Croatian and Serbian experts have met at the Vatican to clarify questions about the life of Blessed Alojzije Stepinac – a national hero for Croats and a highly controversial figure for Serbian Orthodox and some Jewish groups who have accused him of being a Nazi sympathiser.
The commission, which held its first meeting on July 12-13, is made up of representatives of the Serbian Orthodox Church, the Catholic Church in Croatia and the Vatican. It was created at the request of Pope Francis to conduct “a re-reading together” of the cardinal’s life before, during and after the Second World War “to respond to the need to clarify some questions of history”, the Vatican press office said in a written communique this week.
The work of the mixed commission “will not interfere with the canonisation process” still underway, because its work is a “scientific endeavour”, studying historical evidence in its proper context, the note said. The process of studying and determining a candidate’s Cause is a matter that strictly pertains to the Holy See, it said.
Blessed Stepinac was beatified as a martyr by St John Paul II in 1998.
Before the Second World War, he was noted for helping Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany. Though he welcomed the independent, pro-Nazi Croatian state declared in 1941, he later protested against the puppet regime’s genocidal policies and atrocities committed against Serbs, Jews and Gypsies.
But when communist partisans came to power in 1945, they accused the cardinal of attacking communism, and he was convicted of collaborating with the Nazis. He died under house arrest in 1960 from an illness he contracted in prison.
Croats see him as a symbol of the Church’s resistance to communist oppression, but others sharply criticise his early support of Croatia’s pro-Nazi government.
St John Paul said that with the cardinal’s beatification, “we recognise the victory of the Gospel of Christ over totalitarian ideologies, the victory of the rights of God and conscience over violence and the abuse of power, the victory of pardon over hate and vengeance”.
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