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The Pope with a Jewish Heart
The Pope John Paul II transformed
the
Catholic-Jewish Relations
Steve Lipman, staff writer
The Jewish Week, April 8, 2005
Shortly after a little-known
cardinal from Poland was elected spiritual head of the
Catholic Church in 1978, Rabbi Arthur Schneier received
a call from a network television correspondent asking
for comment. The correspondent, who "equated Poles
with anti-Semitism," assumed that Rabbi Schneier,
a Holocaust survivor and president of the Manhattan-based
Appeal of Conscience Foundation, an ecumenical human
rights organization, would comment negatively on the
new pope, the rabbi recalls.
Instead, Rabbi Schneier predicted
that Krakow's Cardinal Karol Wojtyla, who took the papal
name of John Paul II, would improve the church's relationship
with the Jewish community.
"I said if anything, the
pope from Poland would have a greater sense of the suffering"
that Jews had undergone in recent history than his Italian-born
predecessors at the Vatican, he said, noting that the
base of his diocese was 60 miles from Auschwitz.
John Paul II's 26 years as pope,
which included symbolic and substantive overtures to
Jews and the State of Israel, played a major role in
reversing the centuries-long contentious ties between
the Jewish and Catholic religions, erasing the doubts
expressed by many members of the Jewish community when
he succeeded John Paul I, according to representatives
of several prominent Jewish organizations.
The pope, who died Saturday at
84, was remembered as a charismatic figure who brought
a passion to the theological principle of closer interfaith
relations that was advanced, with his participation,
by the Vatican II declarations four decades ago. The
representatives of the Jewish organizations who had
worked with John Paul II over the years cited his landmark
visits abroad (to a Rome synagogue, to Auschwitz, to
Israel), his cultural efforts (including the 1994 Papal
Concert to Commemorate the Holocaust, and a 2004 interfaith-outreach
concert, both under the baton of Jewish-American conductor
Gilbert Levine), his political precedent (establishing
diplomatic relations between the Vatican and Israel),
and his condemnation of anti-Semitism (reversing the
Church's policy of religious triumphalism, and labeling
anti-Semitism a "complete contradiction to the
Christian vision of human dignity.")
"For him, the Jewish community
was very important," said Avi Granot, a political
adviser to the president of Israel who formerly served
as spokesman for the Israeli Embassy in Rome and handled
interfaith dialogue for Israel's embassy in Washington.
"He moved Vatican II forward,"
said Eugene Fisher, the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops' interfaith liaison. The church's ties with
the Jewish community "became one of the hallmarks
of his very long papacy. Catholics from right to left
are very pleased with this. They see it as a very positive
development. There's something deeply satisfying about
seeing that the church has rectified the wrongs of history."
The pope's accomplishments, Jewish
leaders said, overshadowed Jewish criticism of him over
such issues as his embrace of Yasir Arafat, his meeting
with Austria's Kurt Waldheim, the establishment of a
convent at Auschwitz, the failure of the Vatican to
completely open its archives, the revelation that some
Jewish children baptized during the Holocaust were not
subsequently returned to the Jewish community, the Vatican's
canonization of Jewish-born nun Edith Stein, and the
on-again, off-again attempt to declare Pius XII a saint.
One critic within Catholic circles, writer James Carroll,
a former priest, praised the pope for seeking reconciliation
with Jews, but faulted the pontiff for blaming Catholic
individuals, and not the Church itself, for crimes against
the Jews.
Pope John Paul II was "inhibited
in his inability to go perhaps even as far as he'd like
to, I think mostly because he has an idea of the Church
that doesn't easily admit the idea of change to it,
and doesn't admit the idea of failure and of sin,"
Carroll said.
Interfaith Questions
As the Catholic Church prepares
to elect a successor to John Paul II, his passing raises
a question in the Jewish community: Will his successor
continue to bring the Vatican closer to what the pope
called Christianity's "elder brother," or
return to the distant relations that characterized interfaith
ties for centuries?
Future Jewish-Catholic relations will depend on the
background of the new pope and political current in
high Vatican circles, Jewish leaders predicted.
"There's always concern that
people will revert to older patterns," said David
Elcott, the American Jewish Committee's interfaith affairs
director.
Elcott said John Paul II changed the tenor of Jewish-Catholic
relations from often outright hostility to an exchange
between friends.
"These negative areas are
very different than the negative areas that took place
in the past," Elcott said. "Any healthy relationship
has areas where we disagree about implementation of
strategy."
The issues of conflict between
Jews and the Vatican during John Paul II's papacy "are
important, but they are not fundamental" to Jewish-Catholic
relations, said Rabbi Leon Klenicki, who served 30 years
as director of the Anti-Defamation League's Department
of Interfaith Affairs. He said John Paul II left a "unique
legacy."
He repeatedly called anti-Semitism
" 'a sin,' " Rabbi Klenicki said. "That
was a revolution."
"He did more to improve the
Jewish-Catholic relationship than any other pope in
history," said Rabbi James Rudin, the American
Jewish Committee's senior interreligious adviser.
During Pope John Paul II's historic
visit to Rome's major synagogue in 1986, he stated that
"the covenant between the Jewish people and God
is irrevocable," Rabbi Rudin recalled. The rabbi
said that declaration, a standard part of Jewish belief,
was intended for an audience beyond the synagogue walls.
"He wasn't talking to Jews;
he was talking to Catholics," Rabbi Rudin said.
The synagogue visit, and John
Paul II's comments there, were part of a pattern of
remarks the pope made during his years in the papacy,
Rabbi Rudin said.
"Wherever he went, he said
anti-Semitism is a sin against God. That is very strong
theological language," Rabbi Rudin said. "It
put the question of combating anti-Semitism into the
mainstream of the Catholic world."
Views Shaped By War
The pope's feelings about Jews,
discrimination against Jews and the persecution of Jews
during the Holocaust were shaped by his wartime experiences.
Born to a tailor father and schoolteacher mother in
Widowice, a southern Polish town of 10,000 that was
20 percent Jewish, Wojtyla would say later that he was
raised in a family that did not share the anti-Semitic
leanings of many neighbors. His family had a Jewish
landlord. As a child interested in poetry, theater and
religion, he had Jewish schoolmates, Jewish soccer teammates
and a Jewish girlfriend.
"I belong to the generation
for which relationships with Jews was a daily occurrence,"
he commented after becoming pope. "I have in front
of my eyes the numerous worshippers who during their
holidays passed on their way to pray."
Jerzy Kluger, a lifelong friend
who later served as an intermediary between the Vatican
and Israel, said, "The people in the Vatican do
not know Jews, and previous popes did not know Jews,
but this pope is a friend of the Jewish people because
he knows Jewish people."
Wojtyla was a student at Krakow's
prestigious Jagiellonian University when classes were
canceled in 1939 following Germany's invasion of Poland
and the start of World War II. He worked as a stonecutter
in a quarry and studied clandestinely for the priesthood.
During the war he observed the deportation of Jews.
While not part of an organized resistance movement,
Jews testified after the war that he would escort Jewish
friends through the streets to protect them and fend
off anti-Semitic Poles.
The man who would become John Paul II began his priesthood
as an assistant pastor in Krakow in 1949.
In 1956, after vandalism at a few Jewish cemeteries
there, he persuaded local university students to repair
the damage. And a theological journal under his auspices
published articles on the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and
the Holocaust, a rarity in communist Eastern Europe
or in any Catholic community.
As a bishop John Paul II visited Israel with a group
of his colleagues in 1963, and during the debates in
St. Peter's Basilica over the Vatican II declarations
about the Jews in the early 1960s spoke in favor of
a new, more equitable relationship with the Jewish community.
Carroll described a friend's memories
of the sometimes raucous discussions: "All of a
sudden down at the far end of the table a man began
to speak - a voice that he had not heard in any debate.
He knew that it was a different voice because of the
heavy accent. And the man spoke of the Church's responsibility
to change its relationship to Jews.
"And my friend said to me,
'I lifted up my head. I thought, who is this prophet?'
And I looked down and it was this young bishop from
Poland. And no one even knew his name. And it was the
first intervention he made at the council. And it was
very important," Carroll said.
In 1968, during a wave of anti-Semitism in Poland that
forced some 34,000 Jews to leave the country, John Paul
II preached, in veiled terms, against the violence.
The next year, as a sign of solidarity with the Jewish
community, he visited a Krakow synagogue.
For John Paul II, Carroll said, Jews were not a historical
and theological abstraction but friends and neighbors
he had known.
"The absence of Jews in Poland
he feels as a presence, quite clearly," Carroll
said on the PBS show "Frontline."
"For him, it was devastating
what happened in Poland" to the Jews in the Holocaust,
Rabbi Klenicki said. "He was concerned about the
social being of Jews."
"His understanding of anti-Semitism
and the Shoah was not just with the head - he understood
it with his heart," Rabbi Rudin said. "He
always used the Hebrew word Shoah."
Granot accompanied a delegation of American Jewish
leaders who met Pope John Paul II in the Vatican before
his visit to Miami in 1987. The Jewish representatives
traveled to Rome to clarify the pope’s position on his
controversial audience with Waldheim, the Austrian president
and former UN secretary-general who had concealed his
Nazi background.
The meeting with the pope, which had taken place a
few months earlier, upset many members of the Jewish
community. Granot, the son of Polish Jews, greeted John
Paul II in Polish.
"He asked where my parents
are from," Granot recalled.
"Krakow," Granot answered.
"Have you ever visited Krakow?"
the pope asked Granot, who said he had not.
John Paul II began to extol Krakow's
Jewish past.
"You have to be very proud
of your history," he told Granot. A few minutes
later, Granot said, "He turned back to me. He said,
'Don't forget to visit Krakow.' "
Early on, an Unknown
Much of John Paul II's pre-papacy
relationship with the Jewish community was unknown to
many Jewish observers when he became pope in 1978, resulting
in initial skepticism.
"There is little in the new
Pope's past to justify sweeping expectations of his
reign with reference to interreligious ecumenism or
his attitude toward Israel and the Jewish people,"
stated a 1978 editorial in The Jewish Week and The American
Examiner, as the paper was then known.
As the outgoing but dogmatic leader who brought the
Gospel to more than 110 countries and helped topple
communism, while remaining steadfast on many social
issues and the inerrancy of Catholic teachings, John
Paul II quickly showed a new, more accessible face of
the Church. In style and spirit, he was a successor
to John XXIII, who had fostered closer ties with Jews.
One of John Paul II's first moves
in Jewish-Catholic relations was his visit to Auschwitz
in 1979, a decade before communism fell.
At the death camp, he first prayed at a Hebrew monument,
which commemorated the Jewish victims of the Nazis,
before walking to a Polish-language marker dedicated
to the Poles who perished in the war.
"It was a subtle rebuke of
communism's attempt to deny the Jewish reality of the
Shoah," wrote Eugene Fisher of the U.S. Conference
of Catholic Bishops.
As pope, John Paul II became more
outspoken on the Church's responsibility to the Jewish
community than he had been.
"The answer lies here in
Poland," said Feliks Tych, director of the Jewish
Museum in Warsaw. "In leaving Poland, Wojtyla freed
himself to act, to start the re-education program regarding
the Jews in the Church, to forge diplomatic ties with
Israel, to write the document on the Shoah."
Rabbi Rudin said such papal acts
as the 1991 invocation that asked for "forgiveness
for Christian passivity during the Holocaust" and
the 1998 document "We Remember: A Reflection of
the Shoah," which confessed that "the spiritual
resistance and concrete action of other Christians was
not what might have been expected from Christ's followers,"
framed the Church's new relationship with Jews.
Fisher said John Paul II was sensitive to the meaning
of small, symbolic acts.
One meeting with the delegation of American Jewish
leaders was held at the pope’s summer residence of Castel
Gandolfo, near Rome. In the center of the room, on a
small table, were Hebrew and Latin copies of the Bible.
Just the Jewish scriptures, Fisher said, no New Testament.
A circle of chairs was arranged around the room.
"All the chairs were exactly
the same," Fisher said. The pope "sat in one
of the chairs in the circle," signifying that he
was meeting the rabbis as theological equals.
It will probably take months to
determine if the new pope will take the Church's relationship
with the Jewish community in a new direction or continue
John Paul II's. Some of his initiatives are certain
to remain, observers said.
Fisher said the changes instituted
by the John Paul II are "a permanent part"
of the church, "part of the institution."
"The legacy of this pope
will remain forever," Granot said. "He has
set the basis for a very strong dialogue.
Rabbi Klenicki said the substantive changes in Jewish-Catholic
relations, like political recognition of Israel, will
not be affected by the death of one individual, even
one as influential as John Paul II.
"Nothing will be removed
that is written on official documents," Rabbi Klenicki
said.
But the Vatican's style may change,
he said. Such symbolic moves as a visit to a synagogue
or frequent references to the Holocaust may become rare.
"These gestures may disappear,"
Rabbi Klenicki said. "It depends on his successor
and his interests." n
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