A Moral Reckoning

A Moral Reckoning

by Daniel Jonah Goldhagen (Author)

Synopsis

Daniel Jonah Goldhagen cuts through the historical and moral fog to lay out the full extent of the Catholic Church's involvement in the Holocaust, transforming a narrow discussion fixated on Pope Pius XII into the long overdue investigation of the Church throughout Europe. He shows that the Church's and the Pope's complicity in the persecution of the Jews was much deeper than has been understood. The Church's leaders were fully aware of the persecutions. They did not speak out and urge resistance. Instead, they supported many aspects of the persecution. Some clergy even took part in the mass murder. But Goldhagen goes further. He develops a new, precise way for assessing the Church and its clergy's culpability, which was more extensive and varied than has been supposed. He then shows that the Church has, even according to its own doctrine, an unacknowledged duty of repair. He explores it, analyzes the Church's tactics of evasion, and delineates all that the Church must do to repair the harm it inflicted on Jews, and to heal itself. Brilliantly researched and reasoned, A Moral Reckoning is a path- breaking book of profound, and potentially explosive, importance.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 528
Edition: New Ed
Publisher: Abacus
Published: 11 Dec 2003

ISBN 10: 0349116938
ISBN 13: 9780349116938

Media Reviews
'Goldhagen's critique of the Church is literally root-and- branch' Daily Telegraph 'Excellent' Sunday Times 'A compelling, challenging and important book that, God willing, will not become yet another indictment that the Vatican simply sweeps under the carpet' Independent on Sunday '[A Moral Reckoning] breaks important new ground ... Not a word is wasted in a book that can only be read with profit by all' Spectator
Author Bio
Daniel Jonah Goldhagen is Associate Professor of Government and Social Studies at Harvard University and an Associate of Harvard's Minda de Gunzberg Centre for European Studies. He was awarded Germany's Democracy Prize for HITLER'S WILLING EXECUTIONERS.