From Laundering to Profiteering, A Multitude of Sins at the Vatican Bank

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Above is an aerial view of St. Peter’s basilica in Vatican City. Credit: AFP/AFP/Getty Images

Here is the introduction by the NPR Staff to an interview of Gerald Posner, author of God’s Bankers: A History of Money and Power at the Vatican, published by Simon & Schuster (February 2015). To read the interview, check out other resources, and learn how you can help sustain NPR, please click here.

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The Vatican Bank is “essentially an offshore bank in the middle of a foreign country,” says Gerald Posner. Above is an aerial view of St. Peter’s basilica in Vatican City.

For decades, the Catholic Church has been dogged by scandals involving money. Vatican City — a sovereign state — controls its own finances through the Vatican Bank. It developed as a cross between the Federal Reserve and an offshore bank. In a new history, God’s Bankers, Gerald Posner explains that its roots go back to the mid-19th century.

“They had 15,000 square miles of what was central Italy with thousands of subjects,” Posner tells NPR’s Renee Montagne. “They levied taxes and paid for this lavish lifestyle — with 700 servants and a big and growing bureaucracy around them. Then, in 1870, Italy’s nationalists have a revolution. They throw the Pope out, they get rid of the papal states. The Vatican goes from being an empire — an earthly empire — to a little postage-stamp size of property called Vatican City.”

By World War II, the church had sizable investments and created the Vatican Bank in order to hide its financial dealings with the Nazis from the U.S. and the U.K.

“I was surprised the extent to which the Vatican was deeply embedded with German companies,” Posner says. “They bundled together life insurance policies of Jewish refugees who had been sent to Auschwitz and other death camps. They escheated these policies early on — meaning they took the cash value of them.”

Later, when the surviving children or grandchildren of the victims tried to collect on the insurance policies, they were refused.

“These insurance companies would refuse to pay out saying: ‘Show us a death certificate,’ which they knew was impossible,” Posner explains. “They would keep the money.”

In God’s Bankers, Posner sheds light on what he calls “the blood money” that came into the church.

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Here is a direct link to the interview.

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