Not at all, it's kind of a legit question.
We all agree NOW that Hitler was the epitome of evil, because he lost.
But where were the Churches of his time in condemning him. The ones in countries he was at war with, um, yeah, they were against him. But the countries that allied with him, not so much.
Pius XII was at best neutral and at worst an active collaborator with the fascists.
One Axis head of state, Fr. Jozef Tizo of Slovakia, was a Catholic priest. (The Russians executed him after the war, dressed in his Catholic vestments.)
The problem is, Hitler's anti-Semitism and aggression wasn't coming out of left field. It was kind of part and parcel of German Christian teaching for centuries, whether it be the passion plays that blamed the Jews for Jesus' death or Martin Luther writing a book called "The Jews and their Lies".