Hide & Seek
Hide & Seek chronicles the intensely personal war between wartime Rome’s Nazi SS
Chief Herbert Kappler and the Vatican’s Monsignor Hugh O’Flaherty, a fiercely fought rivalry that culminated in Kappler attempting to kidnap and murder his Irish opponent, who was determined to fight Rome’s Nazi rulers. Called
“Ireland’s Oscar Schindler,” O’Flaherty masterminded a large-scale operation from inside the neutral Vatican, to hide and help Jews, downed airmen,
and escaped Allied prisoners. Using safe houses and church buildings, the priest sheltered around five hundred Jews in the Holy See and many thousands more Jews and Allied escapees in and around
Rome.
After a Resistance bomb killed thirty-two German soldiers, an enraged Hitler ordered revenge. Kappler planned and oversaw the firing squad execution of 335 people in the Ardeatine Caves outside Rome. The massacre
became the worst atrocity committed on Italian soil during the war. After the war, the Nazi colonel was found guilty on all the charges relating to the massacre and sentenced to life. Amazingly,
O’Flaherty began visiting his former rival in prison, engaging in a long-run conversation that led to Kappler’s conversion—and baptism by the Irish Monsignor.
Author : Stephen Walker
ISBN-13 : 9780762780396
Publisher : Lyons Press, The
Publication date : 01/05/2012
Editorial Reviews
Kirkus Reviews - Kirkus Reviews
Suspenseful, cat-and-mouse account of one Vatican priest who resisted the Gestapo's terror policies. While Pope
Pius XII was wringing his hands about Allied bombing of Rome and essentially keeping quiet while the Gestapo deported the Jews and massacred the inhabitants, Monsignor Hugh O'Flaherty, an Irish priest and official of the Holy Office, had accidentally begun to organize an Allied escape
operation by the summer of 1943. As told in this non-scholarly account by BBC journalist Walker (Forgotten Soldiers: The Irishmen Shot at Dawn, 2007), O'Flaherty had no love for the English, having been politicized by British violence against the Irish back in the
1920s while he was in apostolic college in Limerick. However, during World War II he gradually changed his mind.
Thanks to O'Flaherty's network, which offered money, false ID papers and safe houses, a trickling of British
soldiers had managed to seek refuge at the Vatican, and soon others found aid during the nine months of Nazi occupation. Meanwhile, the head of Rome's intelligence agency was the ruthless,
ambitious Nazi Herbert Kappler, who organized the Fascist police force and infiltrated espionage operations in
Rome. Protected by Vatican neutrality, O'Flaherty operated under the nose of the Gestapo and barely missed being kidnapped and assassinated. Following orders, Kappler was responsible for rounding up 1,000 Roman Jews for deportation to Auschwitz, as well as the cold-blooded massacre of 325 prisoners in the Ardeatine Caves in
1944. While O'Flaherty was celebrated after the war, Kappler was tried and imprisoned for life. Another extraordinary story of how the bravery of one individual halted the
tide of evil.
Meet the Author
Stephen Walker is an award-winning journalist who has worked for BBC Northern Ireland for twenty years as a television and radio reporter, a documentary maker, and a correspondent. In 2005 he was
named the Northern Ireland Journalist of the Year. His first book, Forgotten Soldiers: The Irishmen Shot at Dawn, was shortlisted for the 2007 Irish Non Fiction Book of the Year.