August Cardinal Hlond

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August Hlond
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August Hlond

August Cardinal Hlond (July 5, 1881 -October 22, 1948) was a Polish prelate. He was Archbishop of Gniezno and Poznań in 1926 and primate (highest ranking church official) in Poland, Archbishop of Gniezno and Warsaw in 1946.

[edit] Controversial bishop

When the Polish leader Józef Piłsudski died in 1935, Poland became highly nationalistic. The Great Depression of the 1930s pushed many Poles into dire poverty. This led to tensions in Polish society and extermism flourished.

Some people believed that if peasants were able to start small businesses, they would escape this poverty. In the meantime a large proportion (estimated at more than 90%) of shop keepers in Poland were Jewish. In 1935 Hlond called for a boycott of Jewish businesses with the words: "It is a fact that the Jews fight against the Catholic church, they are free-thinkers, and constitute the vanguard of atheism, bolshevism and revolution ... It is also true that in the schools the Jewish youth is having an evil influence, from an ethical and religious point of view, on the Catholic youth ... One does well to avoid Jewish shops and Jewish stalls in the markets, but it is not permitted to demolish Jewish businesses. One should protect oneself against the influence of Jewish morals...but it is inadmissible to assault, hit or injure Jews."[citation needed]

Coat of Arms of primate Hlond
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Coat of Arms of primate Hlond

In 1939 Hlond spent several months in Rome for the conclave of 1939. In January 1940, Vatican Radio broadcast Hlond's reports of Nazi persecution of Jews and the Catholic clergy in Poland. These reports were included in the report of the Polish government to the Nuremberg Trials after the war.

Cardinal August Hlond reported in August 1941 to the secretary of state that the Polish people believed Pope Pius XII had abandoned them. This was said in light of the Nazi persecution of the Polish church and clergy.

He lived in southern France from 1940 to 1944 during most of WW II. He was arrested by the Gestapo on February 3, 1944, but was freed by the Allies on April 1, 1945. He returned to Poznań on July 20, 1945. He was transferred to Warsaw and named primate of Poland on June 13, 1946. He strongly opposed the communist regime there.

Hlond has been accused of overstepping his authority by forcing German officeholders to resign their church posts in 1945 in favor of Poles, thereby supporting the Polish annexation of historical eastern German territories after Potsdam. Most Rev. Maximilian Kaller is one of the bishops who were removed from their dioceses at this time, deported to West Germany, died and is now in process of beatification.

[edit] Beatification and further controversy

Professor Franz Scholz, a German theologian, as well as many others have expressed their opposition to the proposed beatification of Cardinal Hlond. Scholz opposes his actions against post-war German expellees and civilians on territory annexated by the Polish Republic. Again Jewish groups, for example, have pointed out that not long after his 1935 call to boycott Jewish shopkeepers, Cardinal Hlond wrote a letter in 1936 that proved harmful to Polish Jews[citation needed]. Some historians have suggested that because of Hlond's allegedly anti-Semitic views, the Roman Catholic Church effectively provided religious cover to the country's extremist anti-Jewish groups[citation needed]. Jewish citizens, they say, were directly affected by Cardinal Hlond's letter. However, it must be noted, that while Hlond promoted the expulsion of German civilians after World War II, Hlond had always consistently condemned the Nazi persecution of the Jews and had been openly opposed to all actions hurting Jews materially and physically.

Preceded by
Edmund Dalbor
Archbishop of Poznań
1926–1946
Succeeded by
Walenty Dymek
Preceded by
Edmund Dalbor
Primate of Poland
1926–1948
Succeeded by
Stefan Wyszyński
Preceded by
Aleksander Kakowski
Archbishop of Warsaw
1946–1948
Succeeded by
Stefan Wyszyński

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