BIRMINGHAM, England - Pope Benedict XVI is celebrating Mass to beatify Cardinal John Henry Newman and in that ceremony he has offered a personal reflection on the evilness of the Nazi regime.
It was the second time that the German-born Benedict had made reference to the Blitz, the attack on the British mainland by Nazi bombers. Britain is now marking the 70th anniversary of that attack, known as the Battle of Britain.
The pope said, as a person who suffered through "the dark days" of the Nazi regime, it was "deeply moving to be here with you on this occasion and to recall how many of our fellow citizens sacrificed their lives, courageously resisting the forces of that evil ideology."
Benedict himself was forced to join the Hitler Youth.
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BIRMINGHAM, England (AP) — Pope Benedict XVI celebrated Mass on Sunday to beatify Cardinal John Henry Newman, the 19th century Anglican convert held up by the pope as a model for the faithful because he followed his conscience at great personal cost.
Newman is admired by many Catholics and Anglicans alike and his influence on both churches is enormous. Yet his defection from the Church of England in 1845 still rankles some in Britain, for Newman believed the truth he was searching could only be found in the Catholic faith.
Benedict moves Newman a step closer to possible sainthood at the open-air Mass, the spiritual highlight of his four-day state visit to Britain. It is the first time Benedict will celebrate a beatification; under his own rules, popes don't beatify, only canonize.