Absolute bunk. Hitler was absolutely
NOT a good Catholic. He
HATED the Church all his adult life. The Nazis considered it a "Jewish" religion and wanted to return Germany to its pagan beliefs. That wasn't a new idea, either. My God, ever heard of Wagner? Where do you get this crap?
The Pope may have been a coward and unwilling to take on the Germans too strongly given that they occupied Italy and encircled the Vatican, and also that he feared they would destroy the Church and send all Catholics to camps as well, but there is
NO EVIDENCE whatsoever that he supported that murderous and racist ideology. In fact, the Church was responsible for saving innumerable Jews in monasteries and convents, and priests and nuns, with the tacit approval of their superiors, were involved in resistance work in France and Italy at least, if not in Germany.
Equally asinine is any suggestion that the Nazis were not clear in their agenda from the beginning. Outright, open racists were among his earliest and most fervent followers. They also bankrolled him, along with industrialists and ex-army people. Have you never read Mein Kampf, for Christ's sake? It's insane anti-Semitism from beginning to end and it was written in
1924!
The ideology is even older than that:
"February 24, 1920
Nazis outline political agenda
The first public meeting of the Nazi party, then called the German Workers’ Party, takes place in Munich, Germany. Adolf Hitler issues a "25 Point Program" outlining the party's political agenda. The party platform embodies racism. It demands racial purity in Germany; proclaims Germany's destiny to rule over inferior races; and identifies Jews as racial enemies. Point 4 concludes that "No Jew, therefore, may be a member of the Nation."
https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/nazi-racism
How much clearer could it be? Hitler's earliest mentor and bankroller of the Nazi party was a notorious anti-Semite, Dietrich Eckhart. Hitler was already part of anti-semitic circles when he was penniless in Vienna. It's not that it would have been hard to find them. Anti-semitism was an important part of the cultural zeitgeist in Austria and Germany since the late 1800's.
Instead of reading modern racist tracts, pick up a copy of "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich". It's still one of the best resources for the era, and it is particularly good in describing the milieu out of which Nazism arose.
Dietrich Eckhart: He was writing anti-semitic plays in
1912.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dietrich_Eckart
Alfred Rosenberg: Executed after his trial at Nuremberg. Good riddance to an evil S.O.B.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Rosenberg
Inform yourself before you open your mouth; we don't need any more uneducated musings. Or perhaps it's just part of your agenda to spread deliberate lies. Continue it and there will be consequences.
"Around a third of Germans were Catholic in the 1930s. The Church in Germany had spoken against the rise of Nazism, but the Catholic aligned Centre Party capitulated in 1933 and was banned. In the various 1933 elections the percentage of Catholics voting for the Nazis party was remarkably lower than the average . Nazi key ideologic Alfred Rosenberg was banned on the index of the Inquisition , presided by later pope Pius XII. Adolf Hitler and several key Nazis had been raised Catholic, but became hostile to the Church in adulthood. While Article 24 of the NSDAP party platform called for conditional toleration of Christian denominations and the 1933 Reichskonkordat treaty with the Vatican purported to guarantee religious freedom for Catholics, the Nazis were essentially hostile to Christianity and the Catholic Church faced persecution in Nazi Germany. Its press, schools and youth organisations were closed, much property confiscated and around one third of its clergy faced reprisals from authorities. Catholic lay leaders were targeted in the Night of the Long Knives purge. The Church hierarchy attempted to co-operate with the new government, but in 1937, the Papal Encyclical Mit brennender Sorge accused the government of "fundamental hostility" to the church.Among the most courageous demonstrations of opposition inside Germany were the 1941 sermons of Bishop August von Galen of Münster. Nevertheless, wrote Alan Bullock "[n]either the Catholic Church nor the Evangelical Church... as institutions, felt it possible to take up an attitude of open opposition to the regime".[1] In every country under German occupation, priests played a major part in rescuing Jews, but Catholic resistance to mistreatment of Jews in Germany was generally limited to fragmented and largely individual efforts. Mary Fulbrook wrote that when politics encroached on the church, Catholics were prepared to resist, but that the record was otherwise patchy and uneven, and that, with notable exceptions, "it seems that, for many Germans, adherence to the Christian faith proved compatible with at least passive acquiescence in, if not active support for, the Nazi dictatorship".[2]
Catholics fought on both sides in the Second World War. Hitler's invasion of predominantly Catholic Poland ignited the conflict in 1939. Here, especially in the areas of Poland annexed to the Reich—as in other annexed regions of Slovenia and Austria—Nazi persecution of the church was intense. Many clergy were targeted for extermination. Through his links to the German Resistance, Pope Pius XII warned the Allies of the planned Nazi invasion of the Low Countries in 1940. From that year, the Nazis gathered priest-dissidents in a dedicated clergy barracks at Dachau, where 95 percent of its 2,720 inmates were Catholic (mostly Poles, and 411 Germans) and 1,034 priests died there. Expropriation of church properties surged from 1941.
The Vatican, surrounded by Fascist Italy, was officially neutral during the war, but used diplomacy to aid victims and lobby for peace. Vatican Radio and other media spoke out against atrocities. While Nazi antisemitism embraced modern pseudo-scientific racial principles, ancient antipathies between Christianity and Judaism contributed to European antisemitism. During the Nazi era, the church rescued many thousands of Jews by issuing false documents, lobbying Axis officials, hiding them in monasteries, convents, schools and elsewhere; including in the Vatican and papal residence at Castel Gandolfo. The Pope's role during this period is contested. The Reich Security Main Office called Pius XII a "mouthpiece" of the Jews. His first encyclical, Summi Pontificatus, called the invasion of Poland an "hour of darkness", his 1942 Christmas address denounced race murders and his Mystici corporis Christi encyclical (1943) denounced the murder of the handicapped."
This should be clear enough even for you.