"Fighting Nun" Publishes New Book on Wartime Pontiff
By Edward Pentin
ROME, June
19, 2009, 10.00 Hrs (Zenit.org):
She may
be 87, but Sister Margherita Marchione isn't even close to retiring.
The indomitable
sister of the Religious Teachers Filippini, and ardent defender
of Pius XII, has just published a new book on the wartime Pontiff
which she launched in Rome last month. Called "Pope Pius
XII -- An Anthology on the 70th Anniversary of Coronation,"
the work is just one of over 60 she has written. Most of them
are passionate defenses of Pius against accusations he did too
little to save Jews in World War II.
Meeting
Sr. Margherita is always a pleasure. A loveable, tiny nun whose
broad New Jersey accent matches her tough resilience in clearing
Pius's name, she ardently defends Pope Pacelli's holiness and
innocence at every opportunity. And her historical research
is supported by a growing number of prominent figures, including
the highly reputed Jewish historian Sir Martin Gilbert and --
increasingly -- rabbis and ordinary Jews.
She began
campaigning to clear Pius XII's name after hearing of the many
Jews who were saved through hiding in the convent of her Order
in Rome. She also has especially fond memories of meeting the
wartime Pope in 1957. "Just that one time I met him, I
can still visualize him," she recalls. "Just thinking
about him, I can hear his voice -- there was something about
him that was so saintly."
But this
isn't mere sentiment: She backs up these claims with hard facts.
He was not silent, she says, as his condemnations of Nazism
were regularly reported in L'Osservatore Romano and on Vatican
Radio; she stresses that whatever the bishops or apostolic delegations
did in Europe to save Jews was on the Pope's instructions; moreover,
she argues that all the convents, monasteries and the Vatican
itself opened their doors to hide Jews because Pius XII had
asked them to. "What more could he have done?" she
asks.
What Sr.
Margherita and many others have been trying to counter is the
so-called black legend – a smear campaign masterminded
by communists in the Soviet Union after the War to discredit
the ardently anti-Communist wartime Pope. He was not silent
during the war, says Sr. Margherita and others in his defense,
but kept a low profile in order to avoid aggravating the situation
of the victims.
Sr. Margherita
also is quick to brush away one criticism which often comes
up: that other Catholics who lost their lives to save Jews,
and who have not yet been beatified, should be elevated to the
altars before Pius XII who survived the war. She insists Pius
XII did lay down his life -- he risked his own self and was
prepared to die (a recent testimony has given credence to rumors
that the Nazis secretly planned to kill or kidnap Pius in 1943).
"Can you picture the kind of fear he experienced day in
and day out?" she says. "What would happen to him
and the Catholic Church, the Vatican? He had a terrible responsibility."
But according
to the Congregation for Saints' Causes, no convincing miracle
attributed to Pius XII (necessary for beatification) has yet
to been found, which is why Sr. Margherita is keen to press
Catholics to pray for one. She gave me a 1958 prayer card in
the hope that ZENIT readers will do their part. It reads:
"O
Jesus, Eternal Pontiff, you deigned to elevate to the supreme
dignity your Vicar here on earth, your faithful servant Pius
XII and to him you gave the grace of being an intrepid defender
of the faith and a courageous asserter of justice and of peace,
a devoted glorifier of your Holy Mother and a luminous model
of charity and of all the virtues. Deem worthy now, in view
of his merits, to grant us the grace that we ask of you. We
are certain of his efficacious intercession and we hope to see
him one day glorified on your altars Amen."
Sr. Margherita
-- nicknamed the "Fighting Nun" -- remains ever hopeful
that she will see Pius XII beatified in her lifetime. And it's
a hope coupled with characteristic good humor. In a recent telephone
call to Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican secretary of
state, she told him: "I'll be back in the fall for the
beatification."
"Pope
Pius XII -- An Anthology on the 70th Anniversary of Coronation"
is published by Libreria Editrice Vaticana as a bilingual edition
in Italian and English. For more information, visit www.sistermargherita.com/articles.htm.