Bernardino Nogara
Bernardino Nogara (June 17, 1870 — November 15, 1958) was the financial advisor to the Vatican between 1929 and 1954, appointed by Pope Pius XI and retained by Pope Pius XII as the first Director of the Special Administration of the Holy See. According to historian John F. Pollard, Nogara laid "the foundations" for "one of the biggest pillars for the Vatican's post-Second World War financial strength."[1]
Nogara's career was characterized by an "ability to move fluidly in the highest circles of industry and politics as well as the Church".[2] In his role as Director of the Special Administration, Nogara made large investments in many of the largest companies in Europe, personally becoming a board member of a "mind-boggling" number of firms, and appointing directors to many others.[3]
Though a Catholic with several close relatives in the Holy Orders,[4] Nogara insisted that his investments remain unrestricted by religious or doctrinal considerations.[5] Under Pius XI, Nogara made large investments in firms contrary to Catholic social teaching and made direct loans to Mussolini's government prior to Mussolini's 1935 invasion of Ethiopia.[6][7] Under Pius XII, Nogara routinely invested in firms that profited from and enabled the war effort of the Axis powers during World War II. Though these investments were hidden from the Allies (with whom Nogara also transacted), through the use of holding companies and offshore banking centers, under Nogara "like water finding a downhill path, Vatican money found its way to the grisly side of the Holocaust".[8]
Early financial career
Nogara was trained as an engineer at the Politecnico di Milano [citation needed]. He managed mining projects in Wales (where he learned fluent English), Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire[citation needed]. While in Istambul, he was appointed representative to the Italian Banca Commerciale and then the Italian representative to an international committee overseeing the Ottoman empire's debt and the Italian delegation to the economic committee at the Versailles Peace Conference in 1919, after which he remained on the permanent reparations committee.[9] He was later appointed to manage the industry section of the Inter-Allied Commission that enacted the Dawes Plan in Berlin.[2]
Within the Banca Commerciale Italiana, Italy's largest private bank, he became a member of the board of directors and later the vice-president.[2] He was also a member of the board of Commissioni Economiche e Finanziarie alle Conferenze (Comofin).
Nogara's dealings with the Vatican began in 1914, when he purchased a variety of bonds on behalf of Pope Benedict XV.[10]
Director of the Special Administration
Appointment
The Vatican finances were on the verge of bankruptcy prior to being bolstered by $92.1 million (750 million lire cash and another 1 billion lire in Italian government bonds) the Vatican received as a consequence of the Lateran treaties in 1929.[11]
In 1929, Pope Pius XI, a family friend, appointed Nogara director of the Special Administration of the Holy See, charged with the financial dealings of the Vatican. In theory, the director of the Special Administration reported to a three cardinal committee—which included Eugenio Pacelli and Pietro Gasparri; in practice, Nogara reported directly to the pope, meeting with him more frequently than any official in the Curia, with the exception of the Cardinal Secretary of State.[12] The Special Administration was independent of the other two Vatican financial offices, although Nogara may have exercised considerable influences over the other branches of Vatican finances as well.[2]
Nogara accepted Pius XI's appointment on one condition: that he would not "be restricted by religious or doctrinal considerations".[5] Nogara's promotion was just one of many where Pius XI favored other natives of Lombardy with promotions within the Roman Curia.[2] At the time, one of his brothers, Bartolomeo, was the superintendent of the Vatican museums, two were archbishops, one was the rector of an Apulian seminary, and his sister was a mother superior.[4]
Under Pius XI
Nogara's tenure at the Special Administration came on the heels of the 1929 stock market crash, and its many after-effects in Europe.[2] Nogara immediately restructured the holdings of the Holy See, moving approximately 100 million lire in gold reserves and moving aggressively into real estate as an entrepreneur rather than an arms-length investor.[2] Nogara created many companies, and appointed equally many chief executive officers to firms that still exist today.[3] Grolux, the holding company for the profits of the Special Administration between 1932 and 1935, was housed in Luxembourg due to its dearth of public disclosure laws.[3]
Nogara became a board member of many Italian firms due to the Vatican's controlling interests, including Assicurazioni Generali, Italy's largest insurer (and one of the largest in the world), and Società Generale Immobiliare, the largest construction company in Italy (which went on to become one of the largest in the world).[3] The Mafia's interest in these activities is fictionalized in the 1990 movie The Godfather Part III.
Nogara was a party to the negotiations on the reorganization of Italy's banks, which followed 1929 legislation bailing out the banks.[3] With this inside information, Nogara knew exactly which industries and firms would benefit from the bailout and purchased large positions in these companies.[3]
Nogara's seat on the boards ensured that he could direct the firm toward the interests of the Vatican and the other equity holders.[3] Nogara, through shrewd investing in stocks, gold, and futures markets, vastly increased the Roman Catholic Church's financial holdings.[11] By 1935, Nogara had vastly expanded the Vatican treasury in a sum estimated in the hundreds of millions of dollars (the Holy See kept the exact amount confidential).[7]
Nogara was a controversial figure with the Roman Curia because many of his investments were perceived to violate the church's doctrines. For example, Nogara purchased a controlling share in Istituto Farmacologico Serono di Roma, Italy's largest manufacturer of birth control products.[6] Nogara also invested in Italy's munitions plants and other war industries, including direct loans to Mussolini's government prior to his invasion of Ethiopia in 1935.[7] However, Nogara was highly regarded by many cardinals for bolstering the church's finances, which had been declining since 1870.
Under Pius XII
After his election in 1939, Pope Pius XII retained Nogara as the head of the Special Administration. Pius XII met regularly with Nogara, as had his predecessor, keeping a close eye on the investment holding of the Holy See.[13] Pius XII managed Nogara directly, with no intermediaries, and no notes were taken during their conferences (nor do any documents relating to Nogara exist in the ADSS)![13] The information from this period of Nogara's tenure is relatively "scanty" (compared to the period 1931-1939, documented by Nogara himself), although much is contained in the US national archives due to Nogara's transactions with New York banks.[13]
The immediate concern for Nogara upon the outbreak of World War II was that the Vatican assets in the various Allied and Axis countries not be seized or frozen.[14] Nogara's "cloaked real estate companies" continued to operate throughout Europe, in Allied and Axis controlled territory, for the entire war.[15] Although Germany otherwise had a policy of blocking funds that might reach Allied countries, the Vatican—which had, and used, an account at the Reichsbank—was excluded and enjoyed relative freedom.[14]
Nogara arranged the Vatican purchase of Profima, a Swiss property owner, into a full-fledged holding company, by 1938 "being able to participate in all forms of commercial, industrial, property and financial enterprises".[16] It was through Profima, and other similarly organized holding companies, that the Vatican was able to purchase blacklisted companies, such as Banco Sudameris (blacklisted by both the US and Great Britain for its financing of the Axis war effort).[16] There are reasons other than profit why Nogara may have been interested in Sudameris—for example, he helped found the bank prior to World War I—but it was without question that the purchase could only have produced a large return if Axis won the war.[17]
Although Harold Tiltmann, the American envoy, bypassed Nogara and warned the Cardinal Secretary of State against the purchase of Sudameris, once the Vatican went ahead with the purchase in 1941 it "left no stone unturned" in its quest to get the company removed from the Allied blacklists, petitioning nearly every relevant government in the world.[18] According to Phayer, the confrontation over the delisting of Sudameris "boiled down to two views of fascism. For the Vatican, which had done business with the fascists during the prewar days, Sudameris was ''business as usual".[18]
Similarly, Nogara bought shares in Italian insurer La Fondiaria for the Vatican in 1940, acting on a tip that Mussolini's government would soon nationalize many Italian assets of English insurer Norwich Union and hand them over to Fondiaria.[19] Even at the time the purchase was controversial because only two months earlier the insurer had made clear its fascist sympathies by firing all of its Jewish employees.[19] While the Allies would not have required the Vatican to sell its assets in Fondiaria if they had been acquired before the war, had they learned of this mid-war transaction, they would have blocked all the banking accounts of the Holy See in New York as well as its business interests in the United States and Great Britain.[20] According to Phayer, both Nogara and Pius XII were well aware that their covert purchase of Fondiara amounted a "betrayal of trust" of their agreements with the Allied powers.[20]
Fondiaria would go on to collaborate with the Nazi expropriation of Eastern European insurance companies, both directly and indirectly (by working with collaborating re-insurers to pool risk).[8] According to Phayer, "like water finding a downhill path, Vatican money found its way to the grisly side of the Holocaust".[8] Phayer cites Nogara's timely purchases of firms about to benefit from fascist and Nazi expropriation as proof that Nogara "knew which way the wind was blowing".[21] Another firm that Nogara invested the Vatican heavily in, Assicurazioni Generali, was the prime beneficiary of the fact that "fascist countries were about to remake the European insurance industry" at the expense of the European Jewry.[21]
In 1941, Phayer suggests that Nogara may have been planning a substantial investment in Iberian tungsten carbonate mining operations (the "high tech metal of the conflict"), the same year that Germany's invasion of Russia cut off their previous supply of Russian metals.[22] According to Phayer, "the conclusion is unavoidable: Nogara indirectly trafficked in the arms race and did so knowing that any resulting profit would be derived from stolen property".[23] As the US would have blocked the transaction had they known it was for tungsten mining, the Vatican labeled the funds as earmarked for "food exports".[23]
According to Pollard, it became public in Nogara's obituary in 1958 that in WWII, Nogara was the Vatican's representative in Rome's underground resistance movement, the Committee of National Liberation.[24] Nogara's grandson, Ambassador Osio, in his interviews with Pollard, said that Nogara did not invest in German securities, or in tungsten, and that he disliked the Nazis.[25]
In 1954, Nogara was succeeded as director of the Special Administration of the Holy See by Henri de Maillardoz, a director of Credit Suisse.
Diary
Nogara kept a diary recording his audiences with Pius XI from 1931 to 1939, which remains unpublished.[26] The diary is supplemented by a variety of papers in the Nogara Archives (AFN[disambiguation needed]), which provide detailed information about the finances of the Vatican and Nogara's involvement.[26]
Notes
- ^ Pollard, 1990, at 1091.
- ^ a b c d e f g Phayer, 2008, p. 99.
- ^ a b c d e f g Phayer, 2008, p. 100.
- ^ a b Pollard, 2005, p. 18.
- ^ a b Phayer, 2008, p. 132.
- ^ a b Murphy, 1983, p. 76.
- ^ a b c Murphy, 1983, p. 139.
- ^ a b c Phayer, 2008, p. 118.
- ^ Pollard, 1999, p. 1078.
- ^ Lo Bella, 1973, p. 21.
- ^ a b Murphy, 1983, p. 88.
- ^ Murphy, 1983, p. 82-84.
- ^ a b c Phayer, 2008, p. 102.
- ^ a b Phayer, 2008, p. 103.
- ^ Phayer, 2008, p. 106.
- ^ a b Phayer, 2008, p. 109.
- ^ Phayer, 2008, p. 110.
- ^ a b Phayer, 2008, p. 111.
- ^ a b Phayer, 2008, p. 115.
- ^ a b Phayer, 2008, p. 116.
- ^ a b Phayer, 2008, p. 119.
- ^ Phayer, 2008, p. 128.
- ^ a b Phayer, 2008, p. 131.
- ^ Pollard, John. Money and the Rise of the Modern Papacy. p. 196.
- ^ Pollard, John. pp. 190–192, 216.
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(help) - ^ a b Pollard, 2005, p. 17.
References
- Lo Bella, N. (1973). The Vatican empire. New York. trans. from L'Oro del Vaticano. (1971). Milan.
- Murphy, Paul I. and Arlington, R. Rene. (1983) La Popessa: The Controversial Biography of Sister Pasqualina, the Most Powerful Woman in Vatican History. New York: Warner Books Inc. ISBN 0-446-51258-3
- Phayer, Michael. 2008. "Papal Capitalism during World War II" in Pius XII, The Holocaust, and the Cold War. Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34930-9. pp. 96–133.
- Pollard, John F. (1999). "The Vatican and the Wall Street Crash: Bernardino Nogara and the Papal Finances in the early 1930s." The Historical Journal, 42: 1077-1091.
- Pollard, John F. (2005). Money and the Rise of the Modern Papacy: Financing the Vatican, 1850–1950. Cambridge University Press.
- Malachi Martin - Rich Church, Poor Church (Putnam, New York, 1984) ISBN 0-399-12906-5
- Template:It icon Saba, Andrea Filippo. (2004). "La Società Commerciale D'Oriente entre la Diversificación y la situación estratégica Internacional (1902-1935)". Historia Empresarial.