Pavol Jantausch

Pavol Jantausch (27 June 1870 – 29 June 1947) was a Czechoslovakian priest and Bishop of the Roman Catholic Church. During the Second World War he protested the antisemitic policies of the Nazi aligned Slovak Republic (1939–45).

Biography

Born in Vrbové in 1870, he was ordained a priest in 1893. In 1922 he was appointed Apostolic Administrator of Trnava and in 1925 he was ordained Titular Bishop of Priene.[1]

Following Adolf Hitler's dismemberment of Czechoslovakia prior to the Second World War, the small and predominantly Catholic and agricultural Slovak region became the Fascist Slovak Republic in 1939, a nominally independent Nazi puppet state.[2] In February 1942, Slovakia agreed to begin deportations of Jews to German concentration camps.[3] Distressing scenes at railway yards of deportees being beaten by Hlinka Guard paramilitary spurred community protest, including from Bishop Pavol Jantausch.[4] Jantausch was active in protecting Jews.[5]

gollark: I feel like if we had saner institutions it would probably be possible to mass-manufacture better-quality masks eventually (it's been two-ish months since COVID-19 got to "obviously a bad problem" levels), but we... haven't really?
gollark: Yes, that seems to mostly concur with what I read.
gollark: Wait, are we talking homemade masks, surgical masks, or actual respirator things?
gollark: It seems a good idea complicated by the issues of actually getting enough and the early insistence by some dodecahedra that MaSkS DoN'T woRk.
gollark: Still, we can't *stay* in lockdown for an indefinite amount of time, it definitely has to be a temporary thing, and there seems to be a distinct lack of plans for dealing with COVID-19 after that.

See also

  • Catholic resistance to Nazism

References

  1. Catholic Hierarchy - Bishop Pavol Jantausch
  2. Richard J. Evans; The Third Reich at War; Penguin Press; New York 2009, p.395
  3. "The Holocaust in Slovakia". Ushmm.org. Retrieved 2013-08-18.
  4. Richard J. Evans; The Third Reich at War; Penguin Press; New York 2009, p.396-397
  5. Phayer, Michael (2000); The Catholic Church and the Holocaust, 1930–1965; Indiana University Press; p. 89
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.