“Cardinal Von Galen Reminds Us that We Can Resist without Giving up on Love”
2 Articles
2 Articles
Eighty years after his death, the Bishop of Münster denounced the crimes of the Nazi regime, particularly the euthanasia of disabled people, while rejecting the logic of revenge, as Jérôme Fehrenbach points out. His strength, a blend of moral intransigence and compassion, resonates as a call to stand firm without losing sight of human dignity.
For Germans, he was a symbol of resistance against Nazism. For many foreigners, too, he was one of the few good Germans during the Nazi era. Cardinal Clemens August von Galen went down in history with the honorary title "Lion of Münster." Eighty years ago, on March 22, 1946, the Bishop of Münster died – shortly after his triumphant return from Rome, where he had been appointed cardinal. >>> Lenten The article "Symbol of Resistance: 80 Years Ago …
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