The Week
I do not bear them any
grudge, but I will say it is just like them. I mean the four hundred
Polish-Americans who got together in St. Laurentius Roman Catholic
Church in Philadelphia last Sunday, and I mean also—yes, even more—the
five Polish priests, who, the newspaper dispatch says “were amongst
them.” The four hundred unordained and five “oiled and oily” ones
mingled on this occasion for a serious purpose. They felt that Czolgosz,
the miscreant, had put a stigma on them and they hastened to wipe
it off. There was really no hurry to do it, for there are right-minded
people in this country—plenty of them—and these Polish-Americans
might know, just as everybody else knows who has the true American
spirit of fairness, that we don’t make anybody bear the blame except
those who are avowedly the abettors. The American Poles need not
excuse themselves. Nobody thinks of blaming them as a class. So
far as I am concerned, I remember the Polish Kosciousko, patriot
of patriots, too intensely, to let a Czolgosz take away my faith
in his kin. The Poles were classical lovers of liberty in the days
when it was hard to love it, and respecters of the conscience, amongst
the first in Europe.
It is a pity that the American Poles
have not lived up to this tradition of their mother country, and
I suppose they are rushing to their self-defense now and are tumbling
head-over-heels to protest their innocence of a crime with which
nobody has yet charged them, simply because they realize how little
they have done in the matter of patriotism that is of record, and
that they are not beyond all doubt of genuine loyalty. Well, as
I say, I do not blame them. Perhaps the eye of the country is indeed
on them, and they feel a bit humiliated by the fact. It is unfortunate
that treason and the crime and the awful scandal have come upon
the country through one of theirs. I commend the Philadelphians,
therefore, for hastening to reassure everybody that they feel the
humiliation that has been brought on the Poles of this country,
and I accept their protestation with all my heart. So far, so good.
But they went a bit too far. For this
is what they said, too, in their “resolutions,” these four hundred
members of St. Laurentius Church and the five priests along with
them: “The would-be assassin is a Hebrew by birth,” and I will say
to this—(manners or no manners, sympathy or no sympathy): In this
these four hundred Catholic faithful and the five priests who were
“amongst them” lied, and lied with malice aforethought, and it is
this lie I will not forgive them. Policemen and detectives who deal
with suspects say that those who tattle of others hint unconsciously
and plainly at what they are themselves. Innocent people never tattle,
while those who feel they are not safe—it is an old practice—usually
“squeal.” I do not know whether I should pity the four hundred who
were foolish enough to believe they could come before the American
people with such a “defense,” more than I despise the five priests
who were “amongst them,” and who probably were leaders in this gathering
of the faithful, as they usually are “amongst them.”
Fortunately, nobody will give credence
to this wretched libel. Czolgosz can not be de-Catholicized even
if four hundred St. Laurentians meet and pass resolutions, and he
can not be made into a Jew even if five priests consider it ever
so convenient. Unfortunately, too, for the church constituency and
their shamelessly libelous clergy, this lie is a boomerang and will
react. American citizens are willing to pity the misguided, but
they disdain informers and despise slimy creatures, who scheme to
slip out by vilifying others. It is quite interesting to notice,
by the way, how these desperate Polish Catholics apologize even
for this “Hebrew” they have put up to hide behind. Say they: “The
would-be assassin is a Hebrew—by birth, but professes to be an agnostic
or an atheist.” This voluntary explanation of his exact status is
generous, and is of a piece with the whole of their villainous fiction.
Who has asked them to do all that? They protest he is not one of
their own—that would have been sufficient. But they go beyond that,
and they offer of their own accord to say where he belongs, and
they proceed to explain in the next breath that after all he really
does not belong there. That is a bit of detail which usually all
informers are scrupulous about. There is no one in the world so
given to explain details, gratuitous details, as a liar is, except
it be an habitual liar, who does the thing less naively, and, as
he believes according to his ostrich policy, quite successfully.
I am much obliged to Joseph Slomkowski the chairman, and John A.
Seraphin the secretary, for being so circumstantial and exhaustive
in the set of resolutions they signed last Sunday. I propose to
keep their document amongst the rest of the interesting pieces of
catholic [sic] apologetics which are sponsored by the faithful with
priests “amongst them.” But I shall keep it also as a piece of Jesuitism
which rarely is so clumsy and bears such evident marks not only
of desperate malice, but also of insipid ingenuity. I am sorry they
did not know how to justify themselves better, and that instead
of exhibiting the good side of Polish and of Catholic temperament
at a time when the American people will accept no other, they soil
their hands with a lie and come before it as wretched libellers
[sic]. Czolgosz is a sad incident in American history, but it is
sad, too, for just such “defenders of the faith” as gathered in
the Philadelphia church. They evidently do not know that this is
the twentieth century, and that vituperation has ceased to be a
defense, and that it brings shame upon those who use it. The four
hundred do not know, but the five “amongst them”—they do!
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