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February 02, 1996 - Image 70

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1996-02-02

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



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Rome (JTA) — Pope John Paul
II rejoiced in the progress of
Middle East peace, but warned
that differences about the sta-
tus of Jerusalem could put the
peace process in jeopardy.
Also, the pontiff condemned
anti-Semitism and deplored the
longstanding tensions between
Christians and Jews.
In his annual State of the
World address, the pope reiter-
ated the Vatican position that
Jerusalem should be a unique,
multireligious entity.
However, last month, Leah
Rabin, the widow of slain Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin,
had an audience with the pope,
after which she said the pope
told her that he considered
Jerusalem "the capital of Israel
and as the capital of three
faiths."
Th pope said, "The religious
and universal dimension of the
holy city demands a commit-
ment on the part of the whole in-
ternational community, in order
to ensure that the city preserves
its uniqueness and retains its
living character."
The pontiff said holy places
that are important to the three
monotheistic religions would
lose "much of their significance
if they were not permanently
surrounded by active communi-
ties of Jews, Christians and
Muslims."
He also said: "It is my hope
that the international commu-
nity will offer the political
partners most directly involved
the juridical and diplomatic in-
struments capable of ensuring
that Jerusalem, one and holy,
may truly be a 'crossroads of
peace."
Saying that Christianity had
a "particularly intimate rela-
tionship" with Judaism, Pope
John Paul II condemned anti-
Semitism and deplored the long-
standing tensions between
Christians and Jews.
The pope, who called for re-
ligious tolerance among all
faiths, criticized the "hatreds,
persecutions and all the mani-
festations of anti-Semitism di-
rected against Jews in every
time and by anyone."
The pope made the remarks
during his regular noontime ad-
dress from his window at the
Vatican overlooking St. Peter's
Square.
The "memory of tensions
which so many times have
marked the relationship be-
tween Christians and Jews"
gave rise to "great pain," he
said, adding that Christians
should respect the "spiritual
riches" of other faiths in order to
build universal peace and broth-
erhood. E

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