"Being a member of the Hitler Youth as a child does not equal dyed in the wool Nazi,"
No, of course not, and perhaps it's my frustrations with the Pope and my experiences of the Catholic Church that makes humour seem like an appropriate reaction. Especially when the Pope starts labelling other groups Nazis.
However there is a point here.
The Pope did swear an oath of personal loyalty to Hitler. He also didn't "dessert" his unit until the unit had fell apart. He wasn't a rabid anti-Nazi and he didn't really fight the system.
Now I can actually understand that. We'd all like to think we had the courage and will of a Sophie Scholl and would take a stand, but few of us are up to that, and I don't dare to include myself among them.
Personally I also think that the world was trying to teach him something. Something about hard choices, compromises and the positions that people find themselves in. He could have been one of the greatest men of all time, few have experienced so close a brush with what many would could "evil" and gone on to hold such a high spiritual position.
Instead what we've ended up with is one of the most dogmatic and intolerant Pope's of recent times.
When he was young he chose co-operation with sin over punishment. Now, for example, he expects Africans to choose punishment, dying of AIDS, over sin, using a condom.
And that I don't understand.
I can almost hear the world sighing and saying "well we tried to show him differently".