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With This
Sister, It’s No Act
by Ronald J. Rychlak
The Fighting Nun: My
Story
by Margherita Marchione, Cornwall Books, 2000,
New York-London 240 pp.
Pope Pius XII: Consensus and Controversy
by Margherita Marchione, (Paulist
Press, 2002, New York, Mahwah, NJ
Not long ago I had dinner with several Catholic scholars from around the nation.
During a lull in the conversation (there were not many) I ventured my
observation that Pope Pius XII was at the center of the attack on the Catholic
Church. I said that the phony charges against him were actually part of a much
broader assault on the Church itself. My brilliant observation went over with a
thud. I don’t think anyone agreed with me.
Since that time we have seen book after book critical of Pius XII, but behind
almost everyone was a larger attack on the papacy and the Catholic Church. The
culmination (at least as of the time I write this) is Daniel Goldhagen’s
hate-filled piece in the January 21, 2002 edition of The New Republic, which is
also scheduled to be released in book from later this year. Goldhagen took all
the lies and half-truths from earlier books, combined them with his own venom
and lack of knowledge, and repackaged them into a true broadside against the
Church. Upon reading the article, one of the scholars from my earlier
conversation called me up. “I never saw it coming,” he said. Now, however, he
agreed. The attack on Pius is actually just the focus point of a much larger
attack against the Catholic Church.
The person who has seen this coming for the longest time, and who has waged a
difficult, often lonely battle to defend the honor of Pope Pius XII (and hence
the Church), is Sr. Margherita Marchione. It is largely due to her efforts that
Pius XII’s reputation was not rolled over in the last several years by books
like Hitler’s Pope and those that followed in its wake.
I first met Sr. Margherita while doing a television show on Pius XII for EWTN. I
had read her earlier writings on Pius, and I assumed that this was her life
work. What a surprise (and a joy) it was to learn so much more about her from
her autobiography, The Fighting Nun: My Story.
While Sr. Margherita has done much for Pius, she has done as much or more for
many other people (and historical figures) during a life in which she earned a
Ph.D. from Columbia, authored 36 books, served as a Fulbright Scholar, been
honored by the New Jersey Literary Hall of Fame, and hobnobbed with popes,
presidents, scholars, and royalty. She has even had a picture of New York Yankee
great Billy Martin kissing her appear in the newspaper.
Sr. Margherita’s story begins with her as a 13-year old, sitting at the dinner
table and informing her parents and seven older siblings that she was leaving to
become a nun. Later that day she took off (with a ride that she had arranged) to
begin her studies with the Religious Teachers Filippini. Before long the stage
for her wonderful life of service was set.
Much in the following chapters is about the people who helped Sr. Margherita,
and the ways in which they did so. She had many benefactors over the years,
including Frank Sinatra and Henry Salvatori. She paid them back by going above
and beyond anything that they might have expected.
Prior to defending Pius XII, Sr. Margherita wrote about Clemente Rebora,
Giovanni Boine, and Giuseppe Prezzolini, but her most significant efforts were
directed towards the promotion of Philip Mazzei, a key figure in the American
Revolution. Not only did Sr. Margherita write several books about him, but in
conjunction with the bicentennial celebration she led the successful effort to
have his image placed on an international commemorative airmail stamp. She also
was behind the effort to have his bust sculpted and placed in Monticello and to
have his image placed on an Italian postage stamp.
Sr. Margherita taught for twenty years at Fairleigh Dickinson University, where
she was a favorite of the students. When she became embroiled in a campus
dispute that threatened her position, they came to her defense. In a parody of a
Beatles song they held banners proclaiming: “Happiness Is the Warmth of a Nun.”
She ended up staying on the faculty.
Although pressured for years to write her memoirs, only in the spring of 2000
did Sr. Margherita agree. She dedicated three weeks of intensive, lengthy
computer hours. Within a few months the book was printed by Cornwall Press where
she had already published Twentieth Century Italian Poetry: A Bilingual
Anthology (1974, 302pp.) and Peter and Sally Sammartino: Biographical Notes
(1994, 305pp.). This was a sudden decision because she wanted a forum to record
her confrontational radio and television discussions with John Cornwell in
October 1999. In the April 2000 issue of Homiletic & Pastoral Review, Kenneth
Baker, SJ, wrote: “Sister Margherita Marchione does not fit the secular
stereotype of the traditional nun. In her article, “The Nun Versus the Spin
Master,” she points out the lies and errors about Pope Pius XII in John
Cornwell’s Hitler’s Pope: The Secret History of Pius XII.
Sr. Margherita’s memoirs, of course, devote a full chapter (plus portions of
other chapters) to her work defending Pius XII. She became interested in this
topic when she learned that Jews had been sheltered in three convents of the
Religious Teachers Filippini in Rome during World War II. That discovery led to
research and a new passion. Over the past decade, no one has written more
letters, more books, or made more presentations defending the honor of Pius XII
than Sr. Margherita.
Pope Pius XII: Consensus and Controversy is Sr. Margherita’s most recent
contribution to the on-going study of Pius XII. As in her earlier books, she
strongly defends the World War II pontiff against the charges of callous
indifference to human (particularly Jewish) suffering.
Refreshingly, she acknowledges that she does not write from a detached
perspective. In an earlier book (Pius XII: Architect for Peace) she wrote: “When
I think of Pius XII, I feel inspired. How can I not dedicate myself to him with
the same fervor that impelled me to write about [others]?” On this topic, too
many authors (most notably John Cornwell, but also James Carroll and Garry
Wills) have tried to disguise motives that become clear in their writing. Sr. Margherita does not do that.
Unfortunately, some commentators (most recently José Sánchez in Pius XII and the
Holocaust) have used this candor against Sr. Margherita, suggesting that her
arguments should be dismissed for that reason alone. While it is true that some
of her arguments involve personal beliefs, she openly states her position and
her arguments remain valid. By dismissing her work without considering the
merits, her critics are overlooking a great deal of valuable evidence.
Sr. Margherita works closely with several top scholars from around the world,
including those within the Vatican who are studying the life of Pius XII for his
sainthood cause. As such, her work is not to be taken lightly. Not only does she
make arguments, unlike most of her critics, shelays out primary source
documents. For instance, in Architect for Peace, almost half of the book is
given over to appendices of tremendous importance. She includes an interview
with Fr. Peter Gumpel, the relator (independent investigating judge) of Pius
XII’s cause for sainthood, a very helpful chronology of Pius XII’s life, and a
good annotated bibliography. She also includes articles written by two of the
four Jesuit priests (Robert A. Graham and Pierre Blet) who compiled and
published 11 volumes of documents relating to the Holy See during the Second
World War from the still-sealed archives of the Vatican Secretariat of State (Actes
et Documents du Saint-Siege relatifs a la Seconde Guerre Mondiale). Perhaps most
importantly, she includes over 100 pages of those documents (most of which are
not available in English anywhere else).
Sr. Margherita’s first book on Pius, Yours is a Precious Witness: Memoirs of
Jews and Catholics in Wartime Italy, collected firsthand accounts of witnesses
who saw what support the Catholic Church gave to Jews and other victims of the
Nazis during WWII. The value of this testimony, which is harder to collect with
each passing day, will become more obvious in the near future. We are fortunate
that Sr. Margherita recognized this value before the witnesses are all gone.
Sr. Margherita calls Consensus and Controversy a sequel to Yours is a Precious
Witness and Architect for Peace, and that is quite clearly true. In this new
book, soon to be released by Paulist Press, Sr. Margherita builds on her
previous work and deals with new issues that have arisen in the past year or so.
Thus she addresses new anti-Pius books by Susan Zuccotti and James Carroll,
important pro-Pius articles by Rabbi David Dalin and William Doino, the
now-defunct Catholic-Jewish study group that was charged with reading the Actes
et Documents collection, and much more.
The issues have been developing so quickly that it is difficult for one book
adequately to cover them all. Viewed, however, as a continuation of her previous
works, Consensus and Controversy does a fine job of bringing forth additional
evidence, including a very nice summary of documents from the Actes et Documents
collection.
No one who honestly and carefully reads the evidence that Sr. Margherita
presents in her body of work can give the slightest credence to the attacks
against Pope Pius XII that have been made by John Cornwell, Daniel Goldhagen,
Susan Zuccotti and others. She may be outnumbered, but this “fighting nun” never
gives up, particularly when fighting for a good cause.
The love that those who know Sr. Margherita feel for her, as well as her playful
attitude, is reflected in the first verse of a song sung to her by comedian Joe
Piscopo at a ceremony honoring her as recipient of the Humanitarian Award from
the Religious Teachers Filippini. To the tune of The Macarena, Piscopo sang:
Let me tell you something, please listen up, Mister;
I want to tell you about a ‘Super-Nun Sister’
If we didn’t see her ever day, we would surely miss her. ‘SISTER MARGHERITA’
When Sr. Margherita first told me that she was writing her memoirs, I told her
that I knew it would be the story of a life well spent. It is, and these books
only add to her stature. Catholics everywhere, but particularly in Italy and the
US (where most of her work has been published), owe her a debt of gratitude.
Ronald J. Rychlak is Professor of Law and Associate Dean for Academic Affairs at
the University of Mississippi School of Law. He is the author of Hitler, the
War, and the Pope.
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