Current:Home > InvestCatholic-Jewish research substantiates reports that Catholic convents sheltered Jews during WWII -Triumph Financial Guides
Catholic-Jewish research substantiates reports that Catholic convents sheltered Jews during WWII
View
Date:2025-04-18 16:37:23
ROME (AP) — Researchers have discovered new documentation that substantiates reports that Catholic convents and monasteries in Rome sheltered Jews during World War II, providing names of at least 3,200 Jews whose identities have been corroborated by the city’s Jewish community, officials said Thursday.
Researchers from the Pontifical Biblical Institute, Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust research institute and Rome’s Jewish community released the findings at an academic workshop Thursday held at the Museum of the Shoah, part of Rome’s main synagogue.
The documentation doesn’t appear to shed any new light on the role of Pope Pius XII during the Nazi occupation of Rome. Historians have long debated Pius’ legacy, with supporters insisting he used quiet diplomacy to save Jewish lives and critics saying he remained silent as the Holocaust raged across Europe, and even as Roman Jews were rounded up and deported from the Vatican’s backyard in 1943.
Rather, the new documentation provides names and addresses of Romans who were sheltered in Catholic institutions during the war, which had only previously been reported in vague terms and numbers by Italy’s preeminent historian of the period, Renzo de Felice, in a 1961 book, according to a joint statement from the Pontifical Biblical Institute, Yad Vashem and Rome’s Jewish community.
The documentation was discovered in the archives of the Biblical Institute, which is affiliated with the Jesuit-run Pontifical Gregorian University. It lists more than 4,300 people who were sheltered in the properties of 100 women’s and 55 men’s Catholic religious orders. Of those, 3,600 are identified by name, and research in the archives of Rome’s Jewish community “indicates that 3,200 certainly were Jews,” the statement said.
“Of the latter it is known where they were hidden and, in certain circumstances, where they lived before the persecution. The documentation thus significantly increases the information on the history of the rescue of Jews in the context of the Catholic institutions of Rome,” the statement said.
The names are not being released to protect the privacy of the people and their descendants, it added.
It is unclear whether any of the Jews listed were baptized. Recently opened Vatican archives of the Pius papacy suggest that the Vatican worked hardest to save Jews who had converted to Catholicism or were children of Catholic-Jewish mixed marriages, according to the book “The Pope at War,” by Brown University anthropologist David Kertzer.
Claudio Procaccia, in charge of the cultural department of Rome’s Jewish community, said the documentation doesn’t provide any information as to whether the Jews identified had been baptized. But he stressed that the lists provided an important “new element in understanding qualitatively and quantitatively” who was sheltered and their origins.
“This is a very important step,” he said in an interview after the workshop, adding that further research was necessary to corroborate further the names listed and their histories, including with other lists in other archives. He noted that discrepancies are likely to emerge down the line since it is known that some people pretended to have Jewish last names to find shelter in Catholic convents, even if they weren’t necessarily Jewish.
Procaccia noted that the Jewish community in 2013 published its own research into the fate of Jews during the Nazi occupation of Rome, entitled “After October 16,” the date in 1943 when more than 1,000 of Rome’s Jews were rounded up and, two days later, deported to Auschwitz.
The Rev. Dominik Markl, of the Pontifical Biblical Institute and University of Innsbruck who helped coordinate the research, said he was moved by the fates of the people named in the documents, “those threatened to be murdered because of the persecution by the Nazi regime, and the many anonymous religious sisters and priests who risked their own security to help them survive.”
In a statement to The Associated Press, Markl noted the significance of the joint research between Catholic and Jewish scholars on an fraught issue which has long divided scholars and often strained relations between Rome’s Jewish community and the Holy See.
“We are extremely grateful for the collaboration with the Jewish Community of Rome and Yad Vashem, which is promising to lead towards a more profound understanding of the history of the Shoah in Rome and beyond,” he said.
veryGood! (82672)
Related
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- The EPA Placed a Texas Superfund Site on its National Priorities List in 2018. Why Is the Health Threat Still Unknown?
- State line pot shops latest flashpoint in Idaho-Oregon border debate
- Deadly ‘Smoke Waves’ From Wildfires Set to Soar
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Adam Sandler's Daughter Sunny Sandler Is All Grown Up During Rare Red Carpet Appearance
- Human skeleton found near UC Berkeley campus identified; death ruled a homicide
- Obamas’ personal chef drowns near family’s home on Martha’s Vineyard
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Climate Advocates Hoping Biden Would Declare a Climate Emergency Are Disappointed by the Small Steps He Announced on Wednesday
Ranking
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- A Bridge to Composting and Clean Air in South Baltimore
- As Illinois Strains to Pass a Major Clean Energy Law, a Big Coal Plant Stands in the Way
- Tony Bennett, Grammy-winning singer loved by generations, dies at age 96
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Inside Clean Energy: Denmark Makes the Most of its Brief Moment at the Climate Summit
- Everything You Need for a Backyard Movie Night
- After the Wars in Iraq, ‘Everything Living is Dying’
Recommendation
Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
Biden’s Infrastructure Bill Includes Money for Recycling, But the Debate Over Plastics Rages On
The Fed raises interest rates again despite the stress hitting the banking system
The cost of a dollar in Ukraine
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Derek Chauvin to ask U.S. Supreme Court to review his conviction in murder of George Floyd
Define Your Eyes and Hide Dark Circles With This 52% Off Deal From It Cosmetics
Ryan Seacrest Replacing Pat Sajak as Wheel of Fortune Host