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Eugenio Zolli’s Path to Rome
Stephen Sparrow
September 5, 2005
It’s little wonder that biographer Judith Cabaud considers
Eugenio Zolli one of the most remarkable men of the twentieth century.
Born in 1881 in Ukraine, then part of the Austro-Hungarian
Empire, the Zolli's baby boy was given the first name Israel. Sixty years later
he was chief Rabbi of Rome. In 1944, while in the synagogue celebrating Yom
Kippur, Zolli experienced a mystical vision of Jesus Christ. Within a year he
was baptized a Catholic at which time he changed his first name from Israel to
Eugenio, the same Christian name as Pope Pius XII. He did this to honor the Pope
for the help he gave Jews trying to escape the Nazi's extermination program
during World War II.
The First Act
Let’s backtrack and look at the life of this Central
European Jew whose restless and courageous mind enabled him to step beyond the
Old Testament and become a follower of Jesus Christ. That long path from Judaism
to Catholicism was also taken by Madame Cabaud, who likened it to "wanting to
see the second act of a play of which we have attended only the first act."
The late nineteenth century provided the backdrop for
Israel Zolli’s formative years. It was a particularly turbulent period in
Europe. France was reeling from a prolonged bout of political instability
exacerbated by military defeat at the hands of Prussia. The philosophical and
scientific theories of Darwin, Marx, Nietzsche, and Schopenhauer were starting
to blur Europe’s Christian perspective, while inside the Russian Empire
anti-Semitism was on the march. The Zolli family had substantial business
interests in what had become Russian controlled territory. The Russian
Government classified the Zollis as foreigners and being Jewish made them even
more vulnerable, so it was not unexpected they lost virtually everything to a
confiscation order issued by Tsar Alexander III. Like many Russian Jews, the
suddenly poverty stricken family moved to Poland where the older children had to
leave home to find work. However, young Israel was sent to a strict Jewish
school where the students spent much of their time studying the books of the
Pentateuch.
That young restless Jewish mind had been agitating about
God’s inner life since the age of eight.
"What
did God do before He created the world? And why did He create it?" Questions,
questions: the answer must lie somewhere. One of Israel’s classmates at the
school was Christian and when visiting this boy’s home, Israel had been deeply
affected by the sight of a crucifix hanging on the wall. Who was that man? What
had he done to deserve such a punishment? Surely he couldn’t have been bad? But
then maybe he had been and so deserved crucifixion! But why was that image
treated so reverently? Perhaps the man represented truth? Israel eventually
concluded that the man on the cross was good and had been wrongly punished.
During his teenage years, the image of that crucifix
sparked Israel’s curiosity so much that he began secretly studying the New
Testament, often taking a copy into the fields where he would read quietly and
contemplate. He found delight in Christ’s sayings, especially those from the
Sermon on the Mount: "But I say to you: love your enemies," and "blessed are the
pure in heart." And from the cross: "Father, forgive them." The New Testament
really was a new covenant crammed with messages of extraordinary beauty and
importance.
For Israel Zolli the teachings of Christ truly marked out
the Kingdom of Heaven, as a place reserved for those persecuted, who in
eschewing vengeance had loved instead. From then on the Gospel would prove an
irresistible attraction and when studying the Old Testament for the Rabbinate he
read further on into the New, regarding it as the natural continuation of the
Old. Many years later, Zolli’s daughter Miriam would tell Judith Cabaud that her
father had once taken her to the Sistine Chapel in Rome and used the prophets,
apostles, and saints painted on the ceiling to explain the bond uniting the Old
and New Testament. But in Israel’s youth the clue connecting the two was how
closely the man on the cross matched the identity of the suffering servant from
Isaiah. That Zolli would hit on the idea that the Gospels were inside the Old
Testament from the beginning was seemingly inevitable.
Naturally enough Judaism exerted a powerful pull on Israel
Zolli. For his family, it was a way of life tied up with community, a cultural
identity that tended to steer religion away from any personal relationship with
God. His mother had always wanted him to be a Rabbi and she scrimped and saved
to pay for his studies. And still the young man fretted about the years of hard
study ahead and the purpose of the 613 commandments of the Torah. "Surely," he
thought, "it would be better for the Torah to be lived?" He felt isolated from
the talk and ideas of other young Jews and his thoughts returned many times to
the crucifix in the home of his friend Stanislas. The person of Isaiah’s
suffering servant of God continued to provoke questions about God, suffering,
and, of course, the identity of the servant referred to by Isaiah.
Rabbi in Rome
Israel fell in with his mother’s plans and began studying,
first in Poland, then Vienna and ending in Florence where he completed his
rabbinical studies. Next he gained a professorship at the University of Padua.
In 1918 he was appointed chief Rabbi of Trieste in Italy. It was the period
between the wars and the political scene in Europe was rapidly assuming a
sinister look. Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini took charge in Italy in 1922
and Hitler came into power in Germany eleven years later.
Just as World War II broke out, Zolli moved from Trieste
to Rome to take up the post of the city’s chief Rabbi. The Jews of Rome were
confident they could survive any fallout from Fascism and Nazism and observed no
safety precautions. But Zolli, knowing what was happening in Germany, predicted
Hitler would soon occupy Italy. His warnings to Jews to destroy their records
and go underground went unheeded. While the Italian army fought alongside the
Germans things went reasonably well, but then the Allies invaded Italy and it
wasn’t long before the Italian military called it a day.
With the collapse of Mussolini’s regime in 1943 and
Italy’s defection from the Axis, the Nazis immediately seized control of all
Italian territory not in Allied hands and occupied Rome. The Nazis quickly
established their usual routine: find the Jews, squeeze them for their wealth,
and then deport them to death camps. Enter Colonel Kappler, a senior German
officer who saw a chance to line his pockets. Kappler issued the Jewish
community an ultimatum: either hand over 50 Kg of gold or, failing that, deliver
300 named hostages – a list headed by none other than Zolli himself. Within a
short time the Jews managed to scrape together 35 Kg of gold but it was
insufficient to satisfy Kappler’s monstrous appetite and so, on behalf of the
Jewish community, Israel Zolli was deputed to approach the Vatican for the
shortfall. This was his first contact with the institutional Church and it took
place in secret since the Gestapo watched all Vatican City’s exits.
Zolli met with the Vatican’s Secretary of State Cardinal
Maglione and appealed to him saying, "The New Testament cannot abandon the Old."
Maglione immediately approached Pius XII to help with the needed gold. The Pope
agreed to the request and Zolli was told to return later for the "package." Not
only did the Pope act with alacrity, the Catholic parishes of Rome hurriedly
gathered together a further 15 Kg of gold, something Zolli found out about from
his daughter when he returned home. For the time being, the hostage crisis was
averted.
That Pius XII played an enormous role in saving Jews from
the Nazis was well known to Zolli. He was aware that monasteries and convents in
Rome and all over Italy had opened their doors to Jews at the urging of the
Pope. In addition, thousands more were being sheltered by ordinary Italian
Catholic families, and both the Vatican and the Pope’s summer residence in
Castel Gandolfo were filled with Jews who had nowhere else to hide.
Zolli, who met Pius XII, was impressed with the Pope’s
open attitude and willingness to help. The Zolli family lived underground during
the Nazi occupation of Rome and saw first hand the charity of the Church in
action, inspired as it was by the personal courage of the pope, who did more
than anyone else at that time to frustrate the arrest and execution of European
Jews. Official Jewish sources cite a figure of 850,000 Jews saved as a result of
the direct intervention of Pius XII, a fact that flies in the face of the
current media smear campaign directed at Pius over his alleged failure to speak
out publicly against Nazi Germany’s race policy.
The Second Act
In June 1944, an agreement was reached between the German
and Allied High Commands; the German Army withdrew from Rome and the Allies
occupied the city without a shot being fired. At the time the Jewish Community
Council in Rome was full of collaborators and the American military wanted them
out and Zolli back in control. But the very day he was asked to resume
leadership of the Jewish Council, he confided to his Jesuit priest friend Father
Dezza that he had other plans. "How can I continue living in this way when I
think very often of Christ and how I love Him?" Zolli was then sixty-five years
old, weary and wanting to retire.
Four months later, while in the synagogue for the feast of
Yom Kippur, Zolli received a vision in which Christ spoke to him saying, "You
are here for the last time: from now on you will follow Me." For Israel Zolli
there would be no going back. Relaxing at home that evening he was at first
reluctant to mention what had happened but when he did his wife admitted that
she to had seen the same vision of Christ standing next to him. Miriam, their
eighteen-year-old daughter then told her parents that she had recently seen
Jesus in a dream. Zolli saw it all as confirmation of what he should do and
immediately resigned from the synagogue. He and his wife took instruction from a
priest and were baptized within a year: Israel taking the additional step of
changing his first name to Eugenio, the same Christian name as Pope Pius XII.
Miriam converted a year after her parents.
The Chief Rabbi of Rome converting to Catholicism was a
big story in Italy, but the secular media tried to rationalize the matter. In
his autobiography,
Before The Dawn,
Eugenio Zolli refuted all assertions that his conversion was out of gratitude to
Pope Pius XII. Certainly he was extremely grateful for what the Pope had done to
protect Jews, but the singular reason behind his conversion was his attraction
to the person of Christ the Messiah – an attraction that had been growing
steadily since Zolli’s childhood.
Fifty years have elapsed since Zolli’s autobiography was
first published in English and only within the last four years has Judith
Cabaud’s well-researched book,
Eugenio Zolli, Prophet of a New World
(de Guibert, Paris 2000), been available, but not yet in English. However, in a
recently published interview, Cabaud provided this
perceptive insight into current relations between Jews and Christians.
"Zolli's experience certainly has a
great significance for Jews today, but also for Christians. In the first place,
through his exegetical findings, we are led to understand that we do indeed have
only one religion – the Judeo-Christian faith. It began with Judaism, in the Law
and the Prophets: it continues today with the Catholic Church. The pivot is
Jesus Christ, the Messiah for whom all religious Jews at that time were waiting
and whom all Christians recognize as the Son of God… it is indispensable
for the Church and her members to be more fully aware of their Jewish
inheritance. It is in this way that Christianity assumes its permanence in the
world. If not, we are only poor orphans who strive for good and truth without
knowing who our parents were."…
"If we listen to the message of Rabbi Zolli, I am sure that in searching for
Truth on both sides, we could mend many of the wounds which have created this
cruel separation between brothers.
The quest for Truth will and can enfold us together with all our diversity in
the loving arms of our One and Eternal God."
After his conversion, Eugenio Zolli was given a post at
the Pontifical Biblical Institute. Early in 1956 he contracted bronchopneumonia
and was admitted to hospital. The week before his death, Zolli told a nun
looking after him that like Our Lord he would die on the first Friday of the
month at three o'clock in the afternoon. On Friday, March 2, 1956, after
receiving Holy Communion in the morning, he drifted into a coma and died as he
predicted, at 3.00 p.m.
Stephen Sparrow
writes from New Zealand. He is semi-retired and reads (and writes) for
enjoyment, with a particular interest in the work of Catholic authors Flannery
O'Connor, Walker Percy, Sigrid Undset, Dante Alighieri and St Therese of
Lisieux. His secondary school education was undertaken by Society of Mary
priests at St. Bedes College and after leaving school in 1960 he joined a family
wood working business, retiring from it in 2001. He is married with five adult
children. His other interests include fishing, hiking, photography and natural
history, especially New Zealand botany and ornithology.
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