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March 17, 2000 - Image 14

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2000-03-17

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BRUISED FEELINGS from page 12

ADDS Jerusalem office, accepted
the confession as a moment of
Catholic soul wrestling. But
they were virtually lost in the
church s `
flood of negativity.
cation °f t h e Jews and the
Many Catholics were left
stewing. Even Catholic ecu-
menical activists, normally
Jews' staunchest defenders
within the church, sound
uncharacteristically testy.
e Vatican and, sra establish for-
"It's interesting that people
will make comments about
what they expected from the
confession," says Father
Lawrence Frizzell, director of
the Institute for Judaeo-
Christian Studies at New
Jersey's Seton Hall University.
"It's not quite appropriate
when discussing somebody
else's liturgy. I don't criticize
Yom Kippur."
For Father Mikulanis in
San Diego, what's most dis-
turbing about the Jewish
response to the confession is
the implication that the
Holocaust is a crime of the
church, comparable to the
Crusades or the Inquisition.
That's a distortion, he says.
"Not a single Catholic bishop
supported Hitler. The Evan-
gelical Lutheran church did.
The Catholic church didn't."
It's true, he says, that
Catholics and their church
failed, like many others, to do
all they might have to save
Jews. That's been acknowl-
edged over and over. "My
question is, what will ever be
enough? The church is not
going to condemn Pius XII.-"
Catholic-Jewish relations
have moved light-years in
recent years, sincethe Second
Vatican Council voted in 1965
"to absolve Jews of deicide. Pope
John Paul II personally pro-
claimed antisemitism a "sin"
and declared the Jews' covenant
one after another they leaped forward
with God "irrevocable."
to voice "disappointment." Their
Thanks to him, Catholics are no
shared complaint: the pope hadn't
longer permitted to seek Jewish con-
mentioned the Holocaust. There were
version. But, Catholics complain, Jews
variations, mostly in emphasis. The
remain woefully unaware of the sea
American Jewish Committee's state-
change. They blame internal Jewish
ment was largely upbeat, though it
divisions, plus the continuing
too began with disappointment.
Orthodox refusal to permit a full-scale
Rabbi Lau, despite his distress, said
Catholic-Jewish dialogue on religious
he welcomed the pope's "initiative to
beliefs. Also at fault is a growing isola-
seek the forgiveness of the Jewish peo-
tionism among the most active Jews,
ple" (actually, forgiveness was asked of
who the Catholics feel should be lead-
God, not the Jews). A handful of voic-
ing the way toward reconciliation.
es, notably Rabbi David Rosen of
In the last decade, relations have

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