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By Clifford Shack
On the holiest of Jewish holidays, Yom Kippur, in the autumn of 1931, Guy de
Rothschild walked through the massive street gate at 19 Rue Laffitte, for the
first time as an adult on adult business. The day was chosen carefully, what
others might perceive as the beginning of a banking career, to a Rothschild
it was entering into a priesthood. At twenty-two, Guy was assigned letters
to write. One of his correspondents was a Cardinal Pacelli, future Pope
PiusXII, then in charge of Holy office finances, and who kept a small account
at MM. de Rothschild Freres.
In the book, Hitler's Pope, John Cornwall's chronicles the life of Eugenio
Pacelli, Pope Pius XII. Pacellli was arguably the most dangerous churchman in
modern history. As Pontiff during World War II, not only did he fail to
speak out against Hitler's Final Solution, but he personally made the Final
Solution possible!
In the first decade of the twentieth century, Pacelli was a brilliant
Vatican lawyer who helped shape a new ideology of unprecedented papal power.
As papal nuncio in Munich and Berlin in the 1920's, he used cunning and
moral blackmail to impose Rome's power on Germany. In 1933, he negotiated a
treaty with Hitler, the Reich Concordat, which ensured that the Nazis would
rise unopposed by the most powerful Catholic community in the world- sealing,
by Hitler's own admission, the fate of the Jews in Europe.
How could Eugenio Pacelli possibly have gotten away with such cunning,
especially since we know that he was in personal contact with the
Rothschilds. Guy de Rothschild was his pen pal eight years before he became
Pope. But wait... if Pacelli was Hitler's Pope, and Hitler was a
Rothschild... then he was Rothschild's Pope!
How did Eugenio Pacelli become Rothschild's Pope?
Eugenio Pacelli was described routinely, during his pontificate and after
his death, as a member of the Black Nobility. The Black Nobility were a
small group of aristocratic families of Rome who had stood by the popes
following the seizure of their dominions in the bitter struggle for the
creation of the nation-state of Italy... Pacelli's father and grandfather
before him owed their distinction to membership of the caste of lay Vatican
lawyers in the service of the papacy.
Pacelli's immediate family association with the Holy See dates from 1819,
when his grandfather, Marcantonio Pacelli, arrived in the Eternal City to
study canon law, or Church law, as a protoge of a clerical uncle, Monsiignor
Prospero Caterini. By 1834 Marcantonio had become an advocate in the
Tribunall of the Sacred Rota, an ecclesiastical court involved in such
activities as marriage annulments. While raising ten children (his second
child being Eugenio's father, Filippo, born in 1837), Marcantonio became a
key official in the service of Pius IX, popularly known as Pio Nono.
The quick tempered, charismatic, and epileptic Pio Nono (Giovanni Maria
Mastai-Ferretti), crowned in 1846, was convinced, as had been his
predecessors from time immemorial, that the papal territories forming the
midriff of the Italian peninsula ensured the independence of the successors
to St. Peter. If the Supreme Pontiff were a mere inhabitant of a "foreign"
country, how could he claim to befree of local influence? Three years after
his coronation, it looked as if Pio Nono had ignominiously lost his
sovereignty over the Eternal City to a republican mob. On November 15, 1849,
Count Pelligrino Rossi, a lay government minister of the papal states, famous
for his biting sarcasm, approached the Palazzo della Cancellleria in Rome and
greeted a sullen waiting crowd with a contemptuous smile. As he was about to
enter the building, a man leapt forward and stabbed him fatally in the neck.
The next day, the Pope's Quirinal summer palace above the city was sacked,,
and Pio Nono, disguised in a priest's simple cassock and a pair of large
spectacles, fled to the seaside fortress of Gaeta within the safety of the
neighboring kingdom of Naples. He took with him Marcantonio Pacelli as his
legal and political adviser. From this fastness, Pio Nono hurled
denunciations against the "outrageous treason of democracy" and threatened
prospective voters with excommunication. Only with the help of French
bayonets, and a loan from the Rothschild's, did Pio Nono contrive to return
to the Vatican a year later to resume a despised reign over the city of Rome
and what was left of the papal territories.
From this we see that the Vatican owed it's existence to the Rothschild's
from this point on.
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