Priests de la Resistance!

The Loose Canons Who Fought Fascism in the Twentieth Century

288 pages

English language

Published Jan. 29, 2019 by Oneworld Publications.

ISBN:
978-1-78607-673-1
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4 stars (1 review)

Whoever said that Christians had to be meek and mild hadn't met Félix Kir - parish priest, French resistance hero and inventor of the Kir Royale. And they probably weren't thinking of Archbishop Damaskinos who, when threatened with the firing squad by the Nazis, replied, 'Please respect our traditions - in Greece we hang our archbishops.'

Whether pushing down country roads atop a tank or taking a bullet for an innocent schoolgirl, these fifteen extraordinary people were willing to give their lives to fight for the world they believed in.

Wherever fascism has taken root, it has met with resistance. From wartime Athens to sixties Alabama, Vichy France to military dictatorship in Brazil, these are the priests who dared to speak out (and act out) against those who would persuade us that hate is stronger than love.

3 editions

A worthwhile read

4 stars

I loved the title of Revd Butler-Gallie's new book, Priests De La Resistance! In it he discusses the lives and, often, premature deaths of fifteen clergy - who actually turn out to include several nuns as well as priests - all of whom took the courageous decisions to attempt to thwart fascism. Some I already had an awareness of, such as Princess Alice who made an appearance in Les Parisiennes, but others were stories I don't think I had read before. Butler-Gallie mostly focuses on Resistance to Nazism across Second World War Europe, but finishes up across the Atlantic in Brazil and then Civil Rights era Alabama.

Each of our clergy gets a potted biography exploring their pre-ordained life and the immediate events which led or pushed them into making a stand. Several, such as Canon Kir, were larger than life characters with a lot of influence. Others, such as …