PURELY COMMENTARY Ecumenism Continued from Page 2 faned, in which the future will not be accompanied by anguish:' It is a compelling con- viction challenging him — and us — to take human history seriously. Dr. Carol Rittner, revered in the designation given her as a "Righteous Gentile," has earned esteem in her Catholic way. The mutual respect is summarized in this response by Wiesel to Rittner's first question, "What does it mean to be a Jew today?": To be a Jew today is like be- ing a Jew 3,000 years ago, except that conditions have changed. Deep down, I should basically feel exactly what a Jew in the time of King David felt, mean- ing, the Jewish people have received the Law, which does not make us superior to any peo- ple nor inferior to any people, but we have received the Law and the Law must be shared with other people. We must not force it on others, but we should offer it to them. To be a Jew is to remember. In the time of David, I would have said, "I remember Joshua, I remember Moses, I remember Abraham:' And today, I say: "I remember David. I remember Solomon:' To be a Jew is to remember as far back as possi- ble, but that also goes for anyone who is not Jewish. Everyone has a memory that began before his or her own. To be a Jew is to be a human being. If there is one word I would like to imprint on everything I do, it is the word, "humanize?' A teacher should "humanize" his or her students, a book should "humanize" its readers, and so forth. Questions, too, must "humanize," not "dehumanize." In Messengers of God I said that the mission of the Jew was not to make the whole world Jewish, but to humanize it, to make it a warmer, more hospitable, more human, more welcoming world. That is true for every individual Jew as well as for all the Jewish people, but again, I would say that this also must be true for others in their own way. My mis- sion and your mission are the same: to humanize the world. This reply defines humanism ecumenically, while giving substance to the Jewish ethicism and idealism of the eminent Nobelist Elie Wiesel. A major lesson for the generations is provided in Wiesel's comment on the results of his lessons acquired from his Holocaust experiences. He thus defined them in his reply to Rittner: Ours is the most cursed and blessed century in history. It's the most cursed because of what it has endured. Blessed, too, because strangely enough, if it learns from the event, from the Holocaust, it may use its ex- perience to save the future. The message is: Learn from experience. Everything should 40 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1989 be related to the event, but nothing should be compared to it. It must maintain its uni- queness, otherwise, who knows what will happen? The danger is always cheap comparisons, easy analogies. Those who didn't experience it will never know what it meant to ex- perience it. For them, it is easy to reduce it to a normative no- tion, to say, "It's like . ." something or other. I don't wish to be in a posi- tion in which it seems that I am begrudging another's suffering. On the contrary. I respect another person's suffering more when I respect the individuali- ty, the genuineness of his or her suffering. I think every group and every person has the right to be remembered, but why play with comparisons and analo- gies, why mix sufferings together? When Christians began talk- ing about the Holocaust, remembering the victims, it was the Jews they remembered. Why? Because of the enormity of what happened to the Jewish people. They felt there was something theological, some- thing ontological about the Jewish tragedy. Later on, because they remembered so well the Jewish tragedy, they began also • to remember the other victims — the gypsies, Communists, homosexuals and so on. Jewish and Christian viewpoints on many issues have developed in con- tradistinction to each other, while in other fields, the viewpoints show a remarkable similarity — one greater than many realize." Lexicography Continued from Page 2 Sister Carol Rittner persecuted, wherever they are and whoever they are. Proud of his heritage, he is a prophet of righteousness, decen- cy, and humanity. His voice resonates and echoes in our hearts and minds as he speaks for all who aspire to a better world. Ecumanism, the subject, now of mounting significance of what had previously been the good will move- ment, gains importance in the quoted views. Let what has just been assem- bled here, as the ideals of Elie Wiesel, under the inspiration of Carol Rittner, serve as a textbook for students of the ecumenical cause. Go back and read the More Ecumenism writings. Forty years ago In Study Guide nobody even remembered the other victims. Yet, there were Of Two Religions resistance fighters, many Polish uch literature dealing with and Ukrainian inmates, even the ethicisms of Judaism and German resistance members Christianity are now making who suffered at the hands of the their appearance. They can be con- Nazis and their collaborators. sidered supplementary texts for the No one mentioned the others, no advancement of ecumenical texts. one spoke- about them, but One such volume is The Gospels because the Jewish tragedy dur- and Rabbinic Judaism published by ing the Holocaust had such an the Anti-Defamation League and impact, it somehow broadened Ktav publishers. It is authored by its own base so that non-Jewish Rabbi Michael Hilton and Father victims of the Nazis began to be Gordian Marshall both Englishmen. remembered, which is natural, Explanatory replies are provided here which is important, which is to a score of topics about the two good — provided there is no con- faiths. fusion. Confusion works against Parables relating to Judaism and memory. Christianity, the synagogue, the Com- "How would you like to be mandments and related subjects are remembered?" Rittner asked Weisel, covered here authoritatively. Impor- and his reply is another lesson for the tant as an explanatory note on the generations: "As a Jew, naturally. As a treatment provided here for an witness. As a good father." understanding of the tradition and This aim to evaluate ecumenism is their observances is this note to one a tribute to the scholarship of Dr. Carol of the chapters: Rittner and the idealism of Elie Wiesel. "The aim of this unit is to il- lb the latter there are many tributes in lustrate how the Gospels and rabbis the quoted Nov. 19 issue of America. In made extensive use of a common one of them the Anti-Defamation literary form, and to explore both the League stated over the signatures of the similarities and the differences in the movement's major leaders: ways it was used." The voice of the voiceless, he A statement by the Anti- speaks for the silent six million Defamation League accompanying made mute by the Holocaust. this important religiously defining With word and deed, he book asserts: represents the suffering and the "Reading the texts side by side, it troubled, the oppresed and the will become clear how and why mi ly instituted a law suit against the publishers of the Oxford dictionary. Of special interest is the involve- ment in these aims for correction of the abuses by another Detroiter, Marvin Frankel. He sent Shloimovitz a check for $100 to assist him in the lawsuit. On April 29, 1972, the Detroit Free Press published an AP story from Lon- don about the lawsuit under the heading "Dictionary Sued by Jew for Slander." A textile merchant, in- furiated by a dictionary defini- tion when he looked up the word Jew, started legal action Friday against the publisher of the respected Oxford Dictionaries. The merchant, Marcus Shloimovitz, said he was filing a suit for defamation, naming the Clarendon Press in Oxford. Among the definitions he ob- jects to are that a Jew is an "unscrupulous usurer," "a cheat," "a trader who drives hard bargains and deals crafti- ly" and "an extortioner:' .. . The major affronts, meanwhile, con- tinue in one of the most important dic- tionaries of the English language; If it is so important to utilize "vulgarism" as sort of an apology for op- probrium, apparently as means of ac- crediting "an historical association of an offensive term," why not separate the offensiveness into a specific volume to be called "vulgarisims"? Leonard Simons and his associate protesters remain valid in a battle for lexicographical fairness. The striving for fairness continues. Longworth Quinn: Good Will Emissary F or 42 years as editor, and at his death last week editor emeritus of the Michigan Chronicle, Longworth Quinn earned the respect and admiration of people of all races and religious faiths. While fighting pre- judices against his own black communi- ty, he avoided personal prejudice and had the charm of a creator of the good will that was the boast of the noblest in citizenship. From the years of the directorship of the Jewish Community Council by Boris Joffe and in the decades that followed, Longworth Quinn cooperated in everything that assured human con- duct in responsible citizenship. There was always the pleasure of working with him to continue the best one can boast of in human conduct. All citizens of good will surely join with the black community in paying honor to his memory.