Pope talks about his life under Hitler
(JTA) -- Pope Benedict XVI made a rare reference to his life as a teenage seminarian in Hitler's Germany.
He made his remarks May 28 during a meeting with members of a German Catholic fellowship from Regensberg on the anniversary of his own entry into that group 70 years ago, when he was 14.
During the meeting, according to the official Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano, the pope departed from his prepared text and spoke off the cuff about his personal experiences at "a dark time marked by war."
Hitler already had subjugated Poland, Denmark, Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and France, and went on to occupy Yugoslavia and Greece, he said. Soon after the pope joined the Regensberg group, the war on the Russian front began and the seminary closed down.
"It seemed that Europe was in the hands of this power that put the future of Christianity in doubt," the pope said.
Don't miss out! Get the JTA Daily Briefing delivered FREE to your inbox!
Click to login and write a letter to the editor.
This article was made possible by the support of readers like you. Donate to JTA now.
Featured Content
Need to know? Get JTA's free e-newsletters!
- Man in custody implicated himself in Etan Patz’ disappearance
- Romney to meet with Jewish donors
- Senate hikes funding for non-profit security, emergency food aid
- OU welcomes Romney’s school choice proposal
- House letter urging Iran diplomacy garners 71 signatures
- White House sets May 30 for Jewish Heritage
- Bulgaria’s economic crisis has its Jewish community facing harsh realities
- French railroad inks deal with Yad Vashem to research deportations
Share
Email
Print




