Kertzer, David I., The Popes Against the Jews: The Vatican's Role in the Rise of Modern Antisemitism

David I. Kertzer, The Popes Against the Jews: The Vatican's Role in the Rise of Modern Antisemitism. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2001

The Popes Against the Jews

 

John T. Pawlikowski, OSM

 

David I. Kertzer, The Popes Against the Jews: The Vatican"s Role in the Rise of

 

Modern Antisemitism. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2001.

 

 

 

David Kertzer adds yet another selection to what is becoming a virtual

 

"book-of-the-month" club on institutional Catholicism, antisemitism and the

 

Holocaust. A professor at Brown University and author of the much discussed The

 

Kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara (a baptized Jewish boy forcibly taken from his parents by

 

church officials), Kertzer presents a detailed account of the significant role of the Popes

 

and other senior church leaders in fomenting societal antisemitism in the two centuries

 

preceding the II Vatican Council and its historic declaration on the Church and the Jewish

 

People.

 

Some

 

of the information in the volume has been exposed by other authors such as Ronald Modras.

 

But Kertzer has probed newly available archival material from Vatican sources more

 

thoroughly than any previous author on the subject. He actually does himself a disservice in

 

this regard by having his volume associated with John Cornwell"s Hitler"s Pope

 

through an endorsement by Cornwell on the book"s dustcover. Unlike Cornwell"s superficial

 

volume, whose notoriety has been based largely on misleading publisher"s hype, Kertzer has

 

presented us with a substantive volume generally based on sound scholarship even if one

 

takes issue with some of his arguments, especially towards the end of the book. This is a

 

serious work that deserves significant attention by Catholics as part of the honest

 

self-assessment of the church that Pope John Paul II made a core component of the recent

 

Jubilee celebration.

 

Kertzer begins his narrative with a discussion of the 1998 Vatican document on the

 

Holocaust "We Remember." This document, while well-intentioned, illustrates the

 

problem with the way Catholic leaders have traditionally handled the issue of Catholic

 

antisemitism. While "We Remember" does acknowledge, according to Kertzer, some

 

personal complicity in the spread of antisemitism by members of the Catholic Church, it

 

argues that the antisemitism of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries was essentially a

 

secular (even anti-Catholic) phenomenon and implies that the church in fact opposed such

 

antisemitism.

 

I share some of Kertzer"s criticism of "We Remember" on this score. It did fail

 

to highlight that popular preaching, catechesis, as well as church art, had a decisive hand

 

in aiding the growth of modern antisemitism which "We Remember" is correct in

 

attributing primarily to non-religious factors such as the new genetics and its biological

 

racism. But Kertzer has failed to note the expanded interpretation of "We

 

Remember" offered by Cardinal Edward Cassidy, the document"s principal author. Nor does

 

he fully understand the theology of the church that is present within the document.

 

While Cardinal Cassidy"s interpretation of "We Remember" does not fully answer

 

Kertzer"s or my criticisms, it certainly does move us in the direction of a closer

 

connection between traditional Catholic and modern forms of antisemitism. Kertzer is either

 

unaware of Cassidy"s writings, as well as other commentaries, on "We Remember" or

 

simply chooses to ignore them. Neither represents sound scholarship on his part.

 

The main thrust of The Popes Against the Jews is the argument that the profound

 

inability of the popes and other Vatican leaders to deal with the challenge of political and

 

cultural modernity in Europe led to an active campaign, often employing classic Christian

 

antisemitic themes and activities, against the Jews who were seen as significant proponents

 

of modernism and liberalism, often referred to as Freemasonery. Here Kertzer is on solid

 

ground in my judgment, even if one might disagree with this or that particular point. I have

 

argued this thesis in some of my own writings. But Kertzer"s work on the newly available

 

Vatican archival documents solidifies this contention beyond question. Catholicism"s hundred

 

years" war with modernity, led by the popes whose administrations Kertzer examines in this

 

volume only came to an end at the II Vatican Council. In light of the papal activities cited

 

by Kertzer

 

such as a resurgence of the ritual murder charge, the dogged anti-Judaism campaign by the

 

semi-official Vatican newspaper Civilta Cattolica, and the active encouragement of

 

antisemitic political parties in Austria in particular the approval of Nostra Aetate

 

at Vatican II appears as even a greater about-face than we previously imagined. The late

 

Cardinal Joseph Bernardin called for total honesty in dealing with church history in such

 

matters. Kertzer"s volume should help the church confront its shadow side more profoundly

 

than it has. Only in this way can it retain moral integrity today.

 

While I believe the central thesis advanced in The Popes Against the Jews is on

 

target, the latter part of the book has definite flaws. I found the chapter on

 

"race" overly simplistic as Kertzer strains to make a direct connection between

 

Catholic antisemitism and biological racism. Kertzer is generally to be critiqued for

 

failing to address the continuity-discontinuity issue in terms of Christian antisemitism and

 

racial antisemitism far more thoroughly. He gives some indication throughout the book that

 

he does not see a simple straight line connecting the two. But the question needs a far more

 

direct airing than he provides.

 

Part three of the volume with its chapters on "A Future Pope in Poland" and

 

"Antechamber to the Holocaust" is poorly done. He skims through the papacy of Pius

 

XII in a few pages while offering a clear indictment. Either he should have stopped his

 

narrative with the papacy of Pius XI or done a far more extensive analysis of Pius XII.

 

Obviously he did not have the kind of archival material available to him for this period as

 

he did for the earlier papacies. This part of the book does not reflect sound scholarship.

 

In sum, The Popes Against the Jews is a challenging volume. While significantly

 

flawed at the end, it presents us with a basically accurate picture of direct, active

 

involvement of the papacy in the spread of antisemitism in the modern world. It is a history

 

that Catholics today need to integrate into their faith perspective rather than bury in a

 

cave.

 


 

John T. Pawlikowski, OSM, Professor of Social Ethics and Director of Catholic-Jewish

 

Studies at the Catholic Theological Union, Chicago, serves as Vice President of the

 

International Council of Christians and Jews and chair of its Theology Committee.

This review was prepared for publication in the National Catholic Reporter (U.S.A.).

 

It is published here with the permission of the author.