Rome – Pope Visits Memorial to Nazi Victims in Rome

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    In this picture made available by the Vatican newspaper Osservatore Romano, Pope Benedict XVI, center, prays during his visit at Rome's Ardeatine Graves, Sunday, March 27, 2011, where 335 Italians were slaughtered by occupying Nazis on March 24, 1944. (AP Photo/Osservatore Romano, HO)Rome – Pope Benedict XVI on Sunday prayed at the memorial to victims of a 1944 massacre that was one of the worst atrocities by German occupiers in Italy during World War II and denounced what he called the “abominable” legacy of violence unleashed during war.

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    The visit won Jewish praise that Benedict had taken yet another step to heal centuries of painful Vatican-Jewish relations.

    The German-born pontiff visited the Ardeatine Caves on the outskirts of Rome to mark the anniversary of the killings of 335 civilians in Rome to avenge an attack by resistance fighters that killed 33 members of a Nazi military police unit.

    Among those in attendance were children and other relatives of the victims, with some of the elderly family members weeping at the memory of their loss and clutching flowers.

    “What happened here on March 24, 1944, is a very grave offense to God, because it is violence perpetrated by man upon man,” the pope said in speech at the simple memorial fashioned out of the walls of the caves. “It is the most abominable effect of the war, of every war,” the pontiff said.

    The wounds are still fresh for Rome’s tiny Jewish community. Many of them expressed outrage last fall when former SS Capt. Erich Priebke, 97, was allowed to go shopping and to church in Rome. Priebke was sentenced to life imprisonment for his role in the massacre but later given house arrest due to his age.

    Elan Steinberg, a leader of the American Gathering of Holocaust Survivors and their Descendants, praised the pontiff for paying “moving homage to the victims of this Nazi crime — Catholic and Jew.”
    Pope Benedict XVI wave during his visit at Rome's Ardeatine Graves, Sunday, March 27, 2011, where 335 Italians were slaughtered by occupying Nazis on March 24, 1944. The banner, background left, reads: "Italian families national association of martyrs and the fallen for national freedom". (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)
    “Coming on the heels of his strong pronouncement exonerating Jews in the death of Jesus, this latest gesture by the German-born Benedict is a further dramatic step in binding the wounds that have disturbed Vatican-Jewish relations in recent years,” Steinberg said in a statement.

    The landmark exoneration came in the pope’s new book, “Jesus of Nazareth-Part II,” in which Benedict lays out biblical and theological reasons why there is no basis in Scripture for the argument that Jewish people as a whole were responsible for Jesus’ crucifixion. Interpretations to the contrary have been used for centuries to justify the persecution of Jews.
    In this picture made available by the Vatican newspaper Osservatore Romano, Pope Benedict XVI, center, prays during his visit at Rome's Ardeatine Graves, Sunday, March 27, 2011, where 335 Italians were slaughtered by occupying Nazis on March 24, 1944. (AP Photo/Osservatore Romano, HO)
    Steinberg also voiced the “shock and disbelief” of Holocaust survivors that Priebke “is allowed shopping trips and other excursions,” and appealed to legal authorities to “put an end to this perversion of justice.'”

    In 1994, Priebke was extradited to Italy from Argentina, where he had lived for years, and put on trial. The Germans had ordered 10 Italians to be executed for each of the 33 Nazis killed by resistance forces in Rome a day earlier. Priebke admitted shooting two people and rounding up victims, but insisted he was only following orders.


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    13 Comments
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    Buchwalter
    Buchwalter
    13 years ago

    The massacre took place in the Fosse Adreatine near Rome and later one SS officer who took part found refuge in Monastery near Mantua

    grund
    grund
    13 years ago

    Big deal 335!! the monsters from europe killed from us 18,000 times that amount!!!

    13 years ago

    To #2 -Grund-How dare you trivialize that massacre by stating “big deal”. One would have thought that such words would come from a Holocaust denier! Incidentally, if Pope Pius had spoken out publicly against the Nazis, he might have prevented the deportationj of the Jews from Rome.

    takeittothem
    takeittothem
    13 years ago

    Nowhere does it say that these 335 were Jews. If anything, there’s always a strong hint that they were Christians.
    If they were Jews, the pope gets a yasher koach. If not, he’s just another scum anti-semitic piece of dreck.

    Tzi_Bar_David
    Tzi_Bar_David
    13 years ago

    #5 There is no reference in the article that the 335 were Yidden; according to Wikipedia (and I have no first hand knowledge where the facts stated therein arise) a total of 335 Italian hostages were taken, composed of civilians, Italian prisoners of war (up to General rank), previously captured partisans and some inmates from Roman prisons. The massacre was perpetrated without prior public notice in what was then a little-frequented rural suburb of the city, inside the tunnels of the disused quarries of pozzolana, near the Via Ardeatina.

    While the Xtian pope is generally someone to be loathed, it is always nice to see these innocent people are not forgotten.

    GB_Jew
    GB_Jew
    13 years ago

    Why is it that – in the eyes of so many otherwise compassionate and frum contributors to VIN – goyim and Jews whose standards of religious observance do not match those of those anshei yirai shamayim appear to be less than nevelos?

    13 years ago

    ? How does the pope explain why the Vatican would enable the escape of nazi murderers via “the ratline” post-WWII, after all the atrocities committed against the Italian people, including some of the Vatican’s own priests, during the German occupation of Italy?

    takeittothem
    takeittothem
    13 years ago

    To # 9, 10, 11: Of course every human being counts. That’s not the point. The point is that the pope went out of his way to honor 335 Christians (that’s still the opinion of most – that they were Christians) as a symbol of the Shoah and man’s inhumanity to man. The symbol of the Shoah should not be Christian dead. It is an insult to the 6,000,000 tortured and murdered Jews. That was my point – so don’t you guys get so high and mighty with me –