Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, January 20, 1920, Night Extra Financial, Page 14, Image 14

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EVENING PUBLIC,, LEDGEEr-PHniAJDklSPHIA, TUESDAY, JANtfABtf &) 1920
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COURAGE DOES NOT FLAG, WE
ABIDE OUR TIME," SAYS MERCIER
E.S4...
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. yiciory, reparation ana necessary guarantees ire w nat we L.ount on, ueciares
5p Cardinal in Defending Pastoral andAttacking Deportations of Belgian
Workmen
Explanatory Comment
rpHE following arc further extracts from the Cardinal's pastoral, "Courage, My Brethren," shich rekindled
! the ire of Von Biasing against the primate:
"Those who light for liberty under the Belgian flag are brave. Tho interned of Holland and England,
who raise toward God, for their native land, their arni3 weighted with chains, are brave. Our exiled com
panions, who bear in silence the weight of their isolation, serve, they abo, as best they can, the Belgian
fatherland, as all those souls serve who, perhaps behind the walls of cloisters, perhaps gathered together by
the homo fireside, pray, we.cp, suffer, waiting for tho return of the absent and of our common deliverance.
"Wo have heard the puissant voice if wives and mothers; thiough their sobs they besought God to sus
tain them with courage and faith for tho honor of their husbands and their sons, driven by force into the fac
tories of the enemy. We have understood how these valiant ones summoned their strength at tho hour of faro
well Co give heart to their comrades or to thunder forth in a supreme effort the national hvmn; we have seen
them on their return, pale, wrecked, human ruins; while our eyes, wet with tears, sought thoir ashen glances,
we, bowed reverently before them because they revealed to us, beyond doubt, a now aspect hitherto unattained
of the national heroism
"In our youth our piofessors of history taught us rightly to admire Leonidas and his 300 Spartans who,
rather than secure their safety in easy flight, chose to bo crushed in the pass of Thermopylae by tho Persian
annjr. They fired us with enthusiasm for the 600 heroes of the land of Franchimont who, their liberty and
their life being pledged, and having crossed in the night through the armies of Louis XI and Charles the Bold,
euccumbed in an assault of almost mad audacity and in a desperate resistance. Tho teachers of the Belgian
generation of the future will hac to cite traits differently evocative of military heroism and of patriotism."
Cardinal Merciers Story
Including his correspondence with the German
authorities in Belgium during the war, 1914 to
1918, edited by Professor Fernand Mayenco of
Louvain University and translated by the Bene
dictine Monks of St. Augustine's, Ramsgate.
England.
TDAROM VON DER LANCKEN, having in the course
of an interview with Mgr. Legraive, complained of
the pastoral, "Courage, My Brethren," the Cardinal
wrote him as follows;
Aichbishop's House, Malines,
Louvain, March 6, 1917.
To Baron on der Lancken, Chief of the Political De
partment, Government General, Brussels.
Dear Baron You were so kind as to inform me
through his Lordship, Mgr. Legraive, that, thanks to
your pressing instances, Mjle. Douterlinge will escape
capital punishment. I rejoice with the family and
thank you for your kind and effective intervention.
In the course of your interview with my auxiliary
bishop it appears that jou passed severe judgment
on my last pastoral and expressed annoyance at a
letter addressed by mo to a club of young French
men. On this last point you have been led astray,
for I havo not written, either to any young men's
club or to any French newspaper.
As regards my pastoral, you must be acquainted
by this time with the correspondence on this topic
exchanged between the Governor General and mysejf.
I cannot expect you to tell me that you are satisfied
with my answer, but you cannot deny that in form
ing a judgment about the meaning or expediency of
my pastoral, we must look at it from two points of
view that of the occupier and that of the unfortu
nate people whose territory is occupied.
You must acknowledge that the military power
of Germany could not hae conceived anything more
opposed to itri longing for peace than the forcible
and woeful deportations, which have aroused univer
sal indignation.
Accept, dear Baton, the expression of my sincere
esteem.
(Signed) D. J. CARDINAL MERCIER,
Archbishop of Malines.
Baron von der Lancken could think of nothing bet
ter to justify the action of the occupying power than
to appeal to wartime necessities:
Political Department of the Government Genet al,
Brussnl3, March 9. 1917.
To His Eminence Cardinal Merrier, Archbishop of
Malines.
Your Eminc7ice,8 esteemed letter, dated the 6th
Inst., has duly come to hand. I did, as you say, dis
cuts with Mgr. Legraive your last pastoral and your
letter published by the Parisian press. As regards
this last, I take the liberty to send your Eminence
an extract from the Vingtieme Sieclc. According to
this, the letter was not addressed directly to the
Revue des Jeunes, but to one of its staff of writers.
I only revert to the pastoral in order to pass a
criticism on the remark made by your Eminence that
we must distinguish between the occupying pouer and
the occupied country. Thf occupied country will un
derstand many things done by the occupying pouer.
t if it makes an attempt to appreciate the latter's point
of view It udl then realize that the occupying power
has to take count of the necessities of war imposed on
it, and that it by no mana acts in an arbitrary man
ner. The occupying power will, of course, look upon
all criticism of it? administration as unwarranted, if
no account be taken of the circumstances.
I offer to your Eminence the expression of my
sincere esteem.
(Signed) LAXCKEX.
Inclosed with this letter was the following extract
from tho Vingtieme Siecle, dated February 24, 1917:
AN UNPUBLISHED LETTER
OF CARDINAL MERCIER
Undaunted Loyalty of French and Bel
gians Under Hardships
The Reuo dns Jeunes will publish tomorrow the
following letter which one of its correspondents has
fsf received from Caulinal Mercier:
Archbishop' House, Malines,
January 15, 1917.
Dear Sit Mr. X has furnished me with a
tangible proof of your kindness toward myself and
my suffering flock. I appieciato it greatly and I
thank you for it. Indeed, Belgium is being sorely
tried and the sufferings of the populations of noith
crn France are not 1i, keen But, thank God, oui
courage does not flag. Our people, I mean thf
lower classes, they who have to bear the brunt of
privations, arp wonderful for their steadfastness.
This week I went through the byways and alleys of
tx little town Lierre which the invaders had already
fc looted in August, 1914, and irom which they had just
Wy kidnapped 1000 able-bodied men. I went from Iioubs
to house to see tiio families of the deported. I had to
, dry man tears and to comfort many in sorrow. I
v j have heard hard words about the tyrants who bru
tally smash up our homes, but I have not heard
cither a wife or a mother asking for peace at any
jtrjec. We buffer, but wc bide our time. Victory,
leparation and necessary guarantees are what we
count on. The Americans in charge of the feeding
of the French populations report
m r-i .A irl
To His Excellency
eral, Brussels.
that your own peo-
Copyright.
Httrnattmal
. ir , T-v I
pie arc animated with the same generous sentiments.
With you, this spectacle is less surprising, as a
Frenchman is temperamentally and traditionally gen
erous. Historically he is the embodiment of warlike
valor and of chivalry, whereas with us, who havo
enjoyed a long spell of peace and! possess a less
sanguine temperament, the intense loyalty shown
during the last two years amazes us and inspires us
with a sentiment, perhaps childishly exaggerated, of
self-admiration.
You will understand and excuse this feeling, at
all events in the case of the-bishop, the father of
his flock, and if I make much of it, it is to explain the
comfort you have given me by your kind thought
fulnebs. I pray God to reward you for it, to bless you
and yours and the noble French nation, and I offer
you, sir, the assurance of my sincere esteem.
(Signed) D. J. CARDINAL MERCIER,
Archbishop of Malines.
CHAPTER XXXVII
Condemnation of Mgr. Lfigraivc, Auxiliary
Bishop of Malines, and of M. 1'Abbe Allaer
(XH THE finding of the court-martial at Antwerp,
Mgr. Legraive, bishop auxiliary of Malines, was
condemned to nine months' imprisonment for showing
hospitality to a young Frenchman on his way to the
frontier, and Abbe Allaer to eight months as an ac
complice. The Cardinal learned of these sentences on
his way through Brussels, after a few days' absence.
He discovered at thn same time that Baron on der
Lancken, through the Nuncio, had advised him to ask
for Mgr. Legraivo's reprieve. Accordingly, he at once
sent in an appeal to the Governor General of this
tenor:
St. Louis's Institute, Brussels,
March 17, 1917.
Baron von Bissing,Governor Gen-
Sir In returning this evening to Brussels after
a few days' absence, I learn to my amazement that
the court-martial sitting at Antwerp has just sen
tenced Mgr. Legraive, my bishop auxiliary, to nine
months' imprisonment.
I feel that your Excellency will mercifully quash
this sentence, the more so because I happen to know
that the act was inspired, as Mgr. Legraive avers, by
motives of charity. I hope also that the Abbe Allaer,
spiritual adviser to the seminary, who has been sen
tenced to eight months' imprisonment, will experi
ence similar leniency.
Accept, sir, the assurance of my sincere esteem.
(Signed) D. J. CARDINAL MERCIER,
Archbishop of Malines.
The next day the Cardinal begged for permission
to visit Mgr. Legraive at Antwerp:
Archbishop's House, Malines,
March 18, 1917.
To Baron von der Lancken, Chief of the Political De
partment of the Government General, Brussels.
Dear Baron I am ery anxious to visit this aft
ernoon his Loidship Mgr. Legraive in prison. Would
you kindly procure me the necessary authority to do
so or warn the governor of the prison by telephone?
1 will arrange to be at Antwerp between 4 and 5.
Accept, sir, the expression of my sincere esteem.
(Signed) D. J. CARDINAL MERCIER,
Archbishop of Malines.
A few moments after sending this letter the Cardi
nal learned that Mgr. Legraive had already been sent
to Germany. He expressed his surprise to Baron von
der Lancken.
Archbishop's House. Malines,
March 18, 1917.
To Baron on d"r Lancken, Chief of the Political
Department of the Government General, Brus
sels. Dear Baion Yesterday, on my arrival at Brus
sels, I learned that his Excellency the Nuncio was
urging me, on jour advice, to send in a petition for
the reprieve of Mgr. Legraive, my auxiliary bibhop.
And this morning I learn that yesterday Mgr. Le
graive had already arrived in Germany. I have tried
in vain to account for the coincidence.
Accept, dear Baron, the assurance of my sincere
esteem.
(Signed) D J. CARDINAL MERCIER,
Archbishop of Malines.
Auxiliary Bishop Reprieved
Thicc days later Mgr. Legraive, having received a
leprieve, returned to his country after spending forty
eight hours in the camp at Siegburg. The Cardinal has
tened to thank Baron von Bissing for his intervent'on.
Archbishop's House, Malines,
March 21, 1917.
To His Excellency Baron von Bissing, Governor Gen
eial, Brussels
Sir At this ery moment Mgr. Legraive re
turns to us from Germany The iepnee granted him
is the result of your prompt and powerful interven
tion. I am only doing my duty in expressing to you
how grateful I feel and at the same time I offer to you
the assurance of my sincere esteem.
(Signed) D. J. CARDINAL MERCIER,
Archbishop of Malines
The Cardinal also thanked Baron von der Lancken
for the share he had had in releasing Mgr. Legraive and
asked him to use. his influence to obtain the Governor
General's clemency on behalf of Abbe Allaer.
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