Wednesday, 11 February 2009
Crusaders for Europe
2009/02/06
Christian Fundamentals
 German Catholic parliamentarians are strongly rejecting the  sharp criticism of the German Pope's decision to lift the excommunication of a  prominent holocaust denier. "The Pope knows what he is doing", explains Norbert  Geis, member of the German Bundestag (CSU): "He cannot be accused of being a  proponent of the holocaust."[1] After Chancellor Angela Merkel criticized  Benedict XVI, Bernd Posselt, member of the European parliament (CSU) is  demanding that she "stop behaving like the Pope's school mistress," and rather  try to accentuate "Christian values inside the Berlin coalition government."[2]  „Many CDU members do not agree with Merkel's statements," says Georg Brunnhuber,  the chairman of the CDU group in the state of Baden-Wurttemberg. The Vatican is  "really appalled at the discussion in Germany" and "has the impression that  subterranean "anti-Catholic resentments are now beginning to surface in  Germany."[3]
Re-Christianization
 The wide-ranging public criticism of the German Pope's most  recent measures distracts from the fact that his policies have always received  approbation in the Federal Republic of Germany. Benedict XVI seeks the  "re-Christianization" of 'Europe. Years before his pontification, he had already  announced his "Idea of Empire" [4] - a concept that even the German chancellery  sees as a "functional model for a supra-national order" that is worth  discussing.[5] In accordance with the Vatican's demand, the German government  has stubbornly attempted to impose a "reference to God" in the EU Constitution  Treaty draft and later in the Lisbon Treaty, but was overruled by secular  opposition, particularly from Paris.[6] The Vatican is totally supportive of the  subdivision of Europe along the lines of the German "Volkstumspolitik" (ethnic  policy) principles, which includes not only the regions inhabited by German  speaking minorities throughout Europe, but also the German-initiated parceling  of Southern Europe (german-foreign-policy.com reported [7]).
Minister Under Franco
 For the implementation of his plans for the  "re-Christianization" of Europe, Benedict XVI is working together with powerful  organizations, from the reactionary wing of the Catholic Church. As their  objective, they see the rollback of modern influence within the church,  particularly the systematic elimination of the liberation theology and even  liberal forms of Catholicism. In the eyes of the Pope, their rejection of  modernity has predestined these organizations to be combat troops against  Christianity's adaptation and absorption into the modern world. Particularly  Opus Dei is included among these organizations. With nearly 90,000 members, it  is one of the most influential inner-church pressure groups. Opus Dei was  founded in 1928 by the Spanish priest Josemaria Escrivá. Escrivá was later close  to the Spanish dictator, Francisco Franco, in whose government Opus Dei had for  a while four ministers.
"Not That Bad"
 The Opus Dei's proximity to Franco, had already conditioned its  relatively close relations to Berlin in the early 1940s. It was reported that  all of the male members of the organization "volunteered to serve in the 'Blue  Division'."[8] The "Blue Division" was a unit of Spanish volunteers, who fought,  under Wehrmacht command, on the German East Front in its war of annihilation  against the Soviet Union. Opus Dei 's founder Escrivá later recounted to another  organization member that he had viewed "Nazi Germany as a crusade against  Communism." The member reported that Escrivá had told him, "they are  exaggerating, when they claim that Hitler killed six million Jews. Hitler was  not that bad. He couldn't have killed more than three or four million  Jews."[9]
Meteoric Rise
 The publicist Peter Hertel, one of the most prolific critics of  Opus Dei, exposed in great detail, how Joseph Ratzinger, after an initial  coolness, began to draw closer to Opus Dei already as a cardinal of the Roman  Curia. As Pope, he, as did his predecessor, continued a close cooperation with  that organization. According to Hertel, the number of Opus Dei members, who were  designated to high office by the head of the Catholic Church personally is  drastically increasing. In the meantime, every fourteenth Opus Dei priest has  been appointed to "an office or bestowed a title by the Pope." In 1990 it was  but one in a hundred.[10] Hertel sees the organization's rise as  "meteoric".
Anti-Semitism
 The rehabilitation of Catholic principles of faith, generally  considered as anti-Jewish, which had been suppressed decades ago, is part of  this development. These principles are fostering Catholic anti-Semitism. For  example the German Pope has reauthorized a liturgy ascribing to Judaism a lower  status than that of Christianity. This is considered a prerequisite for the  reentry into the Catholic Church of the Society of Saint Pius X. The scandal  erupted, when Pope Benedict XVI, in lifting the excommunication of its bishops,  opened the way also for a holocaust denier to return to the fold. Ratzinger has  been criticized, for quite some time, for his remarks belittling anti-Semitism.  For example, during his visit to the Auschwitz Memorial in Mai 2006, he  explained that the Nazi mass murder, carried out with the direct or indirect  participation of millions of Germans, was solely the responsibility of a "band  of criminals", that had "used and abused" the German people.[11] The Vatican is  currently preparing the beatification of Pope Pius XII. Pius XII, who had  formerly served as papal nuncio in Germany and, as Pope, remained in amicable  contact with Berlin, had remained silent about the holocaust, even though he  knew details of the Nazi-extermination practices.
Subventions
 In Germany, strong criticism of Bendict XVI only began, when he  lifted the excommunication of the holocaust denier. But even this tardy  criticism is being contested, as can be seen by recent reactions of Catholic  parliamentarians. The advance of papal combat troops, such as Opus Dei, is even  being financed by the German government. Over the past ten years, a foundation  under Opus Dei's control ("Rhein-Donau-Stiftung") received 1.5 million Euros  from the Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development. The amount of  the subventions is rising: in 2008 alone, this organization was granted over  300.000 Euros. Among the beneficiaries is an Argentinean school for nurses,[12]  who, according to the project description, must be "ethically and religiously  educated and faithful". This subvention was no mistake, according to a statement  by the German government, dated December 23, 2008. The Rhein-Donau Foundation's  president, the parliamentarian Norbert Geis, is a member of the Bundestag  Committee for Economic Cooperation. He qualified Chancellor Merkel's criticism  of the papal care for a holocaust denier "a mistake".[13]
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