This book has been criticized, condemned, banned,
mutilated, destroyed and even burned as frequently as it has been quoted,
recommended, reproduced and praised in many parts of the world, because of the
events and revelations it describes. The ordinary individual cannot accept as
yet the startling facts that only a few years back, for instance, the Catholic
Church advocated forcible conversions, helped to erect concentration camps, and
was responsible for the sufferings, torturing and execution of hundreds of
thousands of non-Catholics. Deeds coolly perpetrated by her lay and ecclesiastic
members. Furthermore, that many of such atrocities were carried out personally
by some of her Catholic priests and even monks. One of the main purposes of this
book is to relate where, when and by whom such atrocities were committed. It
took the author almost half a decade of painstaking investigation before he
accepted what seemed unbelievable. The result is this account, documented from
as authoritative and as varied sources as possible. Among them, people with whom
the present writer became personally acquainted. Some of these played no mean
role in the religious, political and military events herein narrated. Others
were eye-witnesses. Indeed, not a few even victims of the incredible atrocities
sanctioned and promoted by the Catholic Church. The names of most of the
participants, Catholic laymen, military, priests, friars, bishops, archbishops
and cardinals, as well as those of their non-Catholic victims, men, women and
children, including clergymen, are as genuine as the names of the localities,
villages and cities where the atrocities took place. Their authenticity can be
verified by anyone willing to do so. Documents and photographs of Catholic
concentration camps, Catholic mass executions and Catholic forced conversions,
some of which are in this book, are kept in the archives of the Yugoslav
Government, of the Orthodox Church, of the United Nations and of other official
institutions.
The Ecumenical revolution, although seemingly alluring, has shown itself to be nothing more than a Trojan Horse via which Catholic power, apparelled in contemporary garb, continues to assert itself as effectively active as ever. The striking samples of contemporary Catholic terrorization which occurred in Malta and Vietnam, many of which took place during the days of "good old Pope John" and, indeed, under the pontificate of Pope Paul VI, need no elucidation. They are the most damning proof that the Catholic Church, notwithstanding all her alleged liberalization, fraternization and up-to-dateness, basically, has not changed an iota. The portentous significance of what is here described, therefore, should be carefully scrutinized. Lest the past be repeated in the future. Indeed, now. In the present.
Avro Manhattan,
London.