Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-nr4z6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-01T12:12:48.189Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Holy See, Italian Catholics and Palestine under the British Mandate: Two Turning Points

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 September 2016

PAOLO ZANINI*
Affiliation:
University of Milan, Department of Historical Studies, Via Festa del Perdono 7, 20122 Milan, Italy; e-mail: paolo.zanini@unimi.it

Abstract

This paper analyses the reactions of the Holy See and Italian Catholic public opinion towards two events which can be considered as turning points in the history of British Palestine: the disturbances of August 1929 and the presentation of the Peel Plan in the summer of 1937. Through this analysis, based on a wide range of sources, it shows how the Vatican attitude towards the Palestinian question changed during the interwar period. At the same time it aims to ascertain whether or not the Holy See and the Catholic hierarchy in Palestine were in accord with the Italian government's Near East initiatives.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Porath, Yehoshua, The emergence of the Palestinian-Arab National movement, 1918–1919, London 1974, 258–73Google Scholar; Wasserstein, Bernard, The British in Palestine: the Mandatory Government and the Arab-Jewish conflict, 1917–1929, London 1978, 217–35Google Scholar; Townshend, Charles, ‘Going to the wall: the failure of British rule in Palestine, 1928–31’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History xxx/2 (2002), 2552 CrossRefGoogle Scholar at pp. 26–34.

2 Townshend, ‘Going to the wall’, 28.

3 On the Labour attitude towards Zionism see Kelemen, Paul, ‘Zionism and the British Labour Party: 1917–39’, Social History xxi (1996), 7187 CrossRefGoogle Scholar at pp. 75–8.

4 Wasserstein, The British in Palestine, 235; Townshend, ‘Going to the wall’, 27.

5 See Eyal, Yigal, ‘The 1929 disturbances as a turning point in the British government's internal security policy’, Cathedra: for the History of Eretz Israel and its Yishuv lxxxiii (1997), 125–42Google Scholar (in Hebrew).

6 See Eipeleg, Zvi, The Grand Mufti: Haj Amin al-Hussaini, founder of the Palestinian national movement, London 1993, 22–4Google Scholar; Matthews, Weldon C., Confronting an empire, constructing a nation: Arab nationalists and popular policies in Mandate Palestine, London 2006, 4474 Google Scholar.

7 See Cohen, Hillel, Army of shadows: Palestinian collaboration with Zionism, 1917–1948, Berkeley–Los Angeles–London 2008, 1542 Google Scholar.

8 Sheffer, Gabriel, ‘Intention and results of the British in Palestine: Passfield's White Paper’, Middle Eastern Studies ix (1973), 4360 CrossRefGoogle Scholar at pp. 53–4.

9 De Felice, Renzo, Storia degli ebrei italiani sotto il fascismo (1961), Turin 1993, 108–14Google Scholar; Moro, Renato, ‘Le premesse dell'atteggiamento cattolico di fronte alla legislazione razziale fascista: cattolici ed ebrei nell'Italia degli anni Venti (1919–1932)’, Storia Contemporanea xix (1989), 1013–119Google Scholar at pp. 1112–15; Zanini, Paolo, ‘Italia e Santa Sede di fronte ai disordini del 1929 in Palestina’, Italia Contemporanea lxiii/264 (2011), 406–24Google Scholar at pp. 407–11.

10 See Meda, Filippo, ‘Il Sionismo e la Palestina’, La Scuola Cattolica lvii (1929), 292–6Google Scholar, and L'Italia in Palestina’, Palestina iii (1930), 21–2Google Scholar.

11 See Moro, ‘Le premesse’, 1053–63.

12 See Rocca, Guglielmo Della, ‘La nostra Rivista’, OC vi (1928), 14 Google Scholar, and Ambrosini, Gaspare, ‘La situazione del cattolicesimo in Palestina e le insidie degli scismatici e protestanti appoggiati dall'Inghilterra’, OC vi (1928), 138–42Google Scholar.

13 For more on the spread of these views and the role played by Barlassina see Pieraccini, Paolo, ‘Il Patriarcato latino di Gerusalemme: ritratto di un patriarca scomodo: mons. Luigi Barlassina’, Il Politico lxiii (1998), 207–56Google Scholar, 591–639.

14 ‘Francescani e Salesiani in Palestina’, L'Italia, 1 Sept. 1929. See also Monasterolo, Benedetto, La politica religiosa fascista e la Terra Santa, Chieri 1928 Google Scholar.

15 Momento palestinese’, OC vii (1929), 27–8Google Scholar; Rinascita dell'influenza italiana nell'Oriente cristiano’, Palestina iii (1930), 41–3Google Scholar. On the need to extend to the Levant the understanding between State and Church see Lardi, Nicola, ‘La conciliazione e le sue prevedibili conseguenze nella politica missionaria’, OC vii (1929), 510 Google Scholar; Vercesi, Ernesto, ‘La ripercussione mondiale dei patti del Laterano’, Vita e Pensiero xv (1929), 215–20Google Scholar; and Tambaro, Ignazio, ‘La situazione in Palestina’, OC vii (1929), 91–2Google Scholar.

16 See Minerbi, Sergio, ‘The Italian activity to recover the Cenacolo ’, Risorgimento: Rivista europea di storia italiana contemporanea i/2 (1980), 181209 Google Scholar; Pieraccini, Paolo, ‘I Luoghi santi e la rivendicazione italiana del Cenacolo’, Il Politico lix (1994), 653–90Google Scholar; and Giovannelli, Andrea, La Santa Sede e la Palestina: la custodia di Terra Santa tra la fine dell'impero ottomano e la guerra dei sei giorni, Rome 2000, 6372 Google Scholar.

17 De Felice, Renzo, Il fascismo e l'Oriente: arabi, ebrei e indiani nella politica di Mussolini, Bologna 1988, 125–86Google Scholar; Fabrizio, Daniela, Fascino d'Oriente: religione e politica in Medio Oriente da Giolitti a Mussolini, Genoa–Milan 2006, 265334 Google Scholar.

18 See Gayda, Virginio, ‘Sangue in Palestina: gli arabi contro gli ebrei’, Gerarchia viii (1929), 758 Google Scholar; Tritonj, Romolo, ‘La riforma del mandato sulla Palestina’, NA lxiv (1929), 479–91Google Scholar; and Ambrosini, Gaspare, ‘La situazione della Palestina e gli interessi dell'Italia’, NA lxv (1930), 497513 Google Scholar.

19 I Documenti diplomatici italiani (7th ser. 1922–35), IX: 15 aprile–31 dicembre 1930, Rome 1975 Google Scholar, doc. 163.

20 ‘I gravi conflitti tra arabi e ebrei da Gerusalemme a Damasco’, OR, 29 Aug. 1929; Cose Straniere’, La Civiltà Cattolica lxxx/3 (1929), 562–3Google Scholar.

21 See Caviglia, Elena, ‘Il sionismo e la Palestina negli articoli dell'Osservatore Romano e della Civiltà Cattolica (1919–1923)’, Clio xvii (1981), 7990 Google Scholar, and Minerbi, Sergio, Il Vaticano la Terra Santa e il sionismo, Milan 1988, 88138 Google Scholar.

22 Minerbi, Il Vaticano la Terra Santa, 254–64.

23 See, for example, Henry Chilton to Austen Chamberlain, 18 Jan. 1929, CO 732/40/7; Pascal Robinson to Pietro Gasparri, 24 Jan. 1929, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 102, fasc. 99, fos 55r–56v; Anglo-Vatican relations: 1914–1939: confidential annual reports of the British ministers to the Holy See, ed. Hachey, T. E., Boston 1972, 44–5Google Scholar.

24 See handwritten note, 9 July 1925, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 61, fasc. 64, fos 3r–4v; Per l'udienza del Santo Padre, ACO, GP, fasc. 930/28, doc. 12.

25 Instructions for Valerio Valeri, 23 Feb. 1929, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o 78, fasc. 85, fos 44r–45v; Istruzione a mons. Valeri quale Delegato Ap. Della Transgiordania Palestina e Cipro, ACO, GP, fasc. 930/28, doc. 62.

26 Luigi Barlassina to Gasparri, 29 Aug., 10 Sept. 1929, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 108, fasc. 102, fos 21r–29r, 44r–46r.

27 Valeri to Gasparri, 18 Sept., 7 Oct. 1929, ibid. fos 52r–56v, 71r–72r.

28 Valeri to Gasparri, 18 Sept. 1929, ibid. fo. 55r. On Christian-Muslim relations see Valeri to Gasparri, 22 Dec. 1929, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 108, fasc. 103, fos 3r–6r.

29 Telex 2078/500, ASMAE, ASS, b. 18, fasc. 9/1.

30 Valeri to Eugenio Pacelli, 4 Jan. 1932, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 105, fasc. 101, fos 24r–28r. On the Congress see Kramer, Martin, Islam assembled: the advent of the Muslim Congresses, New York 1986, 126–40Google Scholar; Freas, Erik, ‘Hajj Amin al-Husayni and the Haram al-Sharif: a pan–Islamic or Palestinian nationalist cause?’, British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies xxxiv (2012), 1951 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

31 Fidelis, ‘Lettere di Terrasanta’, OR, 17 Nov. 1932.

32 Valeri to Gasparri, 26 Apr. 1929, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 105, fasc. 100, fos 48r–49v.

33 See Secretariat of State to Borgongini Duca, 27 Jan. 1931, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 125, fasc. 109, fos 82r–83v.

34 Fidelis, ‘Il cattolicesimo in Terrasanta’, OR, 7 Mar. 1930. See also Besozzi, Alessandro, Italia e Palestina, Milan 1930 Google Scholar.

35 On the context, motivations and outbreak of the revolt see Bowden, Tom, ‘The politics of the Arab rebellion in Palestine, 1936–1939’, Middle Eastern Studies xi (1975) 147–74CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Porath, Yehoshua, The Palestinian-Arab national movement: from riots to rebellion, 1929–1939, London 1977, 162260 Google Scholar; Yazbak, Mahmoud, ‘From poverty to revolt: economic factors in the outbreak of the 1936 rebellion in Palestine’, Middle Eastern Studies xxxvi (2000), 93113 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Hughes, Matthew, ‘From law and order to pacification: Britain's suppression of the Arab revolt in Palestine, 1936–39’, Journal of Palestine Studies xxxix (2010), 622 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

36 Sinanoglou, Penny, ‘The Peel Commission and partition, 1936–1939’, in Miller, R. (ed.), Britain, Palestine and empire: the Mandate years, Farnham 2010, 119–39Google Scholar at pp. 120–1. On the Peel Commission's work see also El-Eini, Roza, Mandated landscape: British imperial rule in Palestine, 1929–1948, London 2006, 316–30Google Scholar.

37 Palestine Royal Commission (Peel Commission), London 1937 Google Scholar [Cmd. 5479].

38 Galnoor, Itzhak, The partition of Palestine: decision crossroads in the Zionist movement, Albany 1995, 36 Google Scholar; Shlaim, Avi, The politics of partition: King Abdullah, the Zionists and Palestine, 1921–1951, Oxford 1998, 54–6CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

39 Pacelli to Filippo Bernardini, 31 July 1937, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 171, fasc. 149, fo 15r.

40 ‘Progetto britannico per la spartizione della Palestina’, ASMAE, GAB, 1061, b. 4. See also Il progetto per la spartizione della Palestina’, Relazioni Internazionali iii (1937), 553–4Google Scholar.

41 De Felice, Il fascismo e l'Oriente, 177–86.

42 Ibid. 16–20; Arielli, Nir, Fascist Italy and the Middle East, 1933–1940, Basingstoke 2010, 33–4CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

43 Rostagno, Lucia, Terrasanta o Palestina? La diplomazia italiana e il nazionalismo palestinese (1861–1939), Rome 1996, 197262 Google Scholar; Arielli, Nir, ‘La politica dell'Italia fascista nei confronti degli arabi palestinesi, 1935–1940’, Mondo Contemporaneo ii (2006), 565 Google Scholar; Fiore, Massimiliano, Anglo-Italian relations in the Middle East, 1922–1940, Farnham 2010, 87111 Google Scholar.

44 On these suggestions see Beer, Emilio, ‘Perennità Mediterranea’, RN lix/2 (1937), 116–23Google Scholar, and Oriente e Occidente’, RN lx/1 (1938), 913 Google Scholar.

45 On this last point, see James Eric Drummond to Anthony Eden, 6 Aug. 1937, FO, 371/20811.

46 Pasquale Pennisi, ‘Il giudizio di Salomone’, L'Italia, 14 July 1937.

47 See ‘Conclusioni’, ASMAE, GAB, 1061, b. 4.

48 Quinto Mazzolini to Ministry, 22 July 1937, ASMAE, GAB, 1061, b. 4, fasc. Rivolta in Palestina.

49 See G. G. [Guido Gonnella], ‘Acta Diurna’, OR, 14 July 1937.

50 Regarding the Vatican's reaction to the presentation of the Peel Plan see Enardu, Maria Grazia, Palestine in Anglo-Vatican relations, 1936–1939, Florence 1980 Google Scholar; Kreutz, Vatican policy, 63–9; Christian Rossi, Partition of Palestine and political stability: Ottoman legacy and international influences (1922–1948) (EUI, RSCAS, Working Papers, 2010), 13–5; Zanini, Paolo, ‘Italia e Santa Sede di fronte al piano Peel di spartizione della Palestina: il tramonto della carta cattolica ’, Studi Storici liv (2013), 5177 Google Scholar; and Russo, Lucia, ‘La Santa Sede e la Palestina dall'approvazione del mandato britannico alla conferenza di St James (1922–1939)’, Ricerche di Storia sociale e religiosa lxxxiii (2013), 75108 Google Scholar at pp. 96–102.

51 Valeri to Pacelli, 5 July 1937, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 171, fasc. 149, fos 11r–12r; Bernardini to Pacelli, 10 July 1937, fos 7r–8r.

52 Gustavo Testa to Pacelli, 23 July 1937, ibid. fasc. 151, fos 4r–7v. See also Testa to Pietro Fumasoni Biondi, 23 Feb. 1937, ASV, ADAGP, b. 3, fasc. 13, fos 52r–53v.

53 Barlassina to Pacelli, 29 Aug. 1937, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 171, fasc. 152, fo. 63r.

54 Rapporto sulla Palestina, ibid. fasc. 151, fos 15r–21r.

55 On this point it is worth remembering that, a few years earlier, Barlassina had been the promoter of the International Centre for the Protection of Catholic interests in Palestine, an institution whose purpose was to remind public opinion of the difficulties facing Catholicism in the Holy Land. See Zanini, Paolo, ‘Il Centro internazionale per la protezione degli interessi cattolici in Palestina’, Studi Storici liv (2013), 393417 Google Scholar.

56 Risposte supplementari al Rapporto del 3 agosto, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 171, fasc. 152, fos 43r–46r.

57 Rapporto sulla Palestina, ibid. fasc. 151, fos 18r–19r.

58 Anonymous handwritten note, 25 Aug. 1937, ibid. fos 66r–71r.

59 Anonymous undated note, ibid. fasc. 150, fo. 9r.

60 Delegation's note, 14 July 1937, ASV, ADAGP, b. 2, fasc. 8, fo. 116r. On the nationalist leanings of Hajjar see Brunella, Giulio, ‘Sulla posizione nazionalistica del vescovo melchita Grigurius al-Hajjar (1875–1940)’, Alifba iv/6–7 (1986), 5778 Google Scholar, and Robson, Laura, Colonialism and Christianity in Mandate Palestine, Austin 2011, 35–6Google Scholar.

61 Giuseppe Cesarini to Gregorios Hajjar, 27 Sept. 1937, ACO, L, fasc. 457/48, doc. 11. On the mistrust surrounding Hajjar's trip to Europe see Barlassina to Giuseppe Pizzardo, 1 Aug. 1937, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 171, fasc. 151, fos 82r–83r; Testa minute, 23 Sept. 1937, ASV, ADAGP, b. 5, fasc. 23, fo. 338rv.

62 Anonymous note, dated Monday, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 171, fasc. 150, fos 80r–81r; Aldo Laghi to Pacelli, 11, 13 Aug. 1937, fasc. 152, fos 22r–24v, 35r.

63 Circular letter and attached promemoria, 18 Aug. 1937, ibid. fasc. 151, fos 51r–53r.

64 All the points which would be included in the final version of the aide-mémoire appear already defined, even if in a preliminary form, in a handwritten note, probably made at the beginning of the document's preparation, ibid. fasc. 150, fos 28r–29r.

65 Francis D'Arcy Osborne to Owen St Clair O'Malley, 23 July 1937, FO, 371/20810; Osborne to Eden, 4 Aug. 1937, FO, 371/29011. See also Enardu, Palestine, 13–16, and Anglo-Vatican relations, 376–7.

66 See the anonymous undated note, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 171, fasc. 150, fo. 102r. On the different views of the two ministries see Klieman, Aaron S., ‘The divisiveness of Palestine: Foreign Office versus Colonial Office on the issue of partition, 1937’, Historical Journal xxii (1979), 423–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

67 Osborne to Eden, 4 Aug. 1937, and C. J. W. Torr to Eden, 6 Aug. 1937, FO, 371/29011.

68 See the aide-mémoire, attached to the letter from Torr dated 6 Aug., which contained further instructions received verbally from monsignor Pizzardo, in order to explain the meaning of the note: ibid.

69 Edward Maurice Ingram to Torr, 2 Sept. 1937, CO, 733/353/5.

70 Lacy Baggallay minute, 16 Aug. 1937, FO, 371/20811; T. S. Bennet note, 24 Aug. 1937, CO, 733/353/5.

71 See Enardu, Palestine, 18–23; Kreutz, Vatican policy, 65–9.

72 On this point, the silence maintained by Pius xi about the Holy Places during the Christmas celebrations 1937 is significant: a reticence attributed by British diplomats accredited to the Holy See to the pope's desire not to support Italian claims in any way: Torr to Ingram, 30 Dec. 1937, CO, 733/369/9.

73 For the diverse positions in the Vatican see Ferrari, Silvio, Vaticano e Israele dal secondo conflitto mondiale alla guerra del Golfo, Florence 1991, 23–5Google Scholar.

74 Porath, Emergence, 293–303, and From riots to rebellion, 269–71; Robson, Colonialism and Christianity, 36–43, 158–61.

75 See Anglo-Vatican relations, 158, 246, 272.

76 See Giovagnoli, Agostino, ‘Pio xii e la decolonizzazione’, in Riccardi, Andrea (ed.), Pio XII, Rome–Bari 1985, 179–90Google Scholar.

77 For further analysis see Kreutz, Vatican, 93–4, and Ferrari, Vaticano e Israele, 52–4.

78 Ferrari, Silvio, ‘Pio xi, la Palestina e i Luoghi santi’, in Achille Ratti pape Pie XI, Rome 1996, 909–24Google Scholar at p. 920. See also the anonymous note dated 25 Aug. 1937, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o 171, fasc. 151, fos 66r–71r.

79 On Catholic theology regarding the diaspora see the useful account by Pawlikowski, John T., ‘The contemporary Jewish-Christian theological dialogue agenda’, Journal of Ecumenical Studies xi (1974), 599616 Google Scholar. For the implications that such concepts had in anti-Zionist Catholic polemic see Ferrari, ‘Pio xi’, 917–19. With regard to the presence of similar scriptural interpretations among the most able Vatican diplomats see Valeri to Pacelli, 25 July 1930, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 108, fasc. 103, fos 23r–24v.

80 Among the possible examples see Fidelis, ‘Lettere di Terrasanta’, OR. 24 June 1931, and Testa to Pacelli, 27 Mar. 1936, AAEESS, Stati Ecclesiastici iv periodo, p.o. 474, fasc. 482, fos 6r–7v.

81 Chenaux, Philippe, L’Église catholique et le communisme en Europe (1917–1989): de Lénine à Jean-Paul II, Paris 2009, 32–9Google Scholar, 86–108.

82 For more about these fears see, for example, Nota d'archivio sul Sionismo, AAEESS, T.iv, p.o. 7, fasc. 23, fos 68r–71r, and anonymous note, p.o. 171, fasc. 150, fos 82r–84r.