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Obstacle to the Consecration of
Russia:
The Vatican-Moscow
Agreement
by Atila Sinke Guimarães
Editors note: Our Lady of Fatima
requested that the Pope in union with the worlds bishops consecrate
Russia to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, promising Her triumph and a period of
peace as the result. The Pact of Metz, otherwise known as the Vatican-Moscow
Agreement has been the main obstacle to the Popes performing this
consecration a consecration that would have caused the conversion of
Russia and would have prevented the present scandals the Church now
suffers.
Those who pass by
the convent of the Little Sisters of the Poor in Borny on the outskirts
of the French city of Metz never imagine that something of
transcendental importance occurred in the residence of Fr. Lagarde, the
convents chaplain. In a hall of this religious residence in August 1962
two months before the Second Vatican Council opened, a secret meeting of
the greatest importance between two high-ranking personalities took place.
One dignitary was
a Cardinal of the Curia, Eugene Tisserant, representing Pope John XXIII; the
other was Metropolitan Nikodim, who spoke in the name of the Russian schismatic
Church. This encounter had consequences that changed the direction of the
Council, which was already prepared to change the trajectory of the very
history of the Church in the 20th Century.
 Cardinal Willebrands accompanied
by Metropolitan Nikodim on the last day of Vatican Council II. The disastrous
conditions of the Pact of Metz were met. Communism was not condemned,
nor even specifically mentioned, in the official documents of the
Council. |
What was the
matter of such great importance that was resolved at this meeting? Based on the
documents that are known today, there it was established that Communism would
not be condemned by the Second Vatican Council.
In 1962, the
Vatican and the schismatic Russian Church came to an agreement. According to
its terms, the Russian "Orthodox Church" agreed to send observers to Vatican
II, under the condition that no condemnation whatsoever of Communism should be
made there.1
And why were the
consequences of such a pact so far-reaching and important? Because in the 20th
Century a principal enemy of the Catholic Church was Communism. As such, until
Vatican II, it had been condemned numerous times by the Magisterium. Moreover,
in the early 60s, a new condemnation would have been quite damaging,
since Communism was passing through a serious crisis, both internally and
externally. On one hand, it was losing credibility inside the USSR since the
people were becoming increasingly discontent with the horrendous administrative
results of 45 years of Communist demagogy. On the other hand, outside the USSR,
Communism had not been able to persuade the workers and poor of free countries
to take up its banner. In fact, up until that time, it had never won a free
election. Therefore, the leaders of international Communism decided that it was
time to begin to change the appearances of the regime in order to retain the
power they had and to experiment with new methods of conquest. So in the
60s, President Nikita Khrushchev suddenly began to smile and talk about
dialogue.2 This would have been a particularly inopportune moment
for the communist movement if the Pope or the Council issued a formal
condemnation, which could have either seriously damaged or possibly even
destroyed the Communist regime.
A
Half-Secret Pact
Speaking about the
liberty at Vatican II to deal with diverse topics, Prof. Romano Amerio revealed
some previously unpublished facts. "The salient and half-secret point that
should be noted," he stated, "is the restriction on the Councils liberty
to which John XXIII had agreed a few months earlier, in making an accord with
the Orthodox Church by which the patriarchate of Moscow accepted the papal
invitation to send observers to the Council, while the Pope, for his part,
guaranteed the Council would refrain from condemning Communism. The
negotiations took place at Metz in August 1962, and all the details of time and
place were given at a press conference by Msgr. Schmitt, the Bishop of that
Diocese [newspaper Le Lorrain, 2/9/63]. The negotiations ended in an
agreement signed by Metropolitan Nikodim for the Orthodox Church and Cardinal
Tisserant, the Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, for the Holy See.
"News of the
agreement was given in the France nouvelle, the central bulletin of the
French Communist Party in the edition of January 16-22, 1963, in these terms:
Because the world socialist system is showing its superiority in an
incontestable fashion, and is strong through the support of hundreds and
hundreds of millions of men, the Church can no longer be content with a crude
anti-Communism. As part of its dialogue with the Russian Orthodox Church, it
has even promised there will be no direct attack on the Communist system at the
Council. On the Catholic side, the daily La Croix of February 15,
1963, gave notice of the agreement, concluding: As a consequence of this
conversation, Msgr. Nikodim agreed that someone should go to Moscow carrying an
invitation, on condition that guarantees were given concerning the apolitical
attitude of the Council.
"Moscows
condition, namely that the Council should say nothing about Communism, was not,
therefore, a secret, but the isolated publication of it made no impression on
general opinion, as it was not taken up by the press at large and circulated,
either because of the apathetic and anesthetized attitude to Communism common
in clerical circles or because the Pope took action to impose silence in the
matter. Nonetheless, the agreement had a powerful, albeit silent, effect on the
course of the Council when requests for a renewal of the condemnation of
Communism were rejected in order to observe this agreement to say nothing about
it."3
Thus the Council,
which made statements on capitalism and colonialism, said nothing specific
about the greatest evil of the age, Communism. While the Vatican Monsignors
were smiling at the Russian schismatic representatives, many bishops were in
prison and innumerable Faithful were either persecuted or driven underground
for their fidelity to the Holy Roman Catholic Church.
The
Kremlin/Vatican Negotiations
This important
information about Vatican-Kremlin negotiations is confirmed in an article
The Mystery of the Rome-Moscow Pact published in the October, 1989
issue of 30 Dias, which quotes statements made by the Bishop of Metz,
Paul Joseph Schmitt. In a February 9, 1963, interview with the newspaper
Republican Lorrain, Msgr. Schmitt said:
"It was in our
region that the secret meeting of Cardinal Tisserant with
Archbishop Nikodim occurred. The exact place was the residence of Fr. Lagarde,
chaplain for the Little Sisters of the Poor in Borny [on the outskirts of
Metz]. Here for the first time the arrival of the prelates of the Russian
Church was mentioned. After this meeting, the conditions for the presence of
the Russian churchs observers were established by Cardinal Willebrands,
an assistant of Cardinal Bea. Archbishop Nikodim agreed that an official
invitation should be sent to Moscow, with the guarantee of the apolitical
character of the Council."4
The same source
also transcribed a letter of Msgr. Georges Roche regarding the Pact of Metz:
"That accord was negotiated between the Kremlin and the Vatican at the highest
level ... But I can assure you ... that the decision to invite Russian Orthodox
observers to Vatican Council II was made personally by His Holiness John XXIII
with the encouragement of Cardinal Montini, who was counselor to the Patriarch
of Venice when he was Archbishop of Milan ... Cardinal Tisserant received
formal orders to negotiate the accord and to make sure that it would be
observed during the Council."5
In a book
published some time after this, German theologian Fr. Bernard Häring
who was secretary-coordinator at the Council for the reaction to
Gaudium et Spes revealed the more profound reason for the
pigeon-holing of a petition that many conciliar Fathers signed,
asking Paul VI and the Council to condemn Communism: "When around two dozen
bishops requested a solemn condemnation of Communism," stated Fr. Häring,
"Msgr. Glorieux ... and I were blamed like expiatory goats. I have no reason to
deny that I did everything possible to avoid this condemnation, which rang out
clearly like a political condemnation. I knew that John XXIII had promised
Moscow authorities that the Council would not condemn Communism in order to
assure the participation of observers of the Russian Orthodox
church."6
Since the
Time of Stalin
Facts from such
indisputable sources permit no doubt about the effectiveness of the Pact of
Metz. They also lend credibility to the information presented in the book
entitled, The Jesuits, by the late Fr. Malachi Martin, a quite
well-informed ex-Jesuit who offers similar details about what happened before,
during and after the Pact of Metz.
In Martins
work, the Cardinal Secretary of State, under the pseudonym of Stato,
tells about the understanding made by the Holy See with the Kremlin from 1942
to our day:
"Stato
reminded his Venerable Colleagues that he had been with the present Holy Father
at His Holiness two meetings with the Soviet negotiator, Anatoliy
Adamshin, the most recent of which had been earlier this very year of 1981. His
Holiness had given the Soviets a guarantee that no word or action, either by
His Holiness or the Polish Hierarchy or Solidaritys leaders, would
violate the Moscow-Vatican Pact of 1962.
"Stato
did not need to explain to his listeners that in the late spring of 1962, a
certain Eugene Cardinal Tisserant had been dispatched by Pope John XXIII to
meet with a Russian prelate, one Metropolitan Nikodim, representing the Soviet
Politburo of Premier Nikita Khrushchev. Pope John ardently desired to know if
the Soviet Government would allow two members of the Russian Orthodox church to
attend the Second Vatican Council set to open the following October. The
meeting between Tisserant and Nikodim took place in the official residence of
Paul Joseph Schmitt, then the Bishop of Metz, France. There, Nikodim gave the
Soviet answer. His government would agree, provided the Pope would guarantee
two things: that his forthcoming Council would issue no condemnation of Soviet
Communism or of Marxism, and that the Holy See would make it a rule for the
future to abstain from all such official condemnations.
"Nikodim got his
guarantees. Matters were orchestrated after that for Pope John by Jesuit
Cardinal Augustine Bea until the final agreement was concluded in Moscow, and
was carried out in Rome, in that Vatican Council as well as in the policies of
the Holy See for nearly two decades since."7
Further on,
Malachi Martin "relates" that this Vatican-Moscow pact of 1962 was "merely a
renewal of an earlier agreement between the Holy See and Moscow" on the
occasion of conversations that took place in 1942 in the pontificate of Pius
XII. He writes,
"It was in that
year that Vatican Monsignor Giovanni Battista Montini, who himself later
succeeded to the Papacy as Paul VI, talked directly with Joseph Stalins
representative. Those talks were aimed at dimming Pius XIIs constant
fulminations against the Soviet dictator and Marxism. Stato himself had
been privy to those talks. He had also been privy to the conversations between
Montini and the Italian Communist Party leader, Palmiro Togliatti, in 1944 ...
Stato offered to supply reports from the Allied Office of Strategic
Services about the matter, beginning, as he recalled, with OSS Report
JR-1022 of August 28, 1944."8
Such, then, are
the official documents as well as the extra-official information about the Pact
of Metz, which explains the incredible omission at the Ecumenical Second
Vatican Council.
Some Facts
that We Need to Consider
1. Catholic
doctrine has always emphatically condemned Communism. It would be possible,
should it be necessary, to publish a small book composed exclusively of
anti-Communist pontifical documents.
2. It would
have been natural, therefore, for the Second Vatican Council which met in Rome
from 1962 to 1965, to have confirmed these condemnations against the greatest
enemy of the Church and Christian Civilization in the 20th Century.
3. In
addition to this, 213 Cardinals, Archbishops, and bishops solicited Paul VI to
have the Council make such a condemnation. Later, 435 conciliar Fathers
repeated the same request. The two petitions were duly delivered within the
time limits established by the Internal Guidelines of the Council.
Nonetheless, inexplicably, neither petition ever came up for debate. The first
was not taken into consideration. As for the second, after the Council had
closed, it was alleged that it had been "lost" by Msgr. Achille Glorieux,
secretary of the commission that would have been entrusted with the
request.9
4. The
Council closed without making any express censure of Communism. Why was no
censure made? The matter seemed wrapped in an enigmatic fog. Only later did
these significant facts on the topic appear.
The point of my
article is to gather and present information from several different sources for
the consideration of my readers. How can the actions of the Catholic Prelates
who inspired, ordered, followed and maintained the decisions of the Pact of
Metz be explained? I leave the answer to my readers.
Footnotes:
1. Ulysses Floridi, Moscou et le
Vatican, France-Empire, Paris, 1979, pp. 147-48; Romano Amerio, Iota
Unum, K.C., MO: Sarto House, 1996, pp. 75-76; Ricardo de la Cierva, Oscura
rebeliòn en la Iglesia, Barcelona: Plaza & Janes, 1987, pp.
580-81.
2. Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira,
Unperceived Ideological Transshipment and Dialogue, New York: Crusade
for a Christian Civilization, 1982, pp. 8-15.
3. Romano Amerio, Iota Unum, pp.
65f.
4. 30 Dias, October 1988, pp.
55-6.
5. Ibid., p. 57.
6. 30 Dias, October 1989, p.
55.
7. Malachi Martin, The Jesuits
The Society of Jesus and the Betrayal of the Roman Catholic Church, New
York: Simon & Schuster, 1987, pp. 85-6.
8. Ibid., pp. 91-2.
9. The full story is found in The Rhine
Flows into the Tiber, Fr. Ralph Wiltgen, pp. 272-278.
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