Michael von Faulhaber
Michael von Faulhaber (5 March 1869 – 12 June 1952) was a German Catholic
prelate who served as
Archbishop of Munich and Freising for 35 years, from 1917 to his death in 1952. Created a
cardinal in 1921, von Faulhaber remained an outspoken
monarchist and denounced the
Weimar Republic as rooted in "
perjury and treason" against the
German Empire during a speech at the
62nd German Catholics' Day of 1922. Cardinal von Faulhaber was a senior member and co-founder of the
Amici Israel, a priestly association founded in Rome in 1926 with the goal of working toward the Jewish people's conversion to Roman Catholicism, while also seeking to combat
antisemitism within the church. His legacy is complicated, having encouraged German clergy's submission to the Nazi takeover, and acted as a vocal opponent of German democracy, while occasionally voicing opposition to certain actions of the Nazi's. His advocacy for Jewish-Catholic reconciliation also grounded itself in a desire for Jews to convert to Catholicism.
After the Nazi Party seized control of German government in 1933, von Faulhaber recognized the new Nazi government as legitimate, required Catholic clergy to be loyal to the government and maintained diplomatic bridges between the regime and the church, while simultaneously condemning certain Nazi policies, including
religious persecution of members of the clergy, and actively supporting anti-Nazi German Catholics such as
Fritz Gerlich and other persecuted persons. In 1937, von Faulhaber was involved in drafting the anti-Nazi encyclical ''
Mit brennender Sorge''. Von Faulhaber ordained Joseph Ratzinger (future
Pope Benedict XVI) as a
priest in 1951 and was the last surviving cardinal appointed by
Pope Benedict XV.
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