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‘They didn’t bomb the tracks’

Pope Francis has criticised Allied forces for failing to bomb the railway lines that led to concentration camps in World War II.

He also defended pope Pius XII, who has long been accused of remaining silent in the face of the Nazi Holocaust and the mass murder of millions of Jews.

“I don’t know why everyone picks on Pius XII and the Church, but no one talks about the Allied Forces,” Francis said in a wide-ranging interview published on Friday.

“They knew the railway network which transported Jews to the concentration camps very well. They had photographs. But they did not bomb the tracks. Why?” he said.

The 77-year-old said he was confident that once the Vatican archives on World War II are made public in the next few years, their contents will “shed a lot of light” on what went on behind the scenes in the Holy See.

“We hear all sort of things said about poor Pius XII, but we must remember that he was considered a great defender of the Jews,” he said.

The Italian pontiff, who reigned from 1939 to 1958, hid Jews in convents in Rome and across Italy, as well as in the papal summer residence in Castel Gandolfo, where 42 babies were born in hiding, Francis said.

“I do not want to say that Pius XII did nothing wrong. We all make mistakes, I make them too. But his role must be read in the context of the time,” he said.

“To stop more Jews being killed, was it better not to speak out or should he have done so?”

Pius XII is accused by numerous historians of being overly cautious by refusing to condemn the Holocaust for fear of reprisals against Catholics in occupied Europe.

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