Bishop Pagano: Opening the Archives
will reveal the greatness of Pius XII
According to the Prefect of the Vatican Secret Archives,
Pope Francis’ decision to open the archives on Pope Pius XII will allow a more
profound evaluation of the figure of Eugenio Pacelli, who is often the subject
of superficial criticisms. Documents concerning Pius’ pontificate will be
available within the next year.
By Sergio Centofanti
At an audience with managers and staff of the Vatican
Archives, Pope Francis announced the opening of the area of the archive relating
to the pontificate of Pope Pius XII, on 2 March 2020. The opening of this
section of the archives means that qualified researchers will be able to view a
large volume of documents collected in the Vatican during the period from 2
March 1939 to 9 October 1958. The date of the opening in 2020 coincides with
the anniversary of the election of Eugenio Pacelli as Pope Pius XII.
Article in “L’Osservatore Romano”
Bishop Sergio Pagano, Prefect of the Vatican Secret
Archives, provides details of the initiative in an article, published in the
Monday edition of the Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, and anticipated
by the Press Office of the Holy See. In the article, Bishop Pagano describes
the long period of preparation that led to this moment: “Archivists of the
Vatican Secret Archives and their colleagues from other Vatican archives
carried out patient work of sorting, annotating and inventorying the many fonds
and documents", he writes.
The Prefect recalls that, in 2004, Pope Saint John Paul II
made the extensive collection of the Vatican Office of Information for
Prisoners of War (1939-1947) available to researchers. This is composed of
“2,349 archival units, divided into 556 envelopes, 108 registers and 1,685
boxes of documentation, with an alphabetical file, which amounts to about 2
million and 100,000 records, relating to military and civilian prisoners,
missing or interned, of whom information was being sought. A fund
immediately investigated and still very much in demand today by private scholars
or relatives of the deceased prisoners", writes Bishop Pagano.
Archival openings
When the archive relating to the pontificate of Pope Pius XI
(1922-1939) was opened in 2006, at the request of Pope Benedict XVI, continues
the Prefect, "work was already underway for the progressive preparation of
the documentary material of Pius XII, which many scholars demanded with ever
greater insistence".
Pope Francis has decided to open "the Vatican Secret
Archives, the Historical Archives of the Section for Relations with States of
the Secretariat of State, and the Historical Archives of the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith", up to October 1958, explains the Prefect.
Also, the Historical Archives of the Congregation for the Evangelization of
Peoples, the Historical Archives of the Congregation for the Eastern Churches,
the Archives of the “Fabbrica” of St Peter’s and, according to different
modalities and forms of access, other Historical Archives of Congregations,
Dicasteries, Offices, and Tribunals, all “at the discretion of their
superiors”, says Bishop Pagano.
Each of these archives has its own rules, reservation
systems, indexes and inventories relating to their documentation, which will
now be open for study.
New sources available
Describing the new sources of the Secret Archives that will
be available to scholars, Bishop Pagano cites about 151,000 positions (each of
which consists of dozens of sheets) of the Secretariat of State. Detailed
computer descriptions of this documentation have been prepared and are
available in paper format (68 volumes of indexes). Then there are the so-called
"separate envelopes", which contain documentation regarding
individual topics or institutions, under the organization of the Secretariat of
State, totaling “538 envelopes, of which there will be a precise descriptive
list", says the Prefect.
From the same source come the “76 units now called the Pius
XII Papers, which contain manuscripts by Eugenio Pacelli before and during his
pontificate, as well as typescripts of his many speeches, sometimes with
handwritten corrections". There are also three other substantial
"special" archival collections. The first is that of the Relief
Commission, the second is simply called Pontifical Charity, and the third is
that of the Migration Office, set up to deal with the problem of the
repatriation of prisoners and refugees, as well as the growing issue of
migration, caused by the poverty experienced in certain European countries.
The documents of the pontifical representations will also be
available: "For each pontifical representation an accurate Inventory has
been prepared, indispensable guides for researchers (about 81 Indexes for a
total of more than 5,100 envelopes). These inventories can also be consulted on
the Intranet of the Vatican Archives for the convenience of scholars and to
facilitate their research in various fields", writes Bishop Pagano.
Cataloguing challenges
In order to face the challenge of cataloguing, "twenty
officials from the Vatican Archives dedicated themselves constantly and
exclusively. Where possible, they were assisted by qualified graduates from the
School of Palaeography, Diplomacy and Archiving within the Archive
itself". The same goes for the other historical archives of the Roman
Curia that are now open for the pontificate of Pope Pius XII. “It was certainly
a struggle", writes Bishop Pagano, but "a struggle sustained by a
certain enthusiasm, both because we were aware that we were working for future
historical research in relation to a crucial period for the Church and for the
world, and because the papers were everything but uninspiring. They spoke, and
I hope they will speak, to researchers and historians of an almost superhuman
work of Christian "humanism" that was active in the stormy disorder
of those events that in the mid-twentieth century seemed determined to
annihilate the very notion of human civilization".
The figure of Pope Pius XII has often been “too
superficially judged and criticized for some aspects of his pontificate”,
concludes Bishop Pagan. Now, thanks to the openness asked for by Pope Francis,
historians will be able to research the pontificate of Pope Pius XII “without
prejudice, but with the help of new documents, in all the realistic scope and
richness" of that pontificate.
Research instructions
Instructions for conducting research in the Vatican Secret
Archives, are available on the website (http://asv.vatican.va/content/archiviosegretovaticano/en/consultazione/accesso-e-consultazione.html).
Research in the Archivio Segreto Vaticano is free of charge and open to
qualified scholars conducting scientific studies. All researchers must have a
university degree (five-year course) or an equivalent university diploma.
Clergymen must possess a licentiate degree or PhD.
A letter of request must be addressed to the Prefect,
indicating the reasons for the research. This must be accompanied by a
presentation letter from a recognized institute of scientific and historical
research or a person qualified in the field of historical research (tenured
university professors).
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét