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World War I and the Papacy
The Catholic Thing ^ | August 2, 2014 | George J. Marlin

Posted on 08/02/2014 2:58:55 PM PDT by NYer

One hundred years ago this week, Christian Europe commenced the horrific Great War that spread globally, raged from August 1914 to November 1918, and was responsible for the death of more than 15-million soldiers and civilians.

In The World Crisis, Winston Churchill’s six-volume account of the struggle, he observed that the warriors employed “Every outrage against humanity or international law.” And when it was over, “torture and cannibalism were the only two expedients that the civilized, scientific, Christian states had been able to deny themselves: they were of doubtful utility.”

The conflict’s catalyst? On June 28, 1914, the Roman Catholic heir to the Austrian-Hungarian throne, Archduke Ferdinand and his morganatic* wife, Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg, were gunned down in Sarajevo, Bosnia, by a Serbian terrorist, Gavrilo Princip.  The Serbian nationalist assassin, committed to liberating his Slavic people from the Austrian-Hungarian Empire, believed his crime would strike a blow for freedom.

During the next month, as historian Christopher Clark puts it, European rulers “who prided themselves on their modernity and rationalism, stumbled through crisis after crisis and finally convinced themselves that war was the only answer.”

While some monarchs pleaded for peace, war plans designed years earlier were dusted off, ultimatums were delivered, and general mobilizations of armed forces commenced.

On August 3, 1914, Germany declared war on France and invaded Belgium.  Britain, committed to Belgium neutrality, declared war on Germany the next day.  By month’s end, Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Turkey found themselves at war with Britain, France, Russia, Japan, Serbia, and Montenegro.

One person not surprised by the events of August 1914, was the Vicar of Christ, Pope Pius X.  As early as 1912, the pontiff, distraught by European saber-rattling, told his secretary of state, Cardinal Merry del Val, “Le cose vanno male, viene il guerrone.” (“Things are going badly, the Great War is approaching.”)

In an audience with a Brazilian minister in May 1913, Pius said, “You are fortunate, sir, to be going back to your home in Brazil, you will not witness the world-wide war.”

In July 1914, Pius sent a letter to Emperor Franz Joseph pleading that he find a peaceful answer to the Serbian crisis.  When the Austrian ambassador asked the pope to bless the arms of his country, he replied:  “I do not bless arms but peace.”


      St. Pius X

Fearful war was eminent; On August 2, 1914, Pius issued, “A call to the Catholics of the whole world.”  In it, he said, “Now that almost the whole of Europe is being swept along in the maelstrom of this frightful war whose dangers, destruction and consequences nobody can contemplate without being stricken with grief and horror, We too are full of anxiety and sorrow. . . .We realize quite well what these distressful times the love of a father and the apostolic mission of the pope demand of Us.  We must lead the souls of all people to Him from Whom alone relief can be expected, to Christ, the Prince of peace, the powerful mediator between God and Man.”

The Holy Father called on Catholics, “to implore God that he may have mercy on His people by putting a speedy end to this catastrophe and by inspiring the leaders of the peoples to peaceful thoughts and actions.”

Afterwards, Pius went into seclusion and spent his time in continuous prayer.  As the guns of August began firing, he was heard saying “How glad I would have been to offer my miserable life to God, if thereby I could have prevented the slaughter of so many of my young sons.”

On August 20, at 1:15 p.m., Pope Pius died. Cardinal Merry del Val, who believed the pope died of grief, said that his death fulfilled a prophecy Pius made a year earlier at the Shrine of our Lady of Lourdes in the Vatican Gardens:  “I pity my successor.  I shall not see it, but it is only too true that the Religio depopulate [religion laid waste] is at hand.”

Giacomo della Chiesa, only named a cardinal in Pius X’s last consistory on May 25, 1914, was elected pontiff on September 3, 1914 and took the name Benedict XV.  In his first statement to the faithful, he declared he was “stricken with inexpressible horror and anguish before the monstrous spectacle of this war with its streams of Christian blood.”

Calling the war “horrible butchery,” he informed the belligerents that “The pope is not neutral, he is impartial.”  When attacked by opposing Catholic countries for not supporting their causes, he replied:  “We reprove all violations of rights, wherever committed, but to involve the papal authority in the disputes of belligerents would be neither useful nor appropriate.”

Although impartial, Benedict was not a spectator. While his plea for a Christmas truce in 1914 was ignored, his proposals for exchanging wounded prisoners of war and interned civilians – particularly women and children – were  enacted.  He created a Vatican office that worked with the International Red Cross; procured agreements that permitted religious services in POW camps and inspections by apostolic visitors.  He also contributed 82 million gold liras to support war-related relief programs.

Seeking a “stable and equitable” peace through negotiations, Benedict issued in July 1915, a plan that included planks calling for the creation of a free Poland, freedom of the Dardanelles Strait, and the establishment of an international body that would require nations to arbitrate their differences.  President Wilson would later incorporate several of the pope’s suggestions into his Fourteen Points.

The First World War was the most devastating war in the history of mankind until the Second World War.  Millions were killed or wounded in campaigns that gained, at best, a few miles of mud in No Man’s Land.

At the Battle of Verdun (February-December 1916) there were 750,000 French and German casualties.  On the first day of the Battle of the Somme, July 1, 1916, the British suffered 60,000 casualties – the worst in their history.  By the end of the campaign in December 1916, wounded and dead on all sides totaled 1.1 million.  At Passchendaele, there were 244,000 British and 400,000 German casualties between July and November 1917.


              Benedict XV

Overall, 60 million troops were mobilized and when the armistice took effect on November 11, 1918, dead soldiers totaled 10 million.  The British Empire lost 1.1 million; France 1.4 million; Germany 2 million; Austria-Hungry 1.1 million; Italy 700,000; Russia 1.8 million; and the United States 114,000.  Another 21 million were wounded.

Three Christian monarchs fell: the Lutheran Kaiser Wilhelm, the Orthodox Czar Nicholas, and the Roman Catholic Emperor Charles of Austria.

Although the Church had had an official presence at the 1814 Congress of Vienna Peace Conference after the defeat of Napoleon, when the victors met at Versailles in 1919 to negotiate the peace, the Holy See was excluded.  Italy, fearing discussions of the Rome-Vatican problem, insisted the Church not be involved.

In retrospect, the pope’s exclusion from the discussion was good.  The Church had no part in the underhanded agreements that planted the seeds for the rise of Fascism and Nazism, the spread of Communism, the Great Depression, the present crisis in the Middle East, and the Second World War.

Benedict was mindful that some of the Versailles Conference agreements were seriously flawed.  In his 1920 Encyclical, Pacem Dei Munus, he remarked, “Though treaties of peace have been signed, the germ of ancient discords has not been destroyed.”

Two aspects of the treaty did please the Holy Father.  The first was the creation of an independent Catholic Poland.  The future Pius XI, Archbishop Achille Ratti, was named the first papal nuncio to the new nation.  The other was the League of Nations. Benedict publicly blessed the organization and he permitted the Catholic Union of International Studies to establish permanent relations with it.

Although the Vatican was not invited to be a member of the League, the Holy See was consulted on matters including the role of religious missions in newly established third-world territories.  Benedict also urged the League to call for an end of slavery in Africa and Muslim countries and to send aid to people in Russia suffering from famine.

After Pope Benedict XV died in January 1922, Joseph Motta, President of the Swiss Confederation, told an assembly of League of Nation delegates, “If mankind manages one day to get rid of war – and that day is perhaps as yet far distant – it will owe that priceless achievement to the principle of arbitration as proposed by Benedict XV.”

Throughout the First World War, Pope Benedict was the lone voice calling for a cessation of hostilities.  And eighty-five years later when Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger took the name of Benedict XVI, he rightfully referred to his predecessor of that name “the courageous prophet of peace.”


TOPICS: Catholic; History; Religion & Culture; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: hitlerspope; wwi
* morganic - of or denoting a marriage in which neither the spouse of lower rank nor any children have any claim to the possessions or title of the spouse of higher rank.
1 posted on 08/02/2014 2:58:55 PM PDT by NYer
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To: Tax-chick; GregB; Berlin_Freeper; SumProVita; narses; bboop; SevenofNine; Ronaldus Magnus; tiki; ...

Ping!


2 posted on 08/02/2014 2:59:21 PM PDT by NYer ("You are a puff of smoke that appears briefly and then disappears." James 4:14)
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To: NYer

One of the worst wars ever fought. Beautifully told in the enchanting play “War Horse.”


3 posted on 08/02/2014 3:02:18 PM PDT by miss marmelstein (Richard Lives Yet!)
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To: NYer
ONe of the many things that World War One destroyed was the Christian faith of millions. Many, believe that "God was on their side", went off to war only to realize that sometimes God doesn't take sides.

Millions lost their faith, resulting in a "lost generation" of men who either became rootless and self-destructive, or became radicalized and bitter.

4 posted on 08/02/2014 3:20:12 PM PDT by MuttTheHoople (Ob)
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To: NYer

Not mentioned was the catastrophe to Italy, the horrific 12 Battles of the Isonzo.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battles_of_the_Isonzo

Half of the entire Italian war casualty total – some 300,000, came during those fruitless battles. In the war, Italy was devastated by the loss of between 460,000-650,000 men, between 6% and 7% of all fighting age men. They had not recovered by World War II enough to be a major player.

The Vatican would have been intensely aware of this, as every Priest in Italy would have spent much of the war conducting funerals and memorials to the dead, as were those in the rest of Europe.


5 posted on 08/02/2014 3:36:35 PM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy ("Don't compare me to the almighty, compare me to the alternative." -Obama, 09-24-11)
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To: NYer

Let’s not forget the Ottoman Empire. Muslims though they may have been, they were 10 orders of magnitude more sane than what’s running around those parts today. They at least kept the worst of the suicidal jihadist goathumpers in line.


6 posted on 08/02/2014 3:47:51 PM PDT by Free Vulcan (Vote Republican! You can vote Democrat when you're dead...)
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To: miss marmelstein; All

There are two great books that tell the story from the standpoint of men in the trenches. The first is “Poilu” by Louis Barthas, who served in the French army from 1914 to 1918, spending most of his time as an enlisted man in front line units. The other is, “Goodbye to all That” by Robert Graves, who served as a junior officer in front line British units for much of the war. Both present a picture of unbridled, futile horror. Barthas’ book is currently available at Amazon; Graves’ is not. I highly recommend both.


7 posted on 08/02/2014 5:18:30 PM PDT by libstripper
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To: miss marmelstein

Hello Miss Marmelstein. Hows life in The Big Apple? Yes WW1 was horrific. It was a war fought on the cusp between two eras, the Napoleonic,in the philosophic it was the idea that if ones cause was right and just the Lord God would give you victory. Militarily you pretty much lined up facing your enemy and ‘’banged away’’(shot) at each other. It was also the first war fought with weapons of the Industrial Age. Long range big caliber artillery, airplanes, the Devils brew of poison gas, all of which didn’t give a fig about righteousness and whose side The Almighty favored. And it was fought with the machine gun. No other weapon in the 20th. century so changed the nature of war itself but the very idea of going to war at all. Time and again the opposing sides lined up rank on rank and charged each other and time and again the machine gun mowed them down ‘’like summer wheat’’. Hence the creation of those God-awful trenches. My late grandfather served with The American Expeditionary Force(the A.E.F, as it was called) He was wounded twice, once by that awful gas. He never spoke of the horrors he saw.


8 posted on 08/02/2014 5:42:16 PM PDT by jmacusa (Liberalism defined: When mom and dad go away for the weekend and the kids are in charge.)
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To: jmacusa

Hello! Life is fine here give or take a few thousand problems.

Vile war and as you say made so much worse by weaponry and old-fashioned tactics and strategies. The climactic moment in the play “War Horse” is a horrific confrontation between and horse and a British tank.

My grandfather fought in the war. I have a photo of him on his own war horse in France. He actually did sing “Inkie Dinkie Parlez Vous”!


9 posted on 08/02/2014 5:48:16 PM PDT by miss marmelstein (Richard Lives Yet!)
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To: libstripper
I read Goodbye To All That as a kid. I also have Siegfried Sassoon's wonderful memoirs which are funny as well as terrible. They clapped him up in a mental hospital when he condemned the war on leave in Great Britain. There's also Pat Barker's Ghost Road trilogy which I loved but is definitely not for everyone.
10 posted on 08/02/2014 5:52:37 PM PDT by miss marmelstein (Richard Lives Yet!)
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To: MuttTheHoople

The lost generation is what Gertrude Stein’s mechanic called the men of WWI. She had driven an ambulance in the war.


11 posted on 08/02/2014 5:54:42 PM PDT by miss marmelstein (Richard Lives Yet!)
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To: NYer
My paternal grandfather returned to Italy in 1914 on family business, leaving my then-4-year-old father with an uncle. Grandfather was called up at the outbreak of WW I because he had prior service in the Balkan wars. He was killed somewhere in Italy. I doubt Dad even knew any details. At least he never mentioned them. The tragedy of WW I affected my family in ways I never will fully understand.
12 posted on 08/02/2014 6:02:24 PM PDT by JoeFromSidney (Book: Resistance to Tyranny. Buy from Amazon.)
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To: NYer
“If mankind manages one day to get rid of war – and that day is perhaps as yet far distant – it will owe that priceless achievement to the principle of arbitration as proposed by Benedict XV.”

A hopeless wish.

War is as much a part of man as his skin; he can not shed it any more than he can his skin.

Man will abolish war when he stops being man.

13 posted on 08/02/2014 6:28:17 PM PDT by Pontiac (The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spirit.)
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To: miss marmelstein
“Mademoiselle from Armetiers parlez-vous...''
14 posted on 08/02/2014 7:59:38 PM PDT by jmacusa (Liberalism defined: When mom and dad go away for the weekend and the kids are in charge.)
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To: jmacusa

Ridiculous song, lol!


15 posted on 08/03/2014 3:37:35 AM PDT by miss marmelstein (Richard Lives Yet!)
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