the most unholy diplomatic webs, with the specific object of
bestowing upon the political creatures of the devout regicide Pavelic
some kind of a king. For to the Catholic Church kings are, next to
Catholic dictators, still her most cherished political dodos.
 |
|
At a Ustashi Meeting. (From right to left)
Archbishop Stepinac; General Roata, Commander of the Fascist
forces of occupation in Yugoslavia; Field Marsbai Slavio
Kvaternik; and the Commander of the German forces of
occupation in Croatia. As Supreme Military Apostolic Vicar of the Ustashi Army, Archbishop Stepinac
participated in military |
|
and political functions, mingling with the Fascist, Nazi and Ustashi Commanders.
|
At one time Stepinac directed Ustashi
guerrillas following Pavelic's flight. He established
contacts and coordinated the scattered Ustashi bands,
directing priests and monks to act as liaison with them.
When, finally, on November 8, 1945,
Ustashi Croatia disintegrated, Slepinac reconsecrated the
Ustashi Crusaders' force with a fiat in his own Chapel.
After which he received "a pledge from Ustashi
intellectuals" to fight to the end for the liberator of
Ustashi Croatia.
He was in constant contact with the
Ustashi detachments raiding Orthodox villages and towns.
Also with the Nazi occupational forces in and outside
Croatia.
 |
|
Ante Pavelic, the inspirer,
creator and leader of the independent Catholic State of
Croatia. He employed terrorism, political extremism and
religious fanaticism with such ruthlessness as to outsmart
even his two main Fascist protectors, Benito Mussolini and
Adolf Hitler. He was the brains behind the assassination of
King Alexander and other political murders which
preceded the disintegration of Yugoslavia and thus
the erection of his super-Nazi, super-Catholic independent Ustashi
Croatia. He |
|
Enjoyed the protection of Pope Pius XII,
who helped him via diplomatic and monetary means to achieve
his ultimate objective. |
When Ustashi Croatia
collapsed, Pavelic hid at the Vatican, then, disguised as a
monk, fled to the Argentine where he set up an Ustashi
Government, waiting for "the Day." Sundry Catholic
hierarchies openly helped him in exile. Pre-war acts of
terrorism were begun anew. Pavelic became the victim of a
murder attempt himself. He died shortly before and after the
deaths of his two main ecclesiastical supporters, Pope Pius
XII and Cardinal Stepinac, still dreaming of resurrecting
anew Catholic Ustashi Croatia. |
The throne of Croatia had originally been
assigned to the scion of the Hapsburgs—i.e. Otto. As, however, Hitler
suffered from anti-Hapsburg phobia, plans had to be somewhat modified.
Otto had to be discarded. A feverish exploration amid the remaining
forlorn royal crowned heads of Nazified Europe was speedily initiated.
The new King's paramount virtue had to be a very obvious one: he must be
persona grata to the Fuehrer. Catholic Providence, which has
always provided the Vatican with an uninterrupted shower of Peter's
pence—or, to be more up-to-date, with an ever-increasing shower of
Peter's dollars—again proved that her cornucopia could still supply a
mankind confused by all the errors of republicanism with that
increasingly rare commodity: kings. Now kings have become very rare and,
in fact, exceptional. Hence the need for an exceptional man to carry out
an exceptional commission. The man: Pope Pius Xll.
Pius XII had been the recipient of portents—that is,
of phenomena with which only saints, it is said, are privileged. This
even though such phenomena as a rule occur after death, and always when
a rational scrutiny of the miracles has become impossible. During the
Conclave of 1939, convened to elect a new Pope, Cardinal Pacelli was
visited by Pius X in person. Pius X announced that the next Pontiff
would be him, Pacelli. It was a miracle. It must have been, for Pius X
had died almost three decades earlier. Pacelli was indeed elected Pope.
The fact that he cast his own vote for himself did not really affect the
issue. Pacelli became Pope Pius XII, choosing the name of Pius in honour
of Pius X.
[6]
Ten years later, in 1950, Pius XII, after patient
years of self-canonization, saw the sun zig-zag in the sky of Rome. Not
once, it must be noted, but on three successive days. As if this were
not enough, the very Mother of God appeared to him, within the convulsed
sphere, "in a spectacle of celestial movements in transmission of mute
but eloquent messages to the Vicar of Christ."[7]
It was not difficult for so extra-holy a successor of St. Peter,
therefore, to find a worthy king. The fact that Pius XII had to conduct
down-to-earth secret, hard bargaining with Mussolini was discreetly
hushed up. The chosen one? Victor Emanuel, King of Italy, whom Pius XII
himself not long before had blessed as "the august and wise Emperor of
Ethiopia,"[8]
following Fascist Italy's ruthless
 |
|
Pope Pius XII (1939-1958) was a brilliant
diplomat, a cunning politician. These characteristics made
of him one of the paramount personalities of our times. A
match for his fellow Fascist and Communist Dictators. He,
more than anybody else outside Germany, helped Hitler to
power. This he did by steering the German Catholic Party,
and top Catholic leaders, to support the Fuehrer.
|
|
Pius' pet obsession was Communism. After
World War 1, he allied the Church with Italian, Spanish and
German Fascism, and with the USA after World War 11. He
became the main instigator of the Cold War that followed.
|
Besides being ruthless in political
matters, he was unscrupulous in religious ones. He
self-sanctified himself with alleged miracles. He claimed
that the Virgin Mary worked a miracle personally for him,
alone. He claimed also that none other than Jesus Christ
himself visited and spoke to him.
He practiced nepotism, that is, the
granting of undeserved titles, riches and privileges to his
own family.
He was a paranoiac, on a par with Hitler
and Stalin. He transformed the Catholic Church into a global
political instrument, using the Catholic masses as gullible
expendable pawns in his own ideological gambles. |
conquest of Coptic Abyssinia, where Fascism and
Catholicism were jointly to implant Catholic-Fascist civilization. King
Victor, although physically a midget, was a very brave man. He was
already resignedly suffering under the weight of two crowns: the kingly
crown of Italy and the Imperial crown of Abyssinia. The idea of a third,
that of Croatia, fired him with the most admirable democratic conviction
that three crowns upon the head of one single man might be considered by
envious masses as a genuine social injustice. So Victor, for the first
time in his life, took a decision. To the chagrin of that most virtuous
trinity, Pope, Duce, and Pavelic, he shouted an immortal ditty, "Now
then, that's truly much to much, even for me" and refused. Following a
moment of bewilderment, and hasty confabulations with the other two
members of the trio, Pius Xll, thanks to a supernatural hint, found a
priceless substitute: the cousin of Victor, the Duke of Spoleto.
The life of a mere Duke nowadays is somewhat dull. The
Duke of Spoleto, although a mere Duke, was born with above-average ducal
ambition. Hence, when political fortune blew his way, he seized her
tightly by the hair. Having first made quite sure that the somewhat
moody Austrian commoner who had promoted himself to the Chancellorship
of Germany approved of him, secondly that the son of a blacksmith from
Romagna would smile on him, and last but not least that His Holiness
Pius Xll would give him a triple blessing, he accepted the royal
Croatian sceptre with a blush. A name worthy of such a crown was
selected, approved, and hailed. And so it happened that a poor unknown
Duke suddenly found himself the head of a new dynasty in the Kingdom of
Croatia, and became His Most Gracious Exalted Majesty, Tomislav II.
At such wonderful news a massive Ustashi delegation,
led by Ante Pavelic, rushed to Rome, where, in the very seat of the
Fascist Empire, on May 18, 1941, Tomislav II's gracious acceptance of
the Croatian Crown took place, punctuated by clicking of military heels,
Fascist salutes, and hurrahs. At the Vatican the happiness of the Pope
was unbounded. Yet his fatherly heart was made a little heavy by the
fact that Tomislav II, his triumphant political godchild, could not
openly be given a solemn papal blessing. Pius XII was the head of the
Universal Church. Catholics by the million were at that very moment
fighting with the Allies to smash that very Fascist world with which
Pius was on such cordial terms. In addition to that, Pius was
simultaneously the head of the Vatican State and as such—oh, happy
coincidence!—a king himself. To recognize his new royal colleague at
that juncture would have been interpreted by the democratic camp as a
breach of "papal neutrality." His Holiness, therefore, had to use
caution.
Popes claim they can unlock gates—in heaven and in
hell. That is why they have St. Peter's massive keys. But very often
they can open back doors as well down here. And, the world being what it
is, that is even more important. Particularly on occasions when the
official gates of international diplomacy have to remain firmly closed.
Adept in the age-old Catholic Macchiavelliana Pius XII solved the riddle
triumphantly. He received good King Tomislav one day before the ceremony
of his coronation. Who could say this was a breach of "papal
neutrality?" The Duke of Spoleto was not yet officially a king. His
Holiness the Pope had received him before he had legally become His
Exalted Majesty, King Tomislav II.
That same day Croatia was officially proclaimed a
kingdom. The devout murderer of King Alexander of Yugoslavia—that is
Pavelic—was granted a long and very private audience by the Pope. Only
one stenographer, who cautious Pavelic had brought with him and who was
made to take the oath never to reveal what he heard, was present.
Strengthened by what Pius Xll had told him, Pavelic called on Mussolini,
with whom he signed a treaty. Following all this, the indefatigable Holy
Father received and solemnly blessed Pavelic's Prime Minister and his
whole Ustashi delegation. Who, again, could label this a breach of
"papal neutrality?" All those excellent people had been received merely
as "Catholic individuals," not as the heads of the Government of the New
Croatia, declared the Osservatore Romano. Honi soil qui mat
y pense. Yet the real significance of it all did not escape those
who knew. Pius XII had granted all those good people a special audience,
not because they were mere "Catholic individuals": he had specially
received, specially blessed, and specially praised them because, while
members of the Mother Church, they were, above all, the representatives
of the newly born Independent Catholic State of Croatia, a political
creature stubbornly nurtured and ruthlessly promoted by that most malign
of all its conceivers, the Vatican.
Footnotes
1. See The Ciano Diaries, foreward by Sumner
Welles, Doubleday & Co, Inc., 1946, pp. 46,48-50,60,87,97.[Back]
2. Memoire de l'Organisation Musulmane Yougoslav,
to the National Committee for Free Europe, New York, May, 1950.[Back]
3. W.D. Isla, CommentairessurlesvProblemes
Yougoslaves, p. 45, Geneva, 1944.[Back]
4. See Nedelja, August 10, 1941.[Back]
5. See Nedelja, April 27, 1941.[Back]
6. Pius XII claimed to have seen Pius X during the
conclave of 1939, and that the latter foretold him that he would become
the next Pope. For more details, see The Cross, organ of the
Passionist Fathers, Dublin, March, 1948.[Back]
7. This occurred on three successive days, October 30
and 31 and November 1, 1950. The official description of this repetitive
miracle, given by Pius XII's special delegate, Cardinal Tedeschini, was
the following:
The Holy Father (Pius XII) turned his gaze from
the Vatican gardens to the sun, and there was renewed for his eyes
the prodigy of the Valley of Fatima.... He was able to witness the
life of the sun under the hand of Mary. The sun was agitated, all
convulsed, transformed into a picture of life, in a spectacle of
celestial movements; in transmission of mute but eloquent messages
to the Vicar of Christ.
Cardinal Tedeschini, at the Shrine of Fatima,
Portugal, 13.10.1951. See world and Catholic Press, 14-15-16.10.1951.
For more details of the concocted papal visions and the political
objectives of their manufacturers see the author's Catholic
Imperialism and World Freedom (Watts 500 pp.).
8. Words used by Pius XII, December 21, 1939, when
blessing King Victor.[Back]
|
|