COPY Enclosure "C" 1. In the USSR the situation as regards the Catholic Church does not show any substanial improvement from what it was before the war. e anti-religious Soviet legislation always remains in vigour Besides, the now very few survivors of the Catholic Clergy who had been arrested in Russian territory since the Soviet Revolution, were not set free nor were they afforded any possibilty of exercising their sacred ministry. Only a certain number of Catholic priests, through an agreement with the Polish Government, in the second half of 1942, could leave the USSR, together with the Polish Army which was then leaving those regions. Also in theis case not all the priests, previously imprisioned and deported from Poland, were set free, nor does it appear that they were set free after that date. It has never been possible to learn of the fate of Archbishop Edward Profittlich, Apostolic Administrator of Esthonia, arrested in Tallin in June 1941 and deported towards the Urals. 2. Neither have events which have happened within the last two years, any value in modifying the above stated judgment about the religious situation in Russia. It is true that, even befor the death (December 1940) of the well-known director of the Godless organization -Jaroslawsk (Gubelmann)- the athesistic propaganda had practically been suspended. But this suspension, which did not at all mean the suppression of existing anti-religious litterature, is very far from constituting a positive recognition of religious liberty, and it is not difficult to find an explanation for it in the desire to take into account the obvious reasons of political and military opportuneness and the psychological needs of a people in war. |