A priest who knew Pius XII personally and had access to “every strip of
paper” in the Vatican archives says the pontiff believed he did the
right thing during the holocaust despite knowing he would be questioned.
Ninety year-old Father Peter Gumpel, a former professor at the Gregorio
University in Rome for 25 years, was simultaneously appointed as a
Theological Consultant to the Congregation for the Causes of Saints and
as Assistant Postulator General.
He was personally acquainted with Pope Pius XII, and has met every pontiff since with the exception of John Paul I.
The work that Fr. Gumpel was assigned as a theological consultant was to
“examine everything” related to Pius XII and other causes of interest,
and to present the information in a “historically and theologically
accurate way to the congregation before they start to discuss it,” he
told CNA in a Sept. 17 interview.
The cause of canonization for Pius XII was overseen by Fr. Gumpel, who
was in charge of the research needed in order to prove the late pope’s
heroic virtue.
“I had absolute access to every strip of paper that is in the Vatican
archives,” he said. “The period of Pius the XII is not yet accessible to
scholars, but as a responsible investigating judge, I had to see
everything.”
The priest added that he studied “about 100,000 pages” in documents and correspondence in the life of the pontiff.
In his research, Fr. Gumpel confirmed that there were already some who
opposed the Pope’s course of action during the Nazi persecution of World
War II in the 1940s, and that Pius XII himself was aware of it.
The late pontiff faced criticism then and in subsequent decades for
being perceived as silent or inactive in the face of the holocaust. It
is believed, however, that the Pope chose to help the victimized
secretly so as not to provoke increased persecution by the Nazis.
“He knew that some of his measures were not pleasing to everybody,” Fr.
Gumpel noted, and that “at a certain moment he said, ‘I know that what I
am going to do will not be pleasing to everybody, but I am going to do
it because in conscience I feel that it is my duty to do it.’”
“So he was aware that there would be opposition. It is an attitude that any person with higher responsibility has to take.”
Fr. Gumpel recalled how some during the time of the war thought that the
Church should publicly react against the holocaust, but stressed that
this “was totally useless.”
“Anytime anybody made a public protest, it aggravated the situation.”
“If you find documents from the Polish episcopacy during the occupation
of the Germans of Poland,” he said, it was clearly pleaded “‘don’t speak
out, it doesn’t help anything, it only makes things worse.’”
“The same happened in the German resistance movement against Hitler.
They said, ‘For Heaven’s sake, don’t say anything because it will make
the situation, the persecution will be even worse.’”
Pius XII, he emphasized, “knew that this in the future would be misunderstood.”
“People who had no responsibility in government, who had never dealt
with a situation like this, would not understand it,” Fr. Gumpel said,
quoting a Jewish lawyer named Kempner who defended Pope Pius XII by
saying “the only thing to do was to help people in secrecy as much as
possible.”
Another aspect of Pius XII that Fr. Gumpel believes is “very much unknown to people,” is the pastoral heart of the late pope.
“He was always presented as a diplomat,” Fr. Gumpel said, referencing the late pope’s natural gifting and service in this area.
The priest explained that Pius XII had been a bright student, and was
asked by a high-ranking official of the Secretary of State on behalf of
the Pope to come into the diplomatic service of the Holy See.
However, “he wanted to become a parish priest,” Fr. Gumpel noted,
stressing that Pope Pius XII was always primarily concerned with the
care of souls. He “didn’t want to become a diplomat,” but did so out of
obedience.
Among the causes for canonization under Fr. Gumpel’s jurisdiction that
have reached the end of the process, meaning the person was approved for
beatification, are Mother Katherine Drexel, Fr. Casey, Cardinal John
Henry Newman, and Pius XII.