THE VATICAN
POLICY OF DETENTE TOWARD THE COMMUNIST GOVERNMENTS
For the TFP: to
withdraw? or to resist?
The document that follows was written by Plinio Correa
de Oliveira, president of the National Council of the Brazilian Society for the
Defense of Tradition, Family, and Property. It has been published first in
South America by major daily newspapers with very great repercussion, providing
as it does a balanced, vigorous, and wise answer to the most perplexing
question of our days, that is, what is the right position to take toward the
Vatican policy of detente toward Communist regimes? We are proud to reproduce
it now, for this manifesto, which has now been published by all the autonomous
TFP's throughout the world, by showing Catholics the precise nature of a truly
obedient and filial resistance, has opened a new era for Catholics ‑ the
era of filial resistance.
1. The Facts
It is a matter of
public interest that Archbishop Casaroli, Secretary of the Vatican's Council
for Public Affairs, in an interview not long ago commented on his recent visit
to Cuba (cf. O Estado de Sao Paulo,
April 7). His Excellency stressed that "the Catholics who live in Cuba are
happy under the socialist regime." It is not necessary to say what kind of
socialist regime he refers, for it is well known that the regime existing in
Cuba is a Communist one.
His Excellency, in speaking of Fidel Castro's regime,
went on to say that "the Catholics and the Cuban people in general do not
have the slightest problem with the socialist government."
Wishing perhaps
to give an air of impartiality to these amazing declarations, Archbishop
Casaroli then lamented that the number of priests in Cuba is nevertheless
insufficient: a mere 200. He indicated, furthermore, that he had asked Castro
to permit greater opportunity for public worship. And he concluded by stating
quite unexpectedly that "the Catholics of the Island are as respected for
their beliefs as any of the other citizens."
If one considers
only what is immediately apparent in these declarations, it is perplexing to
discover that Archbishop Casaroli, while recognizing that Cuban Catholics
suffer restrictions in their public worship, states at the same time that they
are "respected for their beliefs." As if the right of public worship
was not one of the most sacred of their liberties.
If the non‑Catholic
subjects of the Cuban regime are respected as much as the Catholics, then one
can say that in Cuba nobody is respected ...
What, then, is
the nature of this happiness, which according to Archbishop Casaroli the Cuban
Catholics enjoy? It seems to be the harsh happiness dispensed by the Communist
regime to all of its subjects, that is, the bowing of their heads under it. So
Archbishop Casaroli states that "the Cuban Catholic Church and her spiritual
guide always take care not to create any problem for the socialist regime which
rules the Island."
Analyzed in
greater depth, the observations of this high Vatican dignitary about his trip
lead to conclusions of a higher order.
In an age in
which His Holiness Paul VI has given more stress than ever to the importance of
normal material conditions as a factor favorable to the practice of virtue, it
is inconceivable that Archbishop Casaroli would consider Cuban Catholic's to
be "happy under the socialist regime" of Fidel Castro, if they are
immersed in misery. Hence we deduce that according to Archbishop Casaroli they
enjoy at least the minimum economic conditions which are tolerable.
Now everyone
knows that this is not actually the case. And, moreover, those Catholics who
take seriously the encyclicals of Leo XIII, Pius XI, and Pius XII know that
this cannot be, since these Popes taught that a Communist regime is the
opposite of the natural order of things. And the subversion of the natural
order ‑ in the economy as well as in any other field ‑ can only
bring catastrophic fruits.
Accordingly,
Catholics anywhere in the world who might be naive or ill-informed on the true
social doctrine of the Church, upon reading the results of Archbishop Casaroli's
inquiry in Cuba, will be led to a conclusion diametrically opposed to reality.
In other words, they will believe there is nothing to fear from the
implantation of Communism in the various countries, for according to this
hypothesis they will be perfectly "happy," both with respect to their
religious interests and their material circumstances.
It hurts to say
it, but the obvious truth is this: Archbishop Casaroli's trip to Cuba resulted
in a whitewash of Castro's regime.
This fact,
terrible in itself, is but an episode in the policy of distention that the
Vatican has been carrying out for a long time in regard to Communist regimes.
Several of these moves are very well known to the public.
One of them was
the trip to Russia in 1971 by His Eminence Cardinal Willebrands, President of
the Secretariat for Christian Unity. The official purpose of his visit was to
attend the inauguration of Bishop Pimen as the "orthodox" patriarch
of Moscow. Pimen is the man in whom the Kremlin atheists place their
confidence where religious affairs are concerned. This visit to him by Cardinal
Willebrands was, in itself, highly prestigious to the heterodox prelate, justly
considered the "dark beast" by the non‑Communist orthodox
people throughout the whole world. Pimen affirmed the nullity of the act
through which in 1595 the Ukrainians reverted from schism back to the Catholic
Church. This amounted to proclaiming that the Ukrainians must not be under the
jurisdiction of the Pope, but under Pimen himself and others of his ilk. Instead
of reacting in the face of this clamorous aggression against the rights of the
Catholic Church and the consciences of the Ukrainian Catholics, Cardinal
Willebrands and the delegation that accompanied him did not say a word. He who
is silent, consents, teaches the Roman Law. Distention ...
As is natural,
this capitulation caused a profound trauma among those Catholics who follow
with close attention the policies of the Holy See. The trauma was even greater
among the millions of Ukrainian Catholics scattered throughout Canada, the
United States, and other countries. And it was related to the dramatic
dissensions between the Holy See and His Eminence, the valorous Joseph
Cardinal Slipyj, Major‑Archbishop of the Ukrainians during the Synod of
bishops held in Rome in 197 1.
Seen in its
entirety, the conduct of His Eminence Cardinal Silva Henriquez, Archbishop of
Santiago, Chile, constitutes another episode in the distention toward
Communist governments being promoted by Vatican diplomacy. It is notorious ‑
as the Chilean TFP demonstrated in a lucid manifesto printed by several newspapers
‑ that the Chilean prelate used the weight of influence and authority
inherent in his position to help Allende rise to power, to be inaugurated in
cheerful circumstances, and to be maintained in the presidency till the tragic
moment in which this atheist leader committed suicide. Acting with a
flexibility incompatible with his reputation, His Eminence Cardinal Silva
Henriquez attempted to adjust himself to the order of things that came after
Allende's regime. But notwithstanding this, the Cardinal's constant
manifestations of sympathy for the Chilean Marxists have not yet ceased. Only
recently, His Eminence celebrated a Requiem Mass in the chapel of his residence
for the soul of another Communist, "comrade" Toha, a former minister
of Allende who, incidentally, was also an unhappy suicide. Relatives and
friends of the dead attended this Mass (cf. Jornal do Brasil, March 18, 1974).
It has not been
reported that the prelate suffered the slightest reproach for all these
attitudes, so suitable for bringing Catholics closer to Communism. If someone
imagined he would lose his archdiocese, he has been waiting in vain for it
till now. Cardinal Silva Henriquez goes on calmly, still invested with the
mission of conducting to Jesus Christ the souls of his populous and important
archdiocese.
While he
conserves his position by implementing the policy of distention, another
archbishop, in contrast, has lost his archdiocese. We refer to one of the most
striking personalities of the Church in the twentieth century, a person whose
name is pronounced with veneration and enthusiasm by all Catholics faithful to
the traditional social and economic teachings which have emanated from the Holy
See. The name of this prelate, moreover, is regarded with high respect by persons
of the most diverse religions. He is a fleuron of glory of the Church in the
eyes of even those who do not believe in Her. This fleuron was broken
recently. His Eminence Cardinal Mindszenty was dismissed from the archdiocese
of Esztergom in order to facilitate rapprochement with the Hungarian Communist
government.
As is evident,
the visit of Archbishop Casaroli to Cuba ‑ still abstracting from the
interview he gave after leaving the Island ‑ is inserted as a link in a
chain of facts which succeed each other over a period of years.
Where will this
chain end? What dolorous surprises, what new moral traumas are in store for
those who continue accepting, with all its consequences, the immutable social
and economic doctrine taught by Leo XIII, Pius XI and Pius XII? We are certain
that innumerable Catholics, upon reading these facts again, and knowing the
perplexity, anguish, and trauma expressed in these lines, will feel that their
own interior drama is being depicted: It is a most intimate and poignant drama,
because above and beyond its involvement with social and economic matters, it
has an essentially religious character. It concerns what is most fundamental,
alive, and tender in the soul of the Roman and Apostolic Catholic: his
spiritual bonds with the Vicar of Jesus Christ.
2. Roman and Apostolic Catholics
The TFP is a
civic, not a religious organization. However, the directors, members and
militants of the TFP are Roman Apostolic Catholics. Consequently, in all of
the campaigns undertaken by the TFP for the good of the country, the
inspiration which keeps them in motion is Catholic.
The fundamentally
anti‑Communist position of the TFP is a result of the Catholic
convictions of those who form it. The directors, members, and militants of the
TFP are anti‑Communists, because they are Catholics acting in the name of
Catholic principles.
The Vatican
policy of distention toward the Communist governments creates a situation
which affects anti-Communist Catholics deeply, but much less, however, as anti‑Communists
than as Catholics. For at any moment a supremely embarrassing objection may be
put to them: Does not their anti-Communist action lead to a result that is
precisely opposed to the one intended by the Vicar of Christ? And how can one
consider a Catholic to be consistent if he moves in an opposite direction
from the Pastor of Pastors? This question leads all anti‑Communist
Catholics to a consideration of these alternatives: To cease the struggle? Or
to explain their position?
To cease the
fight, we cannot. And we cannot cease it because of a demand of our conscience
as Catholics. For if it is a duty of every Catholic to promote good and fight
evil, our conscience imposes on us the responsibility of propagating the
traditional doctrine of the Church, and of fighting Communist doctrine.
Everywhere in the
contemporary world the words "liberty of conscience" resound. They
are pronounced throughout the Occident and even inside the dungeons of Russia .
. . or of Cuba. Many times this expression, as it is so frequently used,
acquires even abusive meanings. But of what there is in it of the more
legitimate and sacred, it affirms the right of a Catholic to act in the
religious and in the civic life, according to the dictates of his conscience.
If we could not
act in consonance with the documents of the great Pontiffs who enlightened
Christendom with their doctrine, we would feel more enchained within the Church
than Solzhenitsyn was in Soviet Russia.
The Church is not, the Church never was, the Church
never will be such a prison for consciences. The bond of obedience to the
successor of Peter, which we will never break, which we love in the depth of
our soul, to which we give the best of our love, this bond we kiss at the very
moment in which triturated by sorrow we affirm our position. And kneeling,
gazing with veneration at the figure of His Holiness Paul VI, we express to
him our fidelity.
In this filial
act we say to the Pastor of Pastors: Our soul is yours, our life is yours.
Order us to do whatever you wish. Only do not order us to stay idle in face of
the assailing red wolf. To this, our conscience is opposed.
3. The Answer, in the Apostle Saint Paul
Yes, Holy Father ‑
we continue ‑Saint Peter teaches us that it is necessary "to obey
God rather than men" (Acts 5:29). You are assisted by the Holy Ghost and
you are even comforted ‑ under the conditions defined by Vatican I ‑
by the privilege of infallibility. But this does not prevent the weakness to
which all men are subject from influencing and even determining Your conduct
in certain matters or circumstances. One of these ‑perhaps par
excellence ‑ is diplomacy. And it is here that Your policy of distention
with the Communist governments is situated.
And what, then,
to do? The number of lines in the present declaration is insufficient to permit
the listing here of all the Fathers of the Church, Doctors, Moralists, and
Canonists ‑many of them raised to the honor of the altar ‑ who
affirm the legitimacy of the resistance. This resistance is not separation, it
is not revolt, it is not harshness, it is not irreverence. On the contrary, it
is fidelity, it is union, it is love, it is submission.
"Resistance"
is the word we choose on purpose, for it is the one employed in the Acts of the
Apostles by the Holy Ghost Himself in order to characterize the attitude of St.
Paul. St. Peter, the first Pope, had taken disciplinary measures regarding the
continuity in Catholic worship of some practices remaining from the old
Synagogue, and St. Paul saw in this a grave risk of doctrinal confusion and of
harm to the faithful. He then stood up against St. Peter and "resisted him
to his face" (Gal. 2: 11). In this ardent and inspired move of the
Apostle of the Gentiles, St. Peter did not see an act of rebellion, but rather
one of union and fraternal love. Knowing well in what he was infallible and in
what he was not, St. Peter submitted to the arguments of St. Paul. The Saints
are models for Catholics. Accordingly, in the sense in which St. Paul resisted,
our state is one of resistance.
And in this, our
conscience finds peace.
4. Resistance
To resist means
that we will counsel Catholics to continue to struggle against Communist
doctrine with all licit means, in the defense of each menaced country and
Christian Civilization.
To resist means
that we will never use the unworthy resources of contestation nor, even less,
take attitudes inconsistent with the obedience and veneration owed to the
Supreme Pontiff. To resist implies, however, that we will utter respectfully
our judgment in circumstances like the interview of Archbishop Casaroli in
regard to the "happiness" of Cuban Catholics.
In 1968, the Holy
Father Paul VI was in Bogota, the prosperous capital of Colombia, for the 39th
International Eucharistic Congress. One month later, preaching in Rome to the
whole world, he affirmed that he had seen there a "great need for that
social justice which would place immense classes of poor people (in Latin
America) in more just, comfortable, and human conditions of life" (speech
of September 28, 1968).
He said this
about a Continent where the Church enjoys the greatest liberty.
In contrast,
Archbishop Casaroli saw in Cuba nothing but happiness.
In the face of
this, to resist is to state with a serene and respectful frankness that there
is a dangerous contradiction between these two declarations, and that the
struggle against the Communist doctrine shall continue.
This is an
example of true resistance.
5. Internal Panorama of the Universal Church
It is possible
that the present declaration may cause surprise to some readers. This is
because the TFP, having the maximum reluctance to take the public position that
we today assume, has not yet disclosed the disconcertedness and non‑conformity
which is growing among Catholics in the most diverse countries as a result of
the Vatican's distention toward Communist governments. Since disclosing it here
would too greatly enlarge this already extensive document, for a more complete
explanation of our position we limit ourselves to summarizing what is happening
presently among German Catholics. An important Brazilian newspaper has provided
an account of this situation written by Herman M. Goergen, a former federal
German Congressman and a Catholic of serene thinking and conduct.
He refers to the
publication of two books about the politics of the Vatican by German authors:
Wohin steuert der Vatikan? (Where is the Vatican Headed?) by Reinhard Raffalt
an Vatikan Intern (The Internal Vatican) published under the pseudonym of
Hieronymus. The response to both ischer
Merkur, "conservative and intransigent defender of the faith and the
Popes, a criticism considered by Rome to be even irreverent," with the
title: "No, Mr. Pope!" In addition, Mr. Goergen affirms regarding the
ousting of Cardinal Mindszenty: "A true wave of support (for the Cardinal)
has swept German Catholics." The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung spok
openly of the "Christian‑Marxist dreams" of Pope Paul VI. And
the Paulus Gesellschaft (Society of Paul) spokesman for the dialogue between
Christians and Marxists, condemned the "Ostpolitik" of the Vatican,
denouncing it as "Machiavellian" because it wants to "impose
upon the world a Roman‑Soviet peace. In view of this language, the
courtesy of the TFP is more easily contrasted.
We cannot close
our commentary on the article of Mr. Goergen without stressing a grave
affirmation made by him: In Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia,
the contacts and agreements with the Holy See have not impeded the progress of
the intense religious persecution there. This was also affirmed by Cardinal
Mindszenty regarding his country.
This brings us to
a state of bewilderment. The grand argument (insufficient, according to our
viewpoint) for the Vatican policy of distention, given by its enthusiasts, was
the prospect of an attenuation of the anti-religious fight. But practice shows
that such distention does not achieve this result. Cuba is another example of
this. Yet one authorized promoter of this distention such as Archbishop
Casaroli declares that in this regime of persecution, the Catholics are happy
with their living conditions. We ask then if distention is not synonymous with
capitulation.
If it is, how can
we fail to resist the policy of distention, presenting to the public the
enormous error it contains?
This is one more
example of how we understand the resistance.
6. Conclusion
This explanation
was imperative. It has the character of a legitimate self-defense of our
Catholic consciences in the face of a diplomatic system which is making the
atmosphere unbreathable to them and, putting anti‑Communist Catholics
in a most difficult situation in which their position was becoming
unexplainable to the public. We repeat this, as a conclusion, at the close of
this declaration.
However, no
conclusion would be complete without the reaffirmation of our unrestricted and
loving obedience not only to the Holy Church but also to the Pope in all of the
terms commanded. by Catholic doctrine.
May Our Lady of Fatima help us in this way which we
follow out of fidelity to Her message, and with the joy of anticipation that
the promise She made will be accomplished: "In the end, My Immaculate
Heart will triumph."