São Tomás de Aquino, o "Doutor Angélico", certa vez, diante de um crucifixo em Nápoles, ouviu estas palavras de Jesus:
“Bem tem você escrito sobre Mim, Tomás, o que devo te dar em recompensa?"
São Tomás respondeu: “Nada senão a Ti mesmo, meu Senhor". Em latim, São Tomás disse: Nil, Nisi Te, Domine. Em inglês: Naught save Thyself, O Lord.
segunda-feira, 12 de dezembro de 2016
BBC Reconhece Erro Contra Igreja Católica sobre o Nazismo.
Depois que o Papa Francisco visitou Auschwitz, em julho desse ano, a BBC fez um boletim de notícias no qual afirmava que a Igreja Católica silenciou durante o regime nazista de Hitler que devastou a Europa e matou milhões.
Daí, Lorde David Alton e o Padre Leo Chamberlain entraram com processo formal para que a BBC corrigisse essa informação.
Eu escrevi sobre o assunto no meu livro Teoria e Tradição da Guerra Justa: do Império Romano ao Estado Islâmico. Nele, eu mostro que não só a Igreja Católica não silenciou, como inclusive participou ativamente, com conhecimento e aprovação do Papa Pio XII, junto com generais alemães, de planos para assassinar Adolf Hitler. Em contraponto, no entanto, eu digo que Pio XII poderia ter sido mais ativo publicamente em suas homilias. Não concordo muito com a ideia de que isso faria Hitler mais violento contra católicos. Acho, que ele poderia ter abreviado a guerra. Mas leiam lá no meu livro. Eu também recomendo ótimas leituras sobre o assunto.
A BBC reconheceu depois de seis meses que a Igreja Católica não silenciou frente ao nazismo.
Vejam o texto abaixo do The Catholic Herald. O texto fala de Franz Jägerstätter, que eu coloco no meu livro como precursor moderno do "objector de consciência". Jägerstätter foi fantástico. Rezemos por ele.
BBC admits it underestimated the Church’s opposition to Hitler
The BBC conceded it was false to describe the Church as being 'silent' in the face of Nazism
The BBC’s internal watchdog has found that a programme wrongly accused the Catholic Church of “silence” about the Holocaust.
After Pope Francis’s visit to Auschwitz in July, BBC One’s 6pm news bulletin carried a report which stated: “Silence was the response of the Catholic Church when Nazi Germany demonised Jewish people and then attempted to eradicate Jews from Europe.”
In response, the cross-bench peer Lord Alton of Liverpool and Fr Leo Chamberlain, the former headmaster of Ampleforth, made an official complaint.
Nearly six months later, the BBC’s editorial complaints unit has now concluded that the item was unfair. According to the unit, the BBC reporter “did not give due weight to public statements by successive popes or the efforts made on the instructions of Pius XII to rescue Jews from Nazi persecution, and perpetuated a view which is at odds with the balance of evidence.”
Pope Pius XII, who was the pontiff during World War II, has been accused of silent acquiescence to the Holocaust, most famously by a 1999 book, Hitler’s Pope, which sparked a major controversy among historians. Its author, John Cornwell, has since backed down on some of his claims.
In a blog post criticising the BBC report, Lord Alton pointed out that several historians had praised Pius’s achievements in the fight against Nazism. The peer quoted Pinchas Lapide, a Jewish historian and Israeli diplomat, as saying that Pius XII “was instrumental in saving at least 700,000, but probably as many as 860,000 Jews from certain death at Nazi hands.”
Through its diplomatic network, the Holy See under Pius XII helped Jews to travel safely out of Eastern Europe. It also issued baptismal certificates to Hungarian Jews to help them escape. Thousands of Jews were also sheltered in the Vatican itself.
Lord Alton quoted the Jewish Chronicle’s praise of Pius (“Such actions will always be remembered”) and Albert Einstein’s remark in 1940 that “only the Church stood squarely across the path of Hitler’s campaign for suppressing the truth … I am forced thus to confess that what I once despised I now praise unreservedly.”
Lord Alton also drew attention to the many Catholics, both clerical and lay, who opposed Hitler – from Bishop Clemens von Galen of Münster, who openly denounced the Nazis’ euthanasia programme, to Franz Jägerstätter, an Austrian farmer executed for refusing to fight in the Wehrmacht. Both have been beatified.
After this week’s ruling, Lord Alton told the Catholic Herald: “The BBC is right to recognise that the libel that Catholics said and did nothing against Nazism is precisely that, a collective libel. I am grateful to them for doing so.”
He added that the notion the Church had remained silent was “a canard that is either repeated through sheer ignorance or because the facts don’t fit the story.”
Lord Alton also noted the “irony” that part of the report had come from St Maximilian Kolbe’s cell at Auschwitz. St Maximilian, who died after taking the place of another prisoner, “had been arrested for publishing a denunciation of the Nazis in his magazine, Knight, which had a circulation of around one million people. Hardly silence, then.”
Lord Alton called for “a new BBC documentary that examines the evidence and corrects the distorted caricatures and lazily regurgitated half-truths and untruths.”
The BBC’s editorial complaints unit said that the news team responsible for the report had been notified, “so that any future coverage might reflect historical understanding more closely.”
Foi o caso semelhante da KGB; "Pio XII, o papa de Hitler"; posteriormente descobriu-se ser uma calunia, mas os estragos já tinham sido feitos! Efeito Trump?
Certa vez, li uma frase em inglês muito boa para ser colocada quando se abre para comentários. A frase diz: "Say What You Mean, Mean What Say, But Don’t Say it Mean." (Diga o que você realmente quer dizer, com sinceridade, mas não com maldade).
Foi o caso semelhante da KGB; "Pio XII, o papa de Hitler"; posteriormente descobriu-se ser uma calunia, mas os estragos já tinham sido feitos!
ResponderExcluirEfeito Trump?