III.
Archbishop Stepinac's Reply at the Trial
To all charges brought against me here, I
answer that my conscience is in every way clear ( even though the public here present
ridicule this statement), and I seek neither to defend myself nor appeal against the
verdict.
For my convictions I am able to bear not only ridicule,
hatred, and humiliation, but - because my conscience is clear - I am ready at any moment
to die.
Hundreds of times during the trial I have been called
"the defendant Stepinac." There is no one so naive as not to know that with the
"defendant Stepinac" here on the bench sits the Archbischop of Zagreb, the
Metropolitan, and the head of the Catholic Church in Yugoslavia.
You yourselves have many times appealed to the accused
priests present to acknowledge that only Stepinac is guilty for their, the people's, and
the clergy's attitude. Stepinac, the man, cannot wield such influence, only Stepinac, the
Archbishop.
For seventeen months a campaign has been waged against me,
publicly and in the press; and for twelve months I suffered actual house arrest in the
Archbishop's palace.
The guilt for the rebaptism of Serbs is ascribed to me.
That is a misleading expression, for he who is once baptized, need not be rebaptized. The
question concerns change of religions, and of this I shall not speak in detail, except to
state that my conscience is clear and that history shall one day render its judgment in
this matter.
It is a fact that I was obliged to remove pastors, for they
stood in danger of death form the Orthodox. The Serbs wanted to kill these priests because
they refused them admission into the Church. It is a fact that during the war the Church
had to find its way through countless difficulties. There was a desire to aid as far as it
was at all possible the Serbian people.
The honorable judge has produced evidence showing that I
sought an abandoned Orthodox monastery (once belonging to our own Pauline Fathers) in
Orehovica to lodge Trappists whom the Germans had driven away from Reichburg. It was my
duty to aid my brother Slovenes, whom the Hitlerites had banished, to find temporary
shelter.
Because I was the Military Ordinary, grave criminality is
imputed to me. The honorable judge asked me if I did not consider myself a traitor to
Yugoslavia because in this matter I sought an understanding with the independent State of
Croatia.
I was the Military Ordinary in the former Yugoslavia. I
labored during those eight to nine years to bring about a definite solution of the
religious problem. This question was finally solved through the Yugoslav Concordat, which
was agreed upon after great difficulties, solemnly ratified in parliament, but then
shelved.
When the war between Yugoslavia and Germany neared its end,
I extended spiritual aid to the Catholic soldiers of the former Yugoslav army and of the
newly created independent State of Croatia. If, therefore, the state had fallen, but the
soldiers still remained, I felt obliged to concern myself with this situation.
I was not persona grata to either the Germans or the
Ustashe; I was not a Ustasha, nor did I take their oath as did some of the officials of
this court whom I see here. The Croatian nation unanimously declared itself for the
Croatian State and I would have been remiss had I not recognized and acknowledged this
desire of the Croatian people enslaved by the former Yugoslavia.
I have said that Croatians were not allowed to advance in
the army or to enter the diplomatic corps unless they changed their religion or married a
nonbeliever. That is the factual basis and background of my pastorals and sermons.
Whatever I have said of the right of the Croatian nation to
its freedom and independence is in complete accord with the basic principles enunciated by
the Allies at Yalta and in the Atlantic Charter.
If, according to these principles, every nation has the
right to independence, then why should it be denied to the Croatians? The Holy See has
declared that both small nations and national minorities have a right to freedom. Must,
then, a Catholic Bishop and Metropolitan maintain total silence on this issue? If fall we
must, then we fall because we have done our duty.
Do not think that the Croatian nation is pleased with this
trial, or that if given an opportunity to express themselves I would suffer as a result. I
have honored and respected the will of my people, and I shall continue to do so.
You accuse me as an enemy of the State and the people's
authority. I acknowledge your authority. What was my authority? I repeat again: you have
been my authority since May 8, 1945, but not before that. Where is it possible in the
world to obey two authorities: you in the woods; they in Zagreb?
Should I have given allegiance to the authority of the
illegal Simovic, or - as you call it, the "exiled" - government in London, to
the one in Cairo, yours in the woods or theirs in Zagreb? Is it possible to serve two
masters? The is impossible, according to Catholic morals, the law of nations, and common
sense. We could not ignore the authority here, even if it were Ustasha. It was here. You
have a right to call me to account for action since May 8, 1945.
As to my so-called acts of terrorism, you have no proof,
nor can anyone believe you. If Lisak, Lela Sofijanec, and others came to me under assumed
names, if I received a letter which I never read, and if it be a crime for men to come to
me, I shall accept the verdict with equanimity.
It does not trouble my conscience to have issued a
certificate of free movement to the Rev. Maric, for I did not do so with the purpose of
creating difficulties, and if this be guilt I would leave this world with my soul at
peace.
Whether you believe me or not, does not matter. The accused
Archbishop of Zagreb knows not only how to suffer but also to die for his convictions.
President Bakaric (of Croatia) himself acknowledged to the
Rev. Milanovic: "We are convinced that the Archbishop stands behind these acts, but
we have no proof." That, for me, is sufficient acknowledgment.
And now, what is the essence of our controversy and our
vicissitudes, and why has not a peaceful solution been reached? The state prosecutor has
many times affirmed that nowhere else is there such freedom of conscience as in this
state. I am free to demonstrate the contrary.
Before all, I repeat: 260 to 270 priests have been killed
by the National Liberation Movement. In no civilized state in the world would so many
priests be punished for such crimes as have been imputed to them. For example, the pastor
of Slatina, the Rev. Burger, as a member of the Kultur bund, should have been sentenced,
say, to eight years imprisonment; but no, you killed him because he, in fulfillment of his
duty as dean, had saved the sacred vessels of a national shrine.
The Rev. Povoljnjak was, without benefit of trial, murdered
like a dog in the streets. And the same has been the fate of accused Sisters. In no other
civilized state would death have been meted out: only, at the most, a prison sentence.
You have made a fatal mistake in murdering priests. The
people will not forgive you for that. Such is your "freedom."
Our Catholic schools, built at the cost of great
sacrifices, have been taken away from us. If I had not received seven carloads of
foodstuff from America, we could not have done anything for the children of our poor
peasant folk.
With force you took away all the seminary property. You
have done nothing less than what the Gestapo did in seizing the seminary at Mokrice. We
are not against agrarian reforms - the Holy See has issued many encyclicals on the social
question - but they should have been carried out in agreement with the Holy See.
Our orphanages have been rendered useless. Our printing
presses have been silenced, and I am not sure if one still exists. We have no publications
today, although they have been violently attacked here.
Is it not manifestly scandalous to insist that nowhere does
the Church enjoy such "freedom" as here?
The Dominicans were unable to publish a spiritual book,
translated by me from the French, to be printed at a cost of 75.000 dinars. Is this
freedom of the press?
The St. Jerome Society has ceased to exist. It is a grave
offense against the people to treat their greatest and oldest cultural institution in this
manner. You have reproached me for the work of my "Caritas". But I say to you:
"Caritas" has performed untold services for our people and your children.
There is the question of religious instruction in the
schools. You have laid down the rule: In the higher grades of the secondary schools
religious instruction is forbidden, and in the lower grades it is discretionary.
How can you give to children the right to determine for
themselves when they have not grown up, while those in the higher grades who have the
right to vote are not allowed freedom of choice in this regard?
Our nursing Sisters in the Catholic hospitals must bear
untold miseries and hardships.Against the overwhelming opposition of the people you have
introduced civil marriage. Why did you not interpret this freedom in accordance with the
spirit of society in America, for example, where one is free to choose either civil or
religious marriage?
We do not deny to you some degree of control over marriage.
But it grievously pains our people when they must first enter a civil before a religious
marriage. If you had turned to us, we would have given you suggestions on this matter.
The buildings of some of the religious in Backa have been
confiscated. Some churches in Split (I do not know whether it still holds true) have been
converted into warehouses. Church lands have been seized without any agreement with the
Holy See. You have witnessed how the people, in the face of your agrarian reform, refuse
to take these lands.
No, the material question is the least of our concerns. The
tragic thing is this: not one priest or bishop is today certain of his life day or night.
Bishop Srebrnic was attacked in uak by youngsters at the instigation of responsible
persons. For three hours they tormented him and invaded his quarters while your police and
militia looked on.
I myself suffered a similar experience in Zapreic when I
was attacked with rocks and revolvers. Bishop Lach, when he was on a Confirmation tour
across the Drave, and even though his mission was known, was turned back and held the
whole night in the prison at Koprivnica. In fact, your own men who were in the woods came
to me and declared: "This is unbecoming conduct. We shall protest to the
authorities."
Rocks were hurled thorugh the window of the house where
Bishop Buric was staying while on a Confirmation tour. Bishop Puic, as I heard, was
recently the target of rotten apples and eggs.
Such "freedom" we hold to be an illusion. We do
not wish to exist like outlawed bandits. We shall fight, by all just means, for our rights
- and here in this state.I would add - so that you may understand why we fight - three or
four more examples of your "freedom." In the classrooms it is officially taught
- in defiance of all historical proofs - that Jesus Christ never existed. Know you, then:
Jesus Christ is God. For Him we are ready to die. And today, you teach that He never
actually lived. If a teacher dared to teach the contrary, he would certainly be expelled.I
tell you, Mr. Prosecutor, that under such conditions the Church is not free, but will be
slowly annihilated.
Christ is the foundation of Christianity. You express
concern for the Orthodox Serbs. I ask you: how can you conceive of Orthodoxy without
Christ? How can you conceive of the Catholic Church without Christ? It is an utter
absurdity.
In the schoolbooks it is stated that the Mother of God was
an adulteress. Are you unaware that for both Catholics and Orthodox the Mother of God is
holy?
You have proclaimed, as official doctrine, that man
descends from the apes. That perhaps may satisfy the ambition of some. But why decree that
as an official theory when no scholar of reputation holds it to be valid?
According to your reviews, materialism is the only
acceptable system and that implies the elimination of God and Christianity. If there is
nothing but matter - then thank you for your "freedom.".
One of your men of influence once boasted: There is no one
in this State whom we could not bring to court and sentence.
To these outrageous charges whereby you place us among
murderers and associates of terrorists, I say to you that not all the evil committed in
the former independent State of Croatia was the work of the Domobrani or the Ustashe.
Let no one think I want conflict. Let the present
authorities come to an understanding with the Holy See. The Church does not recognize
dictatorship, but she is not against honest understandings. If that could be achieved,
then the Bishops will know what is their duty and there will be no need to seek out
priests to point out their (the Bishops') guilt, as was done here.
Finally, I want to say a few words to communist party,
which, in reality is my accuser. If you think I have taken the present stand because of
material things, you are wrong, for we have remained firm, even after you have made us
poor.
We are not against workers obtaining greater rights in the
factories, for this is in line with the Papal Encyclicals. Nor are we against reforms. But
let us make it plain to the leaders of communism: if there shall be freedom to diffuse
materialism, then let us have the right to confess and propagate our principles. Catholics
have died and will die for that right.
I conclude: With good will, an understanding can come
about. The initiative lies with the present authorities. neither I nor the hierarchy are
the ones to enter into this basic agreement. That is a matter between the State and the
Holy See.
As to myself and as to the verdict, I seek no
mercy. My conscience is clear!

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
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