Rabbi DavidRosen writes in Ha’aretz about the positive aspects of Pope John Paul II’s relationship with Jews and Israel. He mentions that under this Pope, the Vatican recognized Israel.

…It was Pope John Paul II who was the true hero of Christian-Jewish reconciliation. The late pontiff called for “a new and profound understanding between the Church and Judaism everywhere, in every country, for the benefit of all.” He stated unequivocally that the idea that the Church has replaced the Jewish people in a covenant with God was wrong, and even questioned the attempt to proselytize among Jews.

The two most significant events in terms of Christian-Jewish reconciliation were his visit to the Great Synagogue of Rome in 1986 and his visit to Israel in 2000. The scene of John Paul embracing the chief rabbi of Rome, Elio Toaff, reached millions of believers who did not choose to or who could not read his writings. He described the visit to the synagogue as the most important event of that year, one that would be remembered for “hundreds of thousands of years” and gave “thanks and praise to Providence” for the occasion.

Full diplomatic relations were inaugurated between the Vatican and Israel in 1993, and then the Pope made an official visit to Israel in 2000, in a clear rejection of the traditional position of the Church that the Jews had been exiled from their land because of their refusal to accept Jesus and were condemned to wander. The visit had a powerful effect, primarily on the Jews of Israel. Most of them, especially traditional and Orthodox Jews, had never met a modern Christian.

This Pope also visited Israel, including Yad VaShem, and Auschwitz. He, a Pole, had Jewish friends as a child and has publicly spoken of Jews as the Christians’ elder brothers.

That’s not to say that everything between Jews and Catholics is all fine and rosy, there are still plenty of divisive issues that divide the two groups. And yet, here was the leader of the world’s Catholics making good faith efforts to heal a deep divide.

There is another worthwhile Ha’Aretz article about this Pope, and includes Sharon’s comments about his passing. It includes an Arik Sharon quote from the day’s Cabinet meeting, where he called the Pope, “a man of peace, a friend of the Jewish people.”

Ynet quotes among others, former Chief Rabbi, Yisrael Lau, as saying about the Pope,

“With the exception of John XXIII, there has never been as pro-Jewish a Pope as John Paul II. In addition to his contribution to the fall of communism and the crumbling of the iron curtain—something that allowed hundreds of thousands of Jews to return to their heritage and even come to Israel – we must remember that the Pope contributed to combating anti-Semitism in 120 countries he visited.”

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themiddle

10 Comments

  • “… wallowed in the manure of their own cowardice”

    I mean the writer at JewishIndy made some valid points – The Vatican has yet to recognize Israeli sivereignty, and the Israeli government made some embarassing concessions to the Pope when he came to visit. But he did come for a visit and as they say, Rome wasn’t built in a day ….

  • I am sorry for the pope. As a person, Karol Wojtyla left no descendants because he was celibate. I understand he had an older brother who died in childhood, and as far as I understand,
    he had no other siblings. So with his death, his part of the Wojtyla family is gone. Very sad.

    However, because I believe in monotheism and Judaism, I believe that when he died, his soul returned to G-d, and the fact of G-d’s Unity was revealed to him, a reality he denied during his lifetime.

  • I think that writer made no valid points. This is a process, one that took courage, initiative, and sufficient personal clout and charisma to implement.

    As for recognizing the sovereignty of Israel, can you tell me, ck, what this means?

  • Thinking a man would be celibate for his entire life is delusional.

    Priest or not, everyone has to do it sometime, and for the long life ol’ Popey had, I’d say hes had between the sheets action at least ONCE in his life! (Whether he paid for it or not.)

  • TM, or CK,
    I don’t think the FUNDAMENTAL AGREEMENT recognizes Jewish sovreignty at all. It nicely pats us on the head for keeping the ‘status quo’.

  • Good link TM. I guess I don’t know the exact status, maybe somewhere between full recognition and grudging tolerance. But it’s all good – he was a pretty good pope as far as all that goes.

  • I dunno Josh, it seems to me that you’re looking for some way to disparage what is a fairly straightforward document. That document not only recognizes Israel, but makes it a point to stress the relationship with the Jewish people. I’m not sure what more you expect but this is enough for me.

    Nobody is saying this Pope didn’t have diverging interests from those of the Jewish people, of course he did. The point is that he made a strong and successful effort during his lifetime and papacy to bring about a new relationship between Catholics and Jews. I really don’t know what more you want, it takes time and effort to change hearts and minds.

  • In our local papers, there was a woman who was a Holocaust survivor who said the pope found her starving and weak and carried her to safety and found food for her. What more can anyone ask of a human being? This woman lives in Skokie, Ill or one of the surrounding suburbs.
    Sholom
    Esther Feinstein sackheim
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