AD2000 - a journal of religious opinionAD Books
Ask a Question
View Cart
Checkout
Search AD2000: author: full text:  
AD2000 - a journal of religious opinion
Find a Book:

 
AD2000 Home
Article Index
Bookstore
About AD2000
Subscribe
Links
Contact Us
 
 
 
Email Updates
Name:

Email:

Add Me
Remove Me

Subscriber Access:

Enter the Internet Access Key from your mailing label here for full access!
 

Books

MY BATTLE AGAINST HITLER, by Dietrich von Hildebrand

Bookmark and Share

 Contents - Feb 2015AD2000 February 2015 - Buy a copy now
Editorial: A request for your assistance - Peter Westmore
Consistory: Pope Francis names twenty new Cardinals - AD2000 Report
News: The Church Around the World
The survival of the Church - Fr John O'Neill PP
Vatican report lays bare problems in US religious life - AD2000 Report
Martyrdom: Would I have had their courage? - Cardinal George Pell
The Pope and the Holocaust: why did Pius XII not speak out? - Robert A. Graham SJ
The family and the Church in 2015 - Archbishop Mark Coleridge
Brisbane: powerhouse of Catholic young adult ministry - Br Barry Coldrey
The Eighteen Benedictions of Judaism ... and Christianity - Andrew Sholl
What Pope Francis really said to the Roman Curia - AD2000 Report
Letters: Catholic education - Allan Choveaux
Letters: Smartphone apps 'very suspect' - Elizabeth Afribo
Letters: A rejoinder to Anne Lastman - Charles M. Shann
Letters: Mary in St John's Gospel - Dr Frank Mobbs
Letters: The Church in China - Paul Simmons
Letters: Homosexuality - Anne Lastman
Books: AUSTRALIANS AND THE CHRISTIAN GOD: An historical study, by Hugh Jackson - Michael E. Daniel (reviewer)
Books: MY BATTLE AGAINST HITLER, by Dietrich von Hildebrand - Kate Veik (reviewer)
Books: Order books from www.freedompublishing.com.au
Reflection: Hail, Holy Queen, Mother of Mercy - Anne Lastman

MY BATTLE AGAINST HITLER
by Dietrich von Hildebrand
(Image Books, 2014, hardback, 352pp, $49.95, ISBN: 978-0-38534-751-8)

Dietrich von Hildebrand first earned the hatred of the Nazi party in 1921. At a political convention in Paris, the Catholic philosopher declared Germany's 1914 invasion of neutral Belgium an "atrocious crime".

The divisive statement marked the first step in von Hildebrand's years-long battle against Nazism, a battle that inspired one German diplomat in 1937 to dub von Hildebrand "the greatest obstacle to National Socialism in Austria", where von Hildebrand had launched a political journal.

"There was something probably unintentionally profound and apt in that statement by this Nazi ambassador," said John Henry Crosby, founder and director of the Hildebrand Project. "But, when he said that, he said something very true. The most profound opponents of Hitler were not his political enemies, they were his intellectual and spiritual foes.

"Von Hildebrand, by devoting his full genius and intellectual power to dismantling National Socialism was, in some sense, a much more total enemy of National Socialism. It's a tribute to the power of ideas."

Crosby is translator of von Hildebrand's recently published memoirs, titled My Battle Against Hitler. The book is largely composed of von Hildebrand's personal recollections during his fight with Nazism.

My Battle Against Hitler offers a firsthand look into von Hildebrand's mind as he decides to flee his home in Germany in 1933. Readers also experience von Hildebrand's pain as he sees Nazi persecution of his past colleagues and friends who questioned his decision to leave Germany.

"Very, very few people in Germany in 1920-1921 already realised that Nazism was a poison," von Hildebrand's wife, Alice, explained. "People closed their eyes and did not want to see. (Dietrich) saw the danger and he warned people. Many people would call him a pessimist, but unfortunately he was right."

Crosby said many Catholics in Germany attempted to make peace with Nazism, in the years before World War II. He explained that the Nazi party was likely very attractive in its beginning stages because it promised order and control after years of political violence in Germany.

"It wasn't maybe quite so completely surprising that (Nazism) would have gained a foothold in German life," Crosby said. "But, on the other hand, it was clear that a lot of bad things were happening right from the beginning of the Hitler regime. He was a rabid race-hater and he was a terrible anti-Semite. So, there was every reason to be dubious about whether a Catholic could make peace."

And dubious von Hildebrand was. In his memoirs, von Hildebrand writes, "In the face of such dreadful movements and heresies as Bolshevism and Nazism, in which the Antichrist raises his head, every attempt to "understand", every attempt at a certain neutral objectivity, is entirely impermissible."

Von Hildebrand's memoirs are filled with warnings of danger of becoming morally blunted. He constantly urges his colleagues and friends who stayed in Germany to remain morally alert and to avoid compromise.

Crosby said von Hildebrand's sacrifices and uncompromising battle against Nazism serve as a powerful moral witness for modern-day Catholics.

"I like to say that this book is like a field manual for moral witness," Crosby explained. "I think the application here is really the question of when do we unwittingly make peace with evil? And particularly in our culture where there's a lot of evil that's masked under social acceptability."

"At the end of the day, it boils down to this idea of complicity," Crosby said. "At what point does complicity with the culture become so great that I've tarnished my person? That I've lost my ability to live fully my Christian commitment."

Alice echoed Crosby's statements. "I believe intellectually, religiously and spiritually, we are facing a time of crisis," Alice said. "There are a lot of dangers that are being spread in the younger generation, and you know what happened in Germany might happen in the United States."

"We have to realise that the hour is very late ... and we need a voice who sees clearly what the teaching of the Church has been from the very beginning."

Acknowledgement to Catholic News Service.

Bookmark and Share

Reprinted from AD2000 Vol 28 No 1 (February 2015), p. 18

Page design and automation by
Umbria Associates Pty Ltd © 2001-2004