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August 28, 1987 - Image 36

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1987-08-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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Who Will Represent
American Jews?

After increasingly bitter
debate within the American
Jewish community over who
will attend the September 1.
meeting with Pope John Paul
II at his summer home in Ita-
ly, a list of ten names for the
delegation has surfaced, a
unique minyan, including
two non-Americans. -
While observers note that
the in-fighting points up the
lack of consensus on who
represents American Jewry,
Rabbi Marc Tanenbaum said
that the debate dealt not on-
ly with the makeup of the
delegation but also the struc-
ture of the two proposed
meetings, one with top
Vatican officials and one with
the pope himself.
The primary body represen-
ting American Jews in the
complex series of negotiations
has been the International
Jewish Committee for Inter-.
religious Consultations
(IJCIC). Through IJCIC, a
proposal was made to bring a
delegation of no more than
five Jewish leaders to the
meeting with the pope.
"The pope agreed on a
delegation of five, which in-
dicated to us that there was
the intention of a serious
meeting, not just a series of
speeches," Tanenbaum says.
"Both sides have agreed on
that — but there have been
extraordinary pressures from
groups that haven't been in-
volved in IJCIC. It is not a
healthy situation."
Among the groups not
belonging to IJCIC, Tanen-
baum says, are the Anti-
Defamation League and the

American Jewish Congress.
Both groups, he says, initial-
ly shunned the idea of
meeting with the pope — but
then wanted to be included.
Lay leaders did not want on-
ly rabbis included and Zionist
leaders wanted representa-
tio-n as well.
To resolve these difficulties,
negotiators are now consider-
ing a two-tiered approach to
the upcoming meetings.
"What is being advocated is
a. meeting with Cardinal
Casaroli and Cardinal
Willebrands on August 31,"
Tanenbaum says. "This
would be attended by all of
the members of the Jewish
delegation." (Cardinal
Casaroli is the Vatican
secretary of state, and
Willebrands is a Church of-
ficial who has been working
on Catholic-Jewish relations
since Vatican 11)
"Sometime this week, the
Vatican will have to decide on
that, since it changes the
terms of our proposal."
Another plan calls for hav-
ing all ten of the Jewish
leaders attend the meeting
with the pope, with five being
designated as observers.
The five top Jewish leaders
most likely to meet the pope
are Tanenbaum himself, Rab-
bi Alexander Schindler of the
Union of American Hebrew
Congregations, Rabbi Gilbert
Klapperman, the president of
the Synagogue Council of
America, Gerhart Riegner of
the World Jewish Congress,
who lives in Switzerland, and
Rabbi Mordecai Waxman,
who is chairman of both the

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