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I.
In the Times of Nazism, Fascism and Communism
 I dreamt it was
Easter
At the same table sat
my mother, an elderly little woman,
As if enveloped in the velvet silence,
my father, bent under the burden of age
myself, and opposite me
Archbishop Alojzije Stepinac,
Metropolitan of Croatia,
He blessed us.
Then he said
"We have no enemies,
and their dead are with us."
Plenty of Easter air around us.
he laid his generous hands on the table.
Snow was falling outside.
Then we gazed at the white table-cloth.
I was eating bread and crying.
(Viktor Vida, Iron Curtain, 1950)
*Photo: Stepinac's parents
Cardinal Alojzije Stepinac took over the helm of the Church
in Croatia in the worst period of the 20th century, in the time of rampant Nazism, Fascism
and Communism. Even before the Foreign Ministers of France and England (Daladier and
Chamberlain) tried to once again reach an agreement with the monstrous Hitler in Munich in
1938 and before the powerful statesmen, F. D. Roosevelt and W. Churchill, drew maps
drinking whisky with that other world criminal in Teheran in 1943, Stepinac, though almost
powerless in the face of those murderous powers, was completely aware of all the evils of
the century directly threatening the planet and his people.
As early as 1937 he was at the head of an association which
aided people expelled by National Socialism. He would later explain that in such
circumstances the Church, like all other humane people and institutions, had to find its
way through the difficulties. The Church had to be on the side of human dignity and be
sympathetic toward human suffering, considering that the crimes being committed against
humanity were massive. Stepinac constantly grappled with the powerful to protect those
under threat. He witnessed how Serbian hegemony enslaved the Croatian people and
recognised that it was only in its sovereign state that the Croatian people could survive
with such neighbours. These were harsh circumstances in which one had to be very careful
lest the remedy might be worse than the illness and in which sometimes the only
possibility was to choose the lesser of two evils.
Neither the Nazis nor Communists loved Cardinal Stepinac,
and since they could not win him over, they accused him of sympathising with the other
side. Thus, for both of them he was a persona non rata and treated according to the
estimates of those in power as to what would be more profitable or less detrimental. The
testimony of famous Croatian sculptor Ivan Metrovic about Stepinac has been published
several times. Knowing the circumstances surrounding Cardinal Stepinac very well,
Mestrovic discreetly warned him in 1943, in Rome, that his life was in danger. Stepinac
simply responded that he was aware of the fact and was not afraid, despite having reliable
information that both Nazis and Communists were plotting to kill him. Thus it is no
accident that the US Congress officially stressed that Stepinac, among other things, was
"an open opponent of the practices of Nazism and Communism" and that during the
war years he was entrusted with "the successful organisation of the escape of many
Jewish refugees to freedom" (Nikolic, 1983, p. 221).
Stepinac openly took the side of Nazi and Fascist victims,
both in word and deed. Consequently the Nazis cruelly killed his brother as a bitter
warning. Later he was victimised and convicted at an open, spectacle trial in the darkest
times of a Stalinist regime. Still some in the world, for various reasons, accepted the
Stalinist propaganda from Belgrade and thus did not always do justice to the life and work
of Cardinal Stepinac. This was facilitated by the fact that Stepinac belonged to a nation
that, like many others in Europe, could not be spared the tyranny of either Hitler or
Stalin, nor anything that accompanied it. Yet Stepinac did not abandon the solidarity with
people in need, even in the worst of times. He helped as much as he could, as suggested by
newspaper reports.
"In 1941 he released the Croatian bishops' statement
against a forced conversion of Orthodox Serbs to Catholicism, demanding that conversion to
Catholicism should be totally voluntary and beyond the reach of public authorities. In
1943 he lodged a strong protest with an Italian minister against the Italian atrocities in
the south of the country and enraged the Croatian government by condemning mass reprisals
for acts of sabotage. At the same time, he was constantly engaged in relieving the
sufferings of the Jews, Serbs and Slovenes and other victims of the persecution and saved
many lives" (The Times, London, 11 February, 1960).
As the communists were well cognisant of the fundamental
orientation and the integrity of Cardinal Stepinac, they left him in peace when they took
power. Thus, for a full 15 months he could act "freely", naturally under the
well-known conditions of a Stalinist regime. When the Yugoslav authorities realised that
they would not win him over nor persuade him to separate the Church in Croatia from the
Vatican, they initiated court proceedings with the intentions of eliminating him and
discrediting the Church in Croatia in the eyes of the world by accusing it of
collaborating with the Nazis. The authorities also hoped this would frighten the Croatian
Catholics, who put up indomitable resistance to this Stalinist regime. It is a known fact
that after his conviction, Milovan Djilas, at the time the second man in the state, stated
several times that Stepinac was innocent, but that out of political necessity he had to be
convicted - so Djilas justified to the West.
Today, decades after Stepinac's death, the conditions under
which he worked and all other facts concerning his person and life are known in full
detail. All of this tells us that Stepinac, with his dignified bearing and work,
transcended the boundaries of his homeland, as well as the temporal limitations of his
earthly life. He managed to gain the admiration of more than one religious community.
Recognising in Cardinal Stepinac an innocent martyr who fell victim to the cruel delusions
of communism, and a staunch advocate of rights for each man and each people during the
greatest evils of the 20th century, whose faith was inspired and fed by his true faith in
God and desire for the benefit of each and every one man - the Catholic Church has good
cause, and indeed, is honour bound to beatify Stepinac only 38 days after his death, on
the occasion of the centenary of his birth.

Simun Sito Coric
Cardinal Alojzije Stepinac
Basic Facts about His Person and Work
Publisher: Croatian Information
Centre
Co-Publisher: Croatian
World Congress
Editor: Ante Beljo
Graphic Design: Gorana Benic-Hudin
Printed by: Targa - Zagreb
Copies printed: 5000
I. In the Times of Nazism, Facism and Communism
II. A Brief Biography
III. Archbishop Stepinac's Reply at the Trial
IV.Statements about and by Stepinac
V.A Selection of Books about Stepinac
About the author
Prices : 5DEM; 5USD
Books may be purchased in Croatia at the Croatian Information Centre.
Purchases outside of croatia can be made through the Croatian World Congress.
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