(September 1, 2017 at 11:35 pm)CatholicDefender Wrote: Looks like Pius condemned the holocaust in sort of a vague way
https://www.ewtn.com/library/PAPALDOC/P12CH42.HTM
1. "What is this world war, with all its attendant circumstances, whether they be remote or proximate causes, its progress and material, legal and moral effects? What is it but the crumbling process, not expected, perhaps, by the thoughtless but seen and depreciated by those whose gaze penetrated into the realities of a social order which hid its mortal weakness and its unbridled lust for gain and power?"
2. War has torn from their native land and scattered in the land of the stranger; who can make their own the lament of the Prophet: "Our inheritance is turned to aliens; our house to strangers." Mankind owes that vow to the hundreds of thousands of persons who, without any fault on their part, sometimes only because of their nationality or race, have been consigned to death or to a slow decline. Mankind owes that vow to the many thousands of non-combatants, women, children, sick and aged, from whom aerial war-fare—whose horrors we have from the beginning frequently denounced—has without discrimination or through inadequate precautions, taken life, goods, health, home, charitable refuge, or house of prayer. Mankind owes that vow to the flood of tears and bitterness, to the accumulation of sorrow and suffering, emanating from the murderous ruin of the dreadful conflict and crying to Heaven to send down the Holy Spirit to liberate the world from the inundation of violence and terror."
He never condemned it explicitly but a lot of people knew what he was getting at.
I wonder how he avoided being turned into a bar of soap by Hitler.
Did Hitler like him? I read that in spite of Pius' vacillation and silence Hitler viewed him with scorn and suspicion.
That's some serious weaksauce there coming from the alleged representative of God.