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(1 Mile West of Adams) Auburn Hills 853.7440 102 'excluding kids and cushions EciAosc " s‘P FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1991 21325 Telegraph (Just North of 8 Mile) Southfield 948.1060 E Excellence xcellence in Fashion for the Young at Heart. 6919 Orchard Lake Road W. Bloomfield • 855-5528 New York (JTA) — Car- dinal Jozef Glemp of Poland met here with 11 Jewish leaders last week and in- vited them to come to War- saw in February to inau- gurate a series of con- ferences devoted to pro- moting Catholic-Jewish understanding there. Cardinal Glemp, who heads the Catholic Church in Poland, said he would participate in the series of conferences, indicating that he plans to get personally involved in efforts to ease the longstanding strains between Catholics and Jews in Poland. But the primate would not agree to repeat in Poland a statement he made in Wash- ington last month, after meeting with many of the same Jewish leaders, in which he said that remarks about Jews he made two years ago, in a now infamous homily, were based on "mistaken information." When the Jewish leaders, most of them rabbis, asked him to repeat that statement when he returns to his na- tive country, Cardinal Glemp responded with si- lence, leaving some of them dissatisfied. "I expected something more concrete," said Rabbi Leon Klenicki, director of interreligious affairs for the Anti-Defamation League. "Whatever he says condem- ning anti-Semitism here must be said in Poland, in Polish, otherwise it's just tea and sympathy." Rabbi Klenicki refused to meet with Cardinal Glemp in Washington on Sept. 20, because the prelate had not explicitly repudiated the statements about Jews he made in the homily, among them, that Jews got peas- ants drunk, control the international news media and introduced communism to Poland. Rabbi Klenicki said he was attending the New York meeting out of respect and friendship for Cardinal John O'Connor, who hosted the gathering at New York parish offices behind St. Patrick's Cathedral, and who has a strong relation- ship with the Jewish com- munity. Another participant who said that Glemp's statements did not go far enough was Rabbi Mark Winer of the Jewish Com- munity Center of White Plains. N.Y. "He did not address all that needs to be," said Rabbi Winer, who represents the Reform movement's Central Conference of American Rabbis on the Synagogue Council of America. Not everyone agreed with that assessment. Rabbi Marc Tanenbaum, a longtime participant in Catholic- Jewish dialogue, said that the promises made by Cardinal Glemp to better Catholic-Jewish dialogue, ding in Poland "were excellent, way beyond what I expected." But, he acknowledged, the real outcome of the meetings with Cardinal Glemp "will depend on what follow-up takes place." During last week's meeting, Cardinal O'Connor urged Cardinal Glemp to use his influence to persuade the Vatican to establish full dip- lomatic relations with Israel, participants said. They said that perhaps the most valuable result of Car- dinal Glemp's 19-day, 14- city trip here was that he had the chance to see strong Catholic-Jewish relations at work. "Now he has come to a new realization, since he has seen concretely what a model of these relationships should be," said Rabbi Jack Bemporad of Lawrence, N.Y., who chairs the Syn- agogue Council's inter- religious affairs committee. Gunther Lawrence, a spokesman for the Syn- agogue Council, likened the educational process Glemp had been involved in during his trip to "retraining." The Synagogue Council is composed of delegates from each of the three major U.S. movements of Jewish re- ligious affiliation. It is the American secretariat for IJCIC, the International Jewish Committee on Inter- religious Consultations, which is formally charged with acting on behalf of the Jewish community in rela- tions with the Vatican. Those who participated in last week's meeting, however, did so as in- dividuals rather than as representatives of the Syn- agogue Council, which, as part of IJCIC, was not able to arrive at a consensus about whether or not to meet with Cardinal Glemp during his U.S. tour. Many felt the cardinal had not sufficiently apologized for his past remarks.