Sunday, April 5, 2026

Governments Have Been Hiding History From the Public for Centuries and Here Is Why That Has to Stop

 The Vatican is not the only institution sitting on history that belongs to the public.


Governments around the world maintain archives of historical documents that are sealed, classified, or restricted in ways that prevent ordinary people from understanding what was done in their name.


This is not a new problem. It is as old as power itself.


What Gets Hidden and Why


The documents that tend to get sealed are the ones that show institutions behaving badly. The things governments did that they do not want on the record. The deals made behind closed doors. The operations carried out without public knowledge. The decisions that hurt people in ways that were never acknowledged.


The United States government maintained classified records about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy for decades. Some of those records were only partially released in recent years and researchers say documents are still being withheld. The American people still do not have the full picture of what their government knows about one of the most significant events in twentieth century American history.


The British government holds records about its colonial activities that have never been fully released. Documents about what happened in Kenya during the Mau Mau uprising. Records about how British authorities treated people in colonies around the world. Historians have spent years fighting legal battles just to access what should be public record.


The American government conducted experiments on its own citizens without their knowledge or consent during the Cold War. The full scope of programs like MK Ultra and the Tuskegee syphilis study only became known because of investigative journalism and Freedom of Information requests. The governments involved had every intention of keeping those things secret forever.


Why Institutions Keep Secrets


There are legitimate reasons for some government secrecy. Ongoing national security operations. Intelligence methods that if revealed would put people in danger. Diplomatic communications that could damage relationships between countries if released prematurely.


But that legitimate category gets used to justify a much broader secrecy that has nothing to do with current security. Old records that embarrass institutions. Historical decisions that look indefensible in hindsight. Documents that would change how people understand their own history.


When a 70 year old document about a peacetime government program gets classified that is not about security. That is about protecting the reputation of an institution at the expense of the public's right to know its own history.


What People Can Do


Support journalists and researchers who fight for access to historical records. Organizations like the National Security Archive at George Washington University have spent decades using Freedom of Information requests to force the release of documents the government wants to keep hidden. That work matters.


Support legislation that sets real limits on how long documents can remain classified. Automatic declassification timelines with narrow exceptions are better than systems that allow institutions to keep records sealed indefinitely.


When records become available read them. Share them. Make them part of the public conversation. The release of historical documents only matters if people pay attention to what they contain.


History belongs to the people who lived it and to the people who came after. Not to the institutions that made it and would prefer some of it stay forgotten.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

Galileo Was Convicted by the Church and It Took Them 359 Years to Admit They Were Wrong

 In 1633 Galileo Galilei stood before the Roman Inquisition.


He was 69 years old. He had spent his life observing the sky and documenting what he found. What he found was that the Earth moves around the sun. Not the other way around.


The Church said that was heresy.


The Vatican's own records document every step of the intellectual persecution of Galileo. He was found vehemently suspect of heresy and sentenced to house arrest for the rest of his life.


He spent his final years confined to his home, blind by the end, forbidden to publish further work. The man who had done more to advance human understanding of the universe than almost anyone of his era died a prisoner of the institution that was supposed to pursue truth.


It would take the Church 359 years to formally admit its error. In 1992 Pope John Paul II finally acknowledged that Galileo had been right.


359 years. For something that was provably correct from the moment Galileo said it.


What the Vatican Record Shows


The record of Galileo's trial exists in the Vatican archive. Researchers have studied it. The details of how the Church prosecuted a man for telling the truth are documented in the institution's own files.


That record is important not because it says anything we did not already know but because it shows what happens when powerful institutions decide they get to determine what is true.


The Church had the authority. The Church had the power. The Church had the ability to silence anyone who contradicted its preferred version of reality. And it used all of that to punish a man for being right.


The same thing happens in every era in every institution that protects its own authority over truth. The details change. The mechanism is the same.


Why This Still Matters Today


Galileo's story is not just a historical curiosity. It is a lesson about what happens when institutions put their own credibility above honest accounting.


The Church took 359 years to say it was wrong about one of the most basic facts of astronomy. How long will it take to fully account for the other things the archive contains. The things that are still sealed. The things that have not yet been found in the wrong folder or released ahead of schedule by a reform-minded pope.


Truth does not care about institutional timelines. It waits. It can wait centuries if it has to.


The Galileo record was there the whole time. The Templar absolution was there the whole time. The Pius XII documents were there the whole time.


Open the rest. Let the historians in. Let the record speak.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

The Vatican Knew About Nazi Germany and the Full Record Is Still Coming Out

 For decades one of the most painful questions in modern history was what did the Vatican know about the Holocaust and when.


Pope Pius XII led the Catholic Church through the entire Second World War. He never publicly condemned the Nazi extermination of Jewish people. He never spoke out clearly against what was happening in Europe while it was happening. Six million people died. The Pope said almost nothing.


The Church's defense has always been that Pius was using quiet diplomacy behind the scenes. That speaking out would have made things worse. That he was protecting the Church and its people from retaliation.


For a long time nobody could fully evaluate that argument because the records were sealed.


What the Archive Revealed


Pope Francis ordered the documents of Pope Pius XII's pontificate opened ahead of schedule in 2020 so scholars could finally have the full picture.


What researchers found has been described as devastating. The Vatican's longtime chief archivist himself said he could not square Pius' continued reluctance to publicly condemn Nazi atrocities even after the war ended. He said during the war the Pope made a choice, but after the war there was no longer a reason for silence.


The documents showed that the Church was aware of what was happening to Jewish people in Europe in considerable detail. The quiet diplomacy argument holds up in some places. In others the record is harder to explain.


The Vatican Bank has also faced scrutiny over claims that billions passed through its accounts discreetly during this period with little public transparency about where the money went and who benefited.


What Is Still Not Open


The archives of the Jesuit order which contain crucial documents on Vatican and Fascist relations are separate from the main archive and not fully open. The archives of the Vicariate of Rome which hold the records of the Church's day to day actions during the Nazi occupation of Rome are notoriously difficult to access.


That matters because the Nazi occupation of Rome is one of the most documented periods of Vatican conduct during the war. Church officials helped hide Jewish people in some cases. In other cases the record is murkier. Without full access to those Vicariate records historians cannot complete the picture.


Why the Full Truth Matters


This is not about attacking a religion. It is about completing the historical record of one of the worst crimes in human history.


Six million Jewish people were killed. Millions of others were killed alongside them. Every document that touches on that period of history has a moral weight attached to it. Every sealed file is a piece of the full accounting that has not yet been given.


Survivors and their descendants deserve the complete record. Historians deserve access to the complete record. Future generations deserve to understand exactly what happened and who knew what and when.


The Church says it is not afraid of history. Opening the rest of the archive would prove it.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

The Church Knew the Knights Templar Were Innocent and Burned Them Anyway

 On October 13, 1307 the King of France ordered the arrest of every Knight Templar in the country. In a coordinated early morning sweep hundreds of men were taken. The charges were heresy, blasphemy, and worse.


What followed was years of torture, forced confessions, and public trials. In 1314 the Grand Master of the Templar order, Jacques de Molay, was burned alive in Paris.


The Catholic Church stood by while it happened. In fact the Church cooperated with the prosecutions. The Templars were officially condemned as heretics.


For 700 years that was the story.


Then in 2001 a researcher working in the Vatican archive found a document that had been misfiled. It had been sitting in the wrong folder for seven centuries.


What It Said


The document was the Chinon Parchment, the official record of the papal investigation into the Knights Templar conducted in 1308. It revealed that Pope Clement V in a secret hearing had absolved the Templar leaders including Jacques de Molay of heresy.


The Pope privately cleared them. Then let them be executed anyway.


The Church knew the Templars were not guilty of heresy. The record of that knowledge sat in a Vatican archive for 700 years. The men it could have saved were burned alive while that document collected dust.


It would take the Church 359 years after Galileo's trial to formally admit its error in 1992 when Pope John Paul II finally acknowledged that Galileo had been right. The Templar absolution took even longer to surface because the document was physically lost inside the archive itself.


What This Tells Us About Hidden History


This is not a conspiracy theory. The document exists. Researchers have studied it. The Vatican itself acknowledged its authenticity.


What it shows is that hidden history is not always hidden because powerful people sealed it away deliberately. Sometimes it is hidden because nobody maintained the records carefully enough. Sometimes it disappears into the wrong folder and sits there for seven centuries while the truth it contains goes untold.


That is its own kind of failure. Not malicious maybe. But a failure of preservation that cost men their reputations and their lives even after they were dead.


How many other documents are sitting in the wrong folder somewhere. How many other truths are buried in misfiled records in archives around the world. Not just in the Vatican but everywhere institutions have kept records without properly organizing or maintaining them.


The Templar story is a good argument for why historical preservation matters. And why access to records matters. And why no single institution should have permanent private control over documents that affect the historical record of humanity.


The truth was in there for 700 years. It just needed someone to find it.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.