David Kertzer graduated from Brown University in 1969. He received his PhD in Anthropology from
Brandeis University in 1974 and taught at
Bowdoin College until 1992.[3] That year he joined the faculty of Brown University as Professor of Anthropology and History.[2]
Kertzer is the author of numerous books and articles on politics and culture, European social history, anthropological demography, 19th-century Italian social history, contemporary Italian society and politics, and the history of Vatican relations with the Jews and the Italian state. His book, The Kidnapping of
Edgardo Mortara, was a finalist for the National Book Award in Nonfiction in 1997.
His The Popes Against the Jews, published in 2001, was subsequently described as "one of the most critically acclaimed and contentious books of its genre and generation."[4] The book analyzes the relation between the development of the Catholic Church and the growth of European anti-Semitism in the 19th and 20th centuries, arguing that the Vatican and several popes contributed actively to fertilizing the ideological ground that produced
the Holocaust. The work produced intense discussion among scholars of European history and historians of the Catholic Church. Royal Historical Society Fellow Michael Burleigh objected to “the jumbled chronology, the doctored texts, and the rigged translations that constitute the shoddy underpinnings of the work of Kertzer and of his supportive admirers who are endeavoring to replace an authentic historical narrative with an ideologically driven polemic."[5]
In 2020, after decades of pressure, the Vatican archives were finally opened, and Kertzer was among the first historians to access them. At the time of the death of
Pius XII, in 1958, all the documents of the pontificate were locked up: by preventing scholars from consulting them, many questions remained unanswered, making Eugenio Pacelli one of the most controversial popes in history. With the support of thousands of unpublished documents, in his 2022 book The Pope at War: the Secret History of Pius XII, Hitler, and Mussolini ,[8] Kertzer uncovered the existence of secret negotiations between Hitler and Pius XII already a few weeks after the end of the
conclave. He also showed to what extent Mussolini relied on the Italian clergy and religious institutions to obtain popular support for entering the war, and how both Mussolini and Hitler managed to manipulate the Pontiff to their own advantage. Above all, Kertzer explains why, despite having irrefutable evidence[9] of the ongoing extermination of the Jews, Pius XII never denounced the Nazi atrocities, as he preferred to abandon the role of moral guide, rather than put at risk continued existence of the Church.[10]
1985: Marraro Prize (Society for Italian Historical Studies) for the best work on Italian history category in 1984 for Family Life in Central Italy.
1991: Marraro Prize (Society for Italian Historical Studies) for the best work on Italian history category in 1989 for Family, Political Economy, and Demographic Change.[12]
Comrades and Christians: Religion and Political Struggle in Communist Italy. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1980
Family Life in Central Italy, 1880–1910: Sharecropping, Wage Labor and Coresidence. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1984.
Ritual, Politics and Power. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1988.
Family, Political Economy, and Demographic Change: The Transformation of Life in Casalecchio, Italy, 1861–1921 (with
Dennis Hogan). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989.
Sacrificed for Honor: Italian Infant Abandonment and the Politics of Reproductive Control. Boston: Beacon Press, 1993
Politics and Symbols: The Italian Communist Party and the Fall of Communism. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1996.
The Kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara. New York: Knopf, 1997.
The Popes Against the Jews: The Vatican's Role in the Rise of Modern Anti-Semitism. New York: Knopf, 2001.[14]
Prisoner of the Vatican: The Pope's Plot to Capture Italy from the New Italian State. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 2004.
Amalia's Tale: a Peasant's Fight for Justice in 19th Century Italy. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 2008.
The Pope and Mussolini: The Secret History of Pius XI and the Rise of Fascism in Europe. Random House Publishing, 2014.
The Pope Who Would Be King: The Exile of Pius IX and the Emergence of Modern Europe. Random House, April 24, 2018.
^Kertzer, David (May 2022). Un papa in guerra. La storia segreta di Mussolini, Hitler e Pio XII [The Pope at War. The Secret History of Mussolini, Hitler and Pius XII]. Milan: Garzanti.
ISBN978-88-11-00384-7.
^A letter from Pius XII's main collaborator, made public in 2023, confirms, on the Catholic side, what Kertzer had long maintained: The pope was aware, at least since the end of 1942, that thousands of Jews and Poles were daily eliminated with gas in the Nazi extermination camps. Until now, the Vatican had maintained that Pius XII, before publicly denouncing the Nazi crimes, wanted to be certain of what was happening in Eastern Europe during the Second World War. Faced with this incontrovertible document, the Holy See's response is that if the Pope had disclosed this information, the Nazis would have become even more ferocious against the opponents, preventing the latter from helping the persecuted.
"Letter suggests Pope Pius XII knew of mass gassings of Jews and Poles in 1942". The Guardian. September 16, 2023. Retrieved September 19, 2023.