The Popes Against the Jews, David I. Kertzer
The Popes Against the Jews, David I. Kertzer
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The Popes Against the Jews
The Vatican's Role in the Rise of Modern Anti-Semitism

Author: David I. Kertzer

Narrator: Arthur Morey

Unabridged: 13 hr 17 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 01/19/2021


Synopsis

A groundbreaking historical study based on documents previously locked in the Vatican’s secret archives: The Popes Against the Jews graphically shows how the Catholic Church helped make the Holocaust possible.

Pope John Paul II, as part of his effort to improve Catholic-Jewish relations, has himself called for a clear-eyed historical investigation into any possible link be-tween the Church and the Holocaust. An important sign of his commitment was the recent decision to allow the distinguished historian David I. Kertzer, a specialist in Italian history, to be one of the first scholars given access to long-sealed Vatican archives.

The result is a book filled with shocking revelations. It traces the Vatican’s role in the development of modern anti-Semitism from the nineteenth century up to the outbreak of the Second World War. Kertzer shows why all the recent attention given to Pope Pius XII’s failure to publicly protest the slaughter of Europe’s Jews in the war misses a far more important point. What made the Holocaust possible was groundwork laid over a period of decades. In this campaign of demonization of the Jews—identifying them as traitors to their countries, enemies of all that was good, relentlessly pursuing world domination—the Vatican itself played a key role, as is shown here for the first time.

Despite its focus, this is not an anti-Catholic book. It seeks a balanced judgment and an understanding of the historical forces that led the Church along the path it took.

Inevitably controversial, written with devastating clarity and dispassionate authority, The Popes Against
the Jews is a book of the greatest importance.

About David I. Kertzer

David I. Kertzer is the author most recently of The Popes Against the Jews, which the New York Times hailed as "fascinating…[a] riveting piece of historical detective work" and Garry Wills praised as a "formidable scholarly achievement, staggeringly thorough." Kertzer was a finalist for the 1997 National Book Award for The Kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara, which won the National Jewish Book Award. Writing in the New York Daily News, André Aciman said, "Kertzer is a brilliant analyst and knows how to weave the personal drama into the historical events." He is the Paul Dupee University Professor of Social Science at Brown University, where he is also a professor of anthropology and Italian studies.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Lewis on May 31, 2015

Kertzer presents a methodical fact-based case that utterly destroys many of the self-serving statements and actions of the Catholic Church during and after the Nazi years. He begins with the 1998 report of a Vatican Commission titled "We Remember: A Reflection on the Shoah." Pope John Paul II had as......more

Goodreads review by Brian on January 12, 2021

David Kertzer's research in recently opened sections of the Vatican archives exposes a religious dimension to the rise of modern anti-Semitism. He reviews decisions and statements on the "Jewish problem," by clerics, the popes, and Christian political activists, mainly from the French Revolution to......more

Goodreads review by Daniel on January 25, 2016

Anyone who believes that George Washington never told a lie, that Betsy Ross stitched the first flag, or that the Liberty Bell cracked on July 4, 1776, needs not read this book. The Popes Against the Jews is not for the naïve, faint hearted, or for those whose religious zealotry prevents them from w......more

Goodreads review by Laurence on August 21, 2014

A tremendous, detailed and devastating account of the roots of the Holocaust. I congratulate David on exposing the deceit that has covered up the clear responsibility the Catholic Church holds in one of the most horrific acts of genocide every perpetrated. Pius XII should have stood in the dock at Nu......more

Goodreads review by Liam on May 06, 2023

I read this book and it is such an important book that I am not going to write my own review I am going to quote the entire review by Gary Wills that appeared in the New York Times on September 23, 2001. I don't want to be or appear anti-Catholic, I was raised and educated within the church and I kn......more


Quotes

"Without sanctimony or melodrama but with meticulous documentation, David I. Kertzer tells a sickening story. THE POPES AGAINST THE JEWS is at once the calm, patient lesson of a born history teacher and an iron to burn scars in the mind." --Jack Miles, author of GOD: A BIOGRAPHY

"David Kertzer's provocative new book challenges the widely accepted distinction between Catholic anti-Judaism and modern anti-Semitism. He moves beyond recent attacks on the Vatican's record during WWII, indicting not just Pius XII but the entire tradition out of which he emerged. Many will disagree with Kertzer's conclusions, but no one will be able to ignore this disturbing history of the Papacy and the Jews in the modern era." --Brian Porter, Associate Professor of History at the University of Michigan and author of When Nationalism Began to Hate

"This is a fascinating study of an important and controversial subject. As well as being both polemical and highly readable it is scholarly and contains a great deal of unfamiliar information from the recently opened Vatican archives." --Denis Mack Smith

"Once again Kertzer has produced impressive evidence of the part played by the papacy in the growth of anti-Semitism in the twentieth century. Painful as his historical narrative may be for Catholics, it is a necessary prelude to a true reconciliation between the Catholic Church and Judaism." --John Cornwell, author of Hitler's Pope: The Secret History of Pius XII

"This is a powerful and incisive analysis of the ways in which the Vatican and the Catholic Church helped to nurture and shape the emergence of modern anti-Semitic movements that made the Holocaust possible. With the help of solid documentation and clear exposition, Kertzer sweeps away the apologetic myths that have sought to disculpate the church from direct complicity in the tragic fate of European Jewry."

---Professor Robert S. Wistrich, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, author of Hitler and the Holocaust


Awards

  • Mark Lynton History Prize