ROME -- Following is the text of Pope John Paul II's cover letter, dated last
Thursday and issued Monday, accompanying the Vatican statement about the
Holocaust, addressed to the president of the Commission for Religious Relations
With the Jews:
To My Venerable Brother, Cardinal Edward Idris Cassidy
On numerous occasions during my Pontificate I have recalled with a sense of
deep sorrow the sufferings of the Jewish people during the Second World War.
The crime which has become known as the Shoah remains an indelible stain on the
history of the century that is coming to a close.
As we prepare for the beginning of the Third Millennium of Christianity, the
Church is aware that the joy of a Jubilee is above all the joy that is based on
the forgiveness of sins and reconciliation with God and neighbor. Therefore
she encourages her sons and daughters to purify their hearts, through
repentance of past errors and infidelities. She calls them to place themselves
humbly before the Lord and examine themselves on the responsibility which they
too have for the evils of our time.
It is my fervent hope that the document "We Remember: A Reflection on the
Shoah," which the Commission for Religious Relations With the Jews has prepared
under your direction, will indeed help to heal the wounds of past
misunderstandings and injustices. May it enable memory to play its necessary
part in the process of shaping a future in which the unspeakable iniquity of
the Shoah will never again be possible. May the Lord of history guide the
efforts of Catholics and Jews and all men and women of good will as they work
together for a world of true respect for the life and dignity of every human
being, for all have been created in the image and likeness of God.
Pope John Paul II
From the Vatican, 12 March 1998.
Joannes Paulus II
(VIS) - Cardinal Edward I. Cassidy, president of the Holy See Commission for
Religious Relations with the Jews, presented this morning in the Holy See Press
Office the document
"We Remember: A Reflection on the Shoah."
I: The Tragedy of the Shoah and the Duty of Remembrance
The 20th century is fast coming to a close and a new Millennium of the
Christian era is about to dawn. The 2,000th anniversary of the Birth of Jesus
Christ calls all Christians, and indeed invites all men and women, to seek to
discern in the passage of history the signs of divine Providence at work, as
well as the ways in which the image of the Creator in man has been offended and
disfigured.
This reflection concerns one of the main areas in which Catholics can seriously
take to heart the summons which Pope John Paul II has addressed to them in his
apostolic letter Tertio Millennio Adveniente: "It is appropriate that, as the
Second Millennium of Christianity draws to a close, the Church should become
more fully conscious of the sinfulness of her children, recalling all those
times in history when they departed from the spirit of Christ and his Gospel
and, instead of offering to the world the witness of a life inspired by the
values of faith, indulged in ways of thinking and acting which were truly forms
of counter-witness and scandal."
This century has witnessed an unspeakable tragedy, which can never be
forgotten: the attempt by the Nazi regime to exterminate the Jewish people,
with the consequent killing of millions of Jews. Women and men, old and young,
children and infants, for the sole reason of their Jewish origin, were
persecuted and deported. Some were killed immediately, while others were
degraded, ill-treated, tortured and utterly robbed of their human dignity, and
then murdered. Very few of those who entered the Camps survived, and those who
did remained scarred for life. This was the Shoah. It is a major fact of the
history of this century, a fact which still concerns us today.
Before this horrible genocide, which the leaders of nations and Jewish
communities themselves found hard to believe at the very moment when it was
mercilessly being put into effect, no one can remain indifferent, least of all
the Church, by reason of her very close bonds of spiritual kinship with the
Jewish people and her remembrance of the injustices of the past. The Church's
relationship to the Jewish people is unlike the one she shares with any other
religion. However, it is not only a question of recalling the past. The common
future of Jews and Christians demands that we remember, for "there is no future
without memory." History itself is memoria futuri.
In addressing this reflection to our brothers and sisters of the Catholic
Church throughout the world, we ask all Christians to join us in meditating on
the catastrophe which befell the Jewish people, and on the moral imperative to
insure that never again will selfishness and hatred grow to the point of sowing
such suffering and death. Most especially, we ask our Jewish friends, "whose
terrible fate has become a symbol of the aberrations of which man is capable
when he turns against God," to hear us with open hearts.
II: What We Must Remember
While bearing their unique witness to the Holy One of Israel and to the Torah,
the Jewish people have suffered much at different times and in many places. But
the Shoah was certainly the worst suffering of all. The inhumanity with which
the Jews were persecuted and massacred during this century is beyond the
capacity of words to convey. All this was done to them for the sole reason that
they were Jews.
The very magnitude of the crime raises many questions. Historians,
sociologists, political philosophers, psychologists and theologians are all
trying to learn more about the reality of the Shoah and its causes. Much
scholarly study still remains to be done. But such an event cannot be fully
measured by the ordinary criteria of historical research alone. It calls more a
"moral and religious memory" and, particularly among Christians, a very serious
reflection on what gave rise to it.
The fact that the Shoah took place in Europe, that is, in countries of
long-standing Christian civilization, raises the question of the relation
between the Nazi persecution and the attitudes down the centuries of Christians
toward the Jews.
III: Relations Between Jews and Christians
The history of relations between Jews and Christians is a tormented one. His
Holiness Pope John Paul II has recognized this fact in his repeated appeals to
Catholics to see where we stand with regard to our relations with the Jewish
people. In effect, the balance of these relations over 2,000 years has been
quite negative.
At the dawn of Christianity, after the crucifixion of Jesus, there arose
disputes between the early Church and the Jewish leaders and people who, in
their devotion to the Law, on occasion violently opposed the preachers of the
Gospel and the first Christians. In the pagan Roman Empire, Jews were legally
protected by the privileges granted by the Emperor and the authorities at first
made no distinction between Jewish and Christian communities. Soon, however,
Christians incurred the persecution of the state. Later, when the Emperor
themselves converted to Christianity, they at first continued to guarantee
Jewish priviledges. But Christian mobs who attacked pagan temples sometimes
did the same to synagogues, not without being influenced by certain
interpretations of the New Testament regarding the Jewish people as a whole.
"In the Christian world - I do not say on the part of the Church as such -
erroneous and unjust interpretations of the New Testament regarding the Jewish
people and their alleged culpability have circulated for too long, engendering
feelings of hostility toward this people." Such interpretations of the New
Testament have been totally and definitively rejected by the Second Vatican
Council.
Despite the Christian preaching of love for all, even for one's enemies, the
prevailing mentality down the centuries penalized minorities and those who were
in any way "different." Sentiments of anti-Judaism in some Christian quarters,
and the gap which existed between the Church and the Jewish people, led to a
generalized discrimination, which ended at times in expulsions or attempts at
forced conversions. In a large part of the "Christian" world, at the end of the
18th century, those who were not Christian did not always enjoy a fully
guaranteed juridical status. Despite that fact, Jews throughout Christendom
held on to their religious traditions and communal customs. They were therefore
looked upon with a certain suspicion and mistrust. In times of crisis such as
famine, war, pestilence or social tensions, the Jewish minority was sometimes
taken as a scapegoat and became the victim of violence, looting, even
massacres.
By the end of the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th century, Jews
generally had achieved an equal standing with other citizens in most states and
a certain number of them held influential positions in society. But in that
same historical context, notably in the 19th century, a false and exacerbated
nationalism took hold. In a climate of eventful social change, Jews were often
accused of exercising an influence disproportionate to their numbers. Thus
there began to spread in varying degrees throughout most of Europe an
anti-Judaism that was essentially more sociological and political than
religious.
At the same time, theories began to appear which denied the unity of the human
race, affirming an original diversity of races. In the 20th century, National
Socialism in Germany used these ideas as a pseudo-scientific basis for a
distinction between so-called Nordic-Aryan races and supposedly inferior races.
Furthermore, an extremist form of nationalism was heightened in Germany by the
defeat of 1918 and the demanding conditions imposed by the victors, with the
consequence that many saw in National Socialism a solution to their country's
problems and cooperated politically with this movement.
The Church in Germany replied by condemning racism. The condemnation first
appeared in the preaching of some of the clergy, in the public teaching of the
Catholic Bishops, and in the writings of lay Catholic journalists. Already in
February and March 1931, Cardinal Bertram of Breslau, Cardinal Faulhaber and
the Bishops of Bavaria, the Bishops of the Province of Cologne and those of the
Province of Freiburg published pastoral letters condemning National Socialism,
with its idolatry of race and of the state. The well-known Advent sermons of
Cardinal Faulhaber in 1933, the very year in which National Socialism came to
power, at which not just Catholics but also Protestants and Jews were present,
clearly expressed rejection of the Nazi anti-Semitic propaganda. In the wake of
the Kristallnacht, Bernard Lichtenberg, provost of Berlin Cathedral, offered
public prayers for the Jews. He was later to die at Dachau and has been
declared Blessed.
Pope Pius XI too condemned Nazi racism in a solemn way in his encyclical letter
Mit brennender Sorge, which was read in German churches on Passion Sunday 1937,
a step which resulted in attacks and sanctions against members of the clergy.
Addressing a group of Belgian pilgrims on 6 September 1938, Pius XI asserted:
"Anti-Semitism is unacceptable. Spiritually, we are all Semites." Pius XII, in
his very first Encyclical, Summi Pontificatus, of 20 October 1939, warned
against theories which denied the unity of the human race and against the
deification of the state, all of which he saw as leading to a real "hour of
darkness."
IV: Nazi Anti-Semitism and the Shoah
Thus we cannot ignore the difference which exists between anti-Semitism based
on theories contrary to the constant teaching of the Church on the unity of the
human race and on the equal dignity of all races and peoples, and the
long-standing sentiments of mistrust and hostility that we call anti-Judaism,
of which unfortunately, Christians also have been guilty.
The National Socialist ideology went even further, in the sense that it refused
to acknowledge any transcendent reality as the source of life and the criterion
of moral good. Consequently, a human group, and the state with which it was
identified, arrogated to itself an absolute status and determined to remove the
very existence of the Jewish people, a people called to witness to the one God
and the Law of the Covenant. At the level of theological reflection we cannot
ignore the fact that not a few in the Nazi party not only showed aversion to
the idea of divine Providence at work in human affairs, but gave proof of a
definite hatred directed at God himself. Logically, such an attitude also led
to a rejection of Christianity, and a desire to see the Church destroyed or at
least subjected to the interests of the Nazi state.
It was this extreme ideology which became the basis of the measures taken,
first to drive the Jews from their homes and then to exterminate them. The
Shoah was the work of a thoroughly modern neo-pagan regime. Its anti-Semitism
had its roots outside of Christianity and, in pursuing its aims, it did not
hesitate to oppose the Church and persecute her members also.
But it may be asked whether the Nazi persecution of the Jews was not made
easier by the anti-Jewish prejudices imbedded in some Christian minds and
hearts. Did anti-Jewish sentiment among Christians make them less sensitive, or
even indifferent, to the persecution launched against the Jews by National
Socialism when it reached power?
Any response to this question must take into account that we are dealing with
the history of people's attitudes and ways of thinking, subject to multiple
influences. Moreover, many people were altogether unaware of the "final
solution" that was being put into effect against a whole people; others were
afraid for themselves and those near to them; some took advantage of the
situation; and still others were moved by envy. A response would need to be
given case by case. To do this, however, it is necessary to know what precisely
motivated people in a particular situation.
At first the leaders of the Third Reich sought to expel the Jews.
Unfortunately, the governments of some Western countries of Christian
tradition, including some in North and South America, were more than hesitant
to open their borders to the persecuted Jews. Although they could not foresee
how far the Nazi hierarchs would go in their criminal intentions, the leaders
of those nations were aware of the hardships and dangers to which Jews living
in the territories of the Third Reich were exposed. The closing of borders to
Jewish emigration in those circumstances, whether due to any anti-Jewish
hostility or suspicion, political cowardice or shortsightedness, or national
selfishness, lays a heavy burden of conscience on the authorities in question.
In the lands where the Nazis undertook mass deportations, the brutality which
surrounded these forced movements of helpless people should have led to suspect
the worst. Did Christians give every possible assistance to those being
persecuted, and in particular to the persecuted Jews?
Many did, but others did not. Those who did help to save Jewish lives as much
as was in their power, even to the point of placing their own lives in danger,
must not be forgotten. During and after the war, Jewish communities and Jewish
leaders expressed their thanks for all that had been done for them, including
what Pope Pius XII did personally or through his representatives to save
hundreds of thousands of Jewish lives. Many Catholic bishops, priests,
religious and laity have been honored for this reason by the State of Israel.
Nevertheless, as Pope John Paul II has recognized, alongside such courageous
men and women, the spiritual resistance and concrete action of other Christians
was not that which might have been expected from Christ's followers. We cannot
know how many Christians in countries occupied or ruled by the Nazi powers or
their allies were horrified at the disappearance of their Jewish neighbors and
yet were not strong enough to raise their voices in protest. For Christians,
this heavy burden of conscience of their brothers and sisters during the Second
World War must be a call to penitence.
We deeply regret the errors and failures of those sons and daughters of the
Church. We make our own what is said in the Second Vatican Council's
declaration Nostra Aetate, which unequivocally affirms: "The Church ... mindful
of her common patrimony with the Jews, and motivated by the Gospel's spiritual
love and by no political considerations, deplores the hatred, persecutions and
displays of anti-Semitism directed against the Jews at any time and from any
source."
We recall and abide by what Pope John Paul II, addressing the leaders of the
Jewish community in Strasbourg in 1988, stated: "I repeat again with you the
strongest condemnation of anti-Semitism and racism, which are opposed to the
principles of Christianity." The Catholic Church therefore repudiates every
persecution against a people or human group anywhere, at any time. She
absolutely condemns all forms of genocide, as well as the racist ideologies
that give rise to them. Looking back over this century, we are deeply saddened
by the violence that has enveloped whole groups of peoples and nations. We
recall in particular the massacre of the Armenians, the countless victims in
Ukraine in the 1930s, the genocide of the Gypsies, which was also the result of
racist ideas, and similar tragedies which have occurred in America, Africa and
the Balkans. Nor do we forget the millions of victims of totalitarian ideology
in the Soviet Union, in China, Cambodia and elsewhere. Nor can we forget the
drama of the Middle East, the elements of which are well known. Even as we make
this reflection, "many human beings are still their brothers' victims."
V: Looking Together to a Common Future
Looking to the future of relations between Christians and Jews, in the first
place we appeal to our Catholic brothers and sisters to renew the awareness of
the Hebrew roots of their faith. We ask them to keep in mind that Jesus was a
descendant of David; that the Virgin Mary and the Apostles belonged to the
Jewish people; that the Church draws sustenance from the root of that good
olive tree onto which have been grafted the wild olive branches of the gentiles
(cf. Romans 11:17-24); that the Jews are our dearly beloved brothers, indeed in
a certain sense they are "our elder brothers."
At the end of this Millennium the Catholic Church desires to express her deep
sorrow for the failures of her sons and daughters in every age. This is an act
of repentance (teshuva), since, as members of the Church, we are linked to the
sins as well as the merits of all her children. The Church approaches with deep
respect and great compassion the experience of extermination, the Shoah,
suffered by the Jewish people during World War II. It is not a matter of mere
words, but indeed of binding commitment. "We would risk causing the victims of
the most atrocious deaths to die again if we do not have an ardent desire for
justice, if we do not commit ourselves to insure that evil does not prevail
over good as it did for millions of children of the Jewish people. ... Humanity
cannot permit all that to happen again."
We pray that our sorrow for the tragedy which the Jewish people has suffered in
our century will lead to a new relationship with the Jewish people. We wish to
turn awareness of past sins into a firm resolve to build a new future in which
there will be no more anti-Judaism among Christians or anti-Christian sentiment
among Jews, but rather a shared mutual respect, as befits those who adore the
one Creator and Lord and have a common father in faith, Abraham.
Finally, we invite all men and women of good will to reflect deeply on the
significance of the Shoah. The victims from their graves, and the survivors
through the vivid testimony of what they have suffered, have become a loud
voice calling the attention of all of humanity. To remember this terrible
experience is to become fully conscious of the salutary waning it entails: the
spoiled seeds of anti-Judaism and anti-Semitism must never again be allowed to
take root in any human heart.
16 March 1998
Edward Idris Cardinal Cassidy
President
The Most Reverend Pierre Duprey
Vice President
The Reverend Remi Hoeckman, O.P.
Secretary
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