40101111111110110101111010041110011bi. think it is crucial that we contain the tendency within the Catholic Church towards revisionism with regard to the Nazi holocaust. There are some signs of this revisionist thinking tak- ing hold in the Church. While the pope made an excellent and poignant statement when he went to Auschwitz — that the Jewish people, who brought the world the message of 'thou shalt not kill' through the Ten Commandments were themselves the victims of ineffable killing by the Nazis — he seemed to reverse that at Majdanek. He referred to 14 na- tionalities who suffered there, and Jews were not mentioned." "If the revisionist line con- tinues — that the Church was a vic- tim to Hitler, a kind of martyr — it will tell a historical lie. And it will undercut efforts among German Catholics today to face that history. Ironically, in 1975 the German- Catholic hierarchy issued a statement in which they confessed that the Church gave obedience to Hitler as a form of idolatry, apostasy. They con- fessed that they abandoned the Jews to Hitler's persecution. The church, they said, must face that history, con- fess its sins, and stand against every form of fascism and idolatry, and must stand at the side of the Jewish people. Now there are signs that some people in the Church want to move away from that." Tanenbaum declines to say whether the pope's meeting with Kurt Waldheim represented a particularly visible expression of this revisionist tendency. He does make it very clear that he hopes to use the incident, and the resulting dialogue with the highest levels of the Vatican hierar- chy, to evoke the kind of strong statements on the Holocaust that might contain this trend towards a kind of trivialization of the Holocaust. Initially, Tanenbaum says, his ef- forts were met with suspicion by many other American Jewish leaders. He was accused of representing the entire Jewish community without any official mandate to do so. There were indirect charges that he was go- ing to the Vatican on bended knee, trying to curry favor with the leaders in Rome. His long involvement with Catholic-Jewish relations, he admits, may have reinforced this impression. He says that the overwhelming emotions unleashed by the Waldheim incident were a big part of this divisive reaction. "You have to remember that it was very, very emo- tional," he says. "You're dealing with 2000 years of enmity. So one of the reasons for the reaction to the Pope- Waldheim thing was that the event brought together the embodiments of the two most hostile images in Jewish history — the theological anti- Semitism that characterized the Church until Vatican II and the , , 4 400 Pope John Paul II meets Jewish leader David Gordis, Rabbi Marc Tanenbaum and Howard Friedman. political anti-Semitism of the Nazis, represented by Kurt Waldheim. That's lethal stuff." He maintains that his longstan- ding involvement in Catholic-Jewish relations gives him a perspective on the crisis that other Jewish leaders lack and enables him to look beyond the raw emotionalism of the Wald- heim incident. "It's very difficult for Jews, and especially those who have no contact with the Vatican, as we have had for 25 years, to realize that there are peo- ple there who are horrified by what has happened, and who want to change those patterns. You can't perceive today's situation as if this were the same as thirteenth or four- teenth century relations between Jews and Catholics. It's not the same thing. "The notion that we Jews are coming with hat in hand, begging for favors, strikes me as bizarre. Anyone who sat in our meetings on July 9 would have recognized the firmness, the toughness, with which we stated the Jewish position." The portrait Tanenbaum paints of the Catholic Church in the wake of the Waldheim affair is a curiously divided one. Over and over again, he describes the revolutionary changes in the Church since Vatican II, changes in which he played a small but intriguing part. At the same time, he describes an emotional environment that will con- tinue to stand in the way of better em- pathy between Catholics and Jews — an ugly residue of the Church's in- volvement in the Holocaust, and its institutional inability to face up to the consequences of that act. And, as his years of interreligious diplomacy have demonstrated, the Catholic Church is a massive political institution, respon.sive to its own needs in an ever-shifting worldwide context. The Church may feel a special moral obligation to the Jews who have too often been its victims — but it is also a major actor in worlds where Jews are a relatively minor fac- tor. There is a parallel kind of inter- nal tension within the Jewish groups that are coping with the emotional fallout of the Waldheim affair. On one hand, there is the distrust and suspi- cion bred by two millennia of Church anti-Semitism and the recent memory of the Nazi nightmare. There is also the lingering sore of the Vatican's refusal to recognize Israel — a factor which Tanenbaum downplays. "In this case," he says, "maybe our expectations are too high. There is a kind of de facto recognition, even if there hasn't been an official recognition by the Vatican. To a big extent, the problem is the Vatican's; by not recognizing Israel, they have prevented themselves from becoming active participants in the peace pro- cess." And yet there is a need to believe that we have moved into a new, more enlightened age, a kind of group emo- tional craving that made the insult of the Pope's meeting with Waldheim all the more agonizing. By temperment, Tanenbaum is a patient man, and he has a heavy per- sonal investment in Catholic-Jewish dialogue. "It is very important to remember that major changes aren't made in meteoric flashes," he says. "They don't take place overnight. Very often it takes crises to nudge change along. For me, as painful as the Waldheim crisis was, their response to the event was another in- dication of the dramatic changes that have taken place. What has happen- ed since the Waldheim audience is a litmus test of how important the Jewish-Catholic relationship is to the Vatican. Now, the challenge - is to make the most of it, to push beyond where we are." ❑