R
redrosetea
Guest
The Rest of the Story – Lefebvre’s Father
The father of the conservative French Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre died in 1944 in a Nazi concentration camp
By Robert Moynihan
The father of the conservative French Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre died in 1944 in a Nazi concentration camp
By Robert Moynihan
Code:
February 8, 2009 -- The worldwide uproar over the opinions of Bishop Richard Williamson about the Shoah, following on the decision of Pope Benedict XVI, announced in Rome on January 24, to lift the 20-year-old excommunication of Williamson and three other bishops consecrated illicity in 1988 by French Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, has been loud, emotional -- and very confusing. Reasoned discourse has been ill-served.
(Photo: British-born Bishop Richard Williamson is pictured at an airport in Frankfurt, Germany, in this Feb. 28, 2007, file photo. Pope Benedict XVI has lifted the excommunication of Bishop Williamson and three other bishops of the Society of St. Pius X. In a Swedish television interview conducted in November and aired January 21, Bishop Williamson provoked Jewish and Catholic protests with assertions that the Holocaust has been exaggerated and that the Nazis did not use gas chambers to kill their prisoners -- CNS photo/Reuters)
As the attacks against Pope Benedict XVI began to include suggestions that he resign his papacy because of this decision regarding Williamson, it almost seemed as if the fabric of goodwill and trust, carefully woven between Christians and Jews through numerous meetings and common actions over several decades, was unraveling.
There are many open questions in this affair, and in our upcoming February issue of Inside the Vatican, which will soon go to press, we will have a comprehensive report on the controversy, from the Pope's reasons for lifting the excommunications, to the views of Bishop Williamson on the Holocaust, to the concerns expressed by representatives of the Jewish community (to obtain a copy of this issue, click on the link at the bottom of this email.)
But in this brief newsflash, we thought it right to make a point which has not received sufficient attention in the midst of the tumult.
That point is that the man at the remote origin of this entire controversy, Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, who in 1988 consecrated Williamson a bishop, along with the three others, in order to ensure the continuation of his Pius X Society after his death (he died in 1991), experienced "in his own flesh," as it were, the same cruelty millions of Jews experienced prior to and during the Second World War: his own father died in a Nazi concentration camp.
(Photo: Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre presides at the 1988 ordinations of Bishops Richard Williamson, Bernard Tissier de Mallerais, Bernard Fellay and Alphonso de Galarreta in Econe, Switzerland. Archbishop Lefebvre and the four new bishops were excommunicated after participating in the ordination that had been forbidden by Pope John Paul II. Archbishop Lefebvre, who died in 1991, founded the Society of St. Pius X -- CNS photo/Catholic Press Photo)
Marcel Lefebvre was born in Tourcoing, Nord (département), the second son and third child of factory-owner René Lefebvre. René Lefebvre died in 1944 in the Nazi concentration camp at Sonnenburg (in East Brandenburg), where he had been imprisoned by the Gestapo because of his work for the French Resistance and British Intelligence. (Reference: [absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Marcel_Lefebvre#encyclopedia](http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Marcel_Lefebvre#encyclopedia))
At the time of the First World War (1914-1918), Mr. Lefebvre had served his country by operating as a spy. Decades later, when the Nazis occupied France, he resumed this work, risking his life an incalculable number of times helping soldiers and escaped prisoners return to un-occupied France and London. (Reference: [leflochreport.com/site/?Rene-Lefebvre-and-the-Holocaust](http://leflochreport.com/site/?Rene-Lefebvre-and-the-Holocaust) RENE LEFEBVRE AND THE HOLOCAUST; see also the Russian web site: [dic.academic.ru/dic.nsf/enwiki/47825](http://dic.academic.ru/dic.nsf/enwiki/47825))
"Not very far from Cracow, in the Polish town of S?onsk, near the German border, there (was) a small concentration camp and prison. In the Sonnenburg prison, a brave Catholic Frenchman died after years of torture and suffering in the hands of the Nazis. His name was René Lefebvre (photo below, with his wife and children), loving father of the founder of the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X (FSSPX/SSPX). (Reference: [rorate-caeli.blogspot.com/2006/05/wit-alert.html](http://rorate-caeli.blogspot.com/2006/05/wit-alert.html))