Vatican II Behind the Iron Curtain

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INTRODUCTION



  • • • Piotr H. Kosicki


The announcement of the Council aroused great interest and great
hope. It seemed that, after the stifling regime of Pius XII, the win-
dows were at last being opened; one could breathe. The Church was
being given its chance. One was becoming open to dialogue. Little
by little, these hopes became shrouded in a fine film of dust.
— Yves Congar, OP, Council expert, reflecting on preparations
for the First Session
Roughly near the Palazzo della Cancellaria we stop at a small pizzeria
to nourish ourselves with hot pizza and red wine and to share our
impressions of the city and the news of the Kennedy tragedy. The
evenings in this city are long, and it’s warm; everything is encourag-
ing us to continue our stroll through the ever-more tranquil streets
and beautiful cul-de-sacs. Holding me back is the lone thought that
I have yet to take several different buses to return to the dormitory
where I am staying, which is far away.
— Janusz Zabłocki, Polish Catholic journalist, after a long
day covering Council fathers’ reactions to news of the
JFK assassination

On January 25, 1959, the recently elected Pope John XXIII an-
nounced plans for an ecumenical council “to proclaim the truth”
and “to reanimate the faith of Christians.”1 Charged with the


Epigraphs are from Yves Congar, OP, My Journal of the Council, trans. Mary John
Ronayne and Mary Cecily Boulding (Collegeville, Minn.: Liturgical Press, 2012), 5;
and Janusz Zabłocki, Dzienniki, vol. 1, 1956–1965 (Warsaw: IPN-KŚZpNP, 2008), 494;
author’s translation.



  1. Xavier Rynne [Francis X. Murphy], Vatican Council II (New York: Farrar,
    Straus, and Giroux, 1968), 3–4.

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