May 1945. The war in Europe is over. Germany surrendered unconditionally on 8 May 1945, and Allied forces are now searching for those responsible for the worst crimes in modern history. Internment camps fill with thousands of former German and Austrian soldiers, SS officers and officials as well as party members of the collapsed Nazi regime. The apparatus of mass murder, the men who built and ran the death camps, organised deportations, and carried out executions are attempting to disappear into the ruins of a
shattered continent. In Rome, far from the rubble of Berlin and the advancing Allied occupation authorities, an Austrian bishop sits in his study at the German College and begins to receive visitors. Some come openly, others arrive in secret, told only by word of mouth that a churchman is willing to help them escape. The men who find their way to him include some of the most wanted war criminals in Europe. The bishop’s name is Alois Hudal. Alois Karl Hudal was born on 31 May 1885 in Graz, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. His
father was a shoemaker and the family had little money. Hudal showed academic ability from an early age, and after completing his schooling he enrolled to study theology at the University of Graz in 1904. He was ordained to the priesthood in July 1908 and initially served as a parish chaplain in Kindberg, a small town in Styria in today’s Austria. During years of his study he developed an unusual specialisation for a Catholic priest from the German-speaking world: he became a notable scholar of the Eastern Orthodox churches, studying their liturgy and spirituality, and
harbouring long-term ambitions for reconciliation between Rome and the Orthodox world. In 1911, Hudal earned his doctorate in theology from the University of Graz and then moved to Rome, where he entered the Teutonic College of Santa Maria dell’Anima, a seminary for German speaking priests, where he was a chaplain from 1911 to 1913. During the First World War, Hudal served as a military chaplain and in 1917 he published a collection of his wartime sermons, in which he declared that loyalty to the flag was loyalty to God, while also warning
against what he called national chauvinism. In 1923, Hudal was appointed rector of the Teutonic College of Santa Maria dell’Anima in Rome known also as Anima, a position he would hold for nearly thirty years. The appointment was partly the result of Austrian diplomatic manoeuvring: Ludwig von Pastor, the Austrian historian and diplomat, had recommended Hudal to Pope Pius XI specifically to ensure that an Austrian, rather than a German, Dutch, or Belgian candidate, would lead the college at a moment when Austria’s post-war influence in the Vatican
was under pressure and the Austrian empire had just collapsed. Hudal became the public face of Austrian prestige in Rome, and for more than a decade he was an influential and respected figure in the Catholic world. In June 1933 he was consecrated titular bishop of Aela by Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli, the future Pope Pius XII, who was then the cardinal protector of the German national church in Rome. The ceremony placed Hudal at the centre of Catholic-German relations at a moment of extraordinary danger after Adolf Hitler came into power in Germany in January 1933.
From the early 1930s onward, Hudal’s political views shifted visibly and decisively. He was a committed anti-communist, and fear of Bolshevism shaped his entire political outlook. He had concluded that only a strong, unified German-Austrian military force could halt the advance of Soviet power in Central Europe and protect Rome from what he saw as the existential threat of godless communism and liberalism. In this framework, the rise of Adolf Hitler appeared to him not as a catastrophe but as a potential instrument for Christian civilization. From 1933,
Hudal began publicly embracing the pan-Germanic nationalism – the belief that all German-speaking peoples should be united into a single state – declaring that he wished to serve as a herald of the German cause. His invective against Jews intensified during these years, as he linked what he called the Semitic race with democracy, internationalism, and financial conspiracy. In 1937, Hudal published a book in Vienna entitled The Foundations of National Socialism. In it, Hudal enthusiastically praised Hitler and proposed a reconciliation between Nazism and Christianity,
arguing that the two could coexist if the regime left education in the hands of the churches while the Nazis controlled politics. He sent Hitler a personal copy with a handwritten dedication praising him as “the new Siegfried of Germany’s greatness”. The book also attacked the policies of the Vatican, arguing that Rome had been insufficiently supportive of the German cause against communism. The reaction from both sides was damaging. The Nazi regime did not ban the book outright but prevented its circulation in Germany, restricting
it to two thousand copies. The Vatican was furious at the implicit criticism of its diplomacy and the explicit endorsement of a Nazi regime it was already engaged in an uncomfortable and contested relationship with. Hudal had managed to offend his superiors while simultaneously failing to impress those whose cause he championed. The publication of the book effectively ended Hudal’s influence within the Vatican. He was kept at arm’s length from positions of real responsibility and was never given the authority he believed his rank and connections deserved.
A few years earlier, when he appealed to Pope Pius XI with his theory that the conservative wing of the Nazi party, headed in his interpretation by Hitler himself, could be Christianized and directed against communism, the response had been sceptical. After 1937, the scepticism hardened into something close to Hudal´s exclusion. The ambitious bishop who had once delivered speeches of honour in the presence of the Pope and multiple cardinals found himself increasingly marginalised in the institution, he had spent his entire life serving. In April 1938,
Hudal helped organize a vote of German and Austrian clerics from the German college of Anima on the question of the Anschluss – the German annexation of Austria which took place in March 1938. The vote took place on the German heavy cruiser Admiral Scheer, anchored in the Italian harbour of Gaeta. Interestingly, despite Hudal´s views, more than 90% voted against the Anschluss. The Second World War began on 1 September 1939 when Nazi Germany attacked Poland. In the years that followed, Hudal’s position in Rome remained uncomfortable, though he retained his title and
his rectorship at the Anima. During the war itself, Hudal’s record was more complicated than the simple picture of a Nazi collaborator would suggest. In October 1943, when the German occupation authorities in Rome began the deportation of the city’s Jewish community, Hudal wrote directly to Generalmajor Rainer Stahel, the German military commander of Rome, urging him to halt the operation. He warned that the deportations would damage relations between the Church and the German Reich and provide propaganda material to Germany’s enemies.
According to several sources, Hudal may have acted as a Vatican-based informer for Nazi Germany, reporting either to the Abwehr – the German military intelligence service, or to the Reich Security Main Office – the SS security and intelligence authority. After the German surrender in May 1945, Hudal began the work for which history would remember him. He used his position and his connections to help former Nazis obtain false identity documents and travel papers. The mechanism was straightforward in outline:
Hudal would vouch for a man to the Vatican’s refugee relief organisation, the Pontificia Commissione di Assistenza. The commission’s papers were not passports, but they were enough to approach the International Committee of the Red Cross – or ICRC, whose representatives in Rome would issue a displaced persons travel document on the word of a bishop. That document, in turn, could be used to apply for a visa to Argentina, Brazil, Arab countries or another destination willing to receive German-speaking emigrants. In practice,
the ICRC performed minimal checks, and the word of the bishop was accepted without question. The men Hudal helped included some of the most significant perpetrators of the Holocaust. Franz Stangl, the commanding officer of the Sobibor and Treblinka extermination camps, came to Hudal after learning from other fugitives that the bishop was helping all Germans who needed assistance. Stangl later told the journalist Gitta Sereny that Hudal had arranged accommodation for him in Rome, provided money, and obtained documents enabling his travel
to Syria. Hudal even arranged employment for Stangl in a textile factory in Syria. Gustav Wagner, deputy commander of the Sobibor extermination camp, was similarly helped. Alois Brunner, who had organised the deportation of Jews from France and Slovakia to the German extermination camps, also escaped through Hudal’s network. Adolf Eichmann, the man placed in charge of implementing the murder of European Jewry, obtained his false identity as Ricardo Klement with assistance from a Franciscan friar connected to Hudal.
Hauptsturmführer Erich Priebke, an SS officer responsible for the Ardeatine massacre near Rome, in which 335 civilians were killed, confirmed directly to the Italian newspaper La Repubblica in 1994 that Bishop Hudal had helped him reach Buenos Aires. Through these escape routes—later known as “ratlines”—other fugitives also fled Europe, including Josef Mengele, who carried out selections and experiments on prisoners at Auschwitz-Birkenau in German-occupied Poland. On 31 August 1948, Hudal wrote to Argentine President Juan Perón, requesting 5000 visas: 3000
for Germans and 2000 for Austrians, describing them not as Nazi refugees and criminals but as anti-communist fighters “whose wartime sacrifice” had saved Europe from Soviet domination. In Hudal’s worldview, the men he was protecting were not perpetrators of mass murder but soldiers in a sacred war against godless Bolshevism, and the Allied prosecutions at Nuremberg and elsewhere were show trials orchestrated by the enemies of Christian civilisation. Hudal’s activities caused a press scandal in 1947 after he was accused of leading a Nazi smuggling
ring by the Passauer Neue Presse, a German Catholic newspaper. In January 1952, the Bishop of Salzburg in Austria informed Hudal that the Holy See wished him to step down from his position at the Anima. Hudal announced his resignation in June 1952, though he did so with bitterness, insisting that his removal reflected the Vatican’s capitulation to Allied pressure rather than any genuine moral failing on his part. He withdrew to a residence at Grottaferrata, a small town near Rome, where he spent the final years of his life. In 1962, in the last year of his life, Hudal wrote
his memoirs, published posthumously in 1976. The memoirs were not a confession in any conventional sense. They were an extended complaint against the Vatican officials who had failed to support him, a bitter account of perceived injustices accumulated over decades, and an unapologetic defence of his role in helping Nazi criminals escape post-war justice. Writing with full knowledge of what the Holocaust had been, Hudal described his actions in the following terms: “I thank God that He opened my eyes and allowed me to visit and comfort many victims in their
prisons and concentration camps and to help them escape with false identity papers.” The victims in Hudal´s view were SS officers and camp commandants, and the prisons were Allied internment camps. The bishop who helped murderers escape justice died in Grottaferrata on 13 May 1963, never having faced legal proceedings for his role in the infamous ratline. He was 77 years old. Thanks for watching the World History Channel. Be sure to like and subscribe and click the bell notification icon so you don’t miss our next
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