OTHER VIEWS A Witness At Yad Vashem Jerusalem he new Holocaust History Museum at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem has just opened and it is an overwhelming experi- ence. Having been to Yad Vashem many times, especially as a tour guide, I was a bit complacent and did not expect the impact to be so deep and moving. The new exhibit takes place in a new, architecturally minimalist and angular building with bare cement walls that tower above you, creating a powerful sense of space and awareness of one's physical limi- tations. As our guide explained, the muse- um has taken nearly a decade to plan and build. Previous exhibits were incorporated into this presentation T Moshe Dann, a former Detroiter and past assistant professor of history at City University of New York, is a writer and journalist living in Jerusalem. His e- mail address is moshedan@netvision.netil. using documentary films, narratives from survivors, creative video pro- ductions and art produced by the victims themselves to create a very personal, deeply moving educational experience. The museum also includes some thought-provoking surprises, and innovative and perhaps controversial additions. Room by room, step by step visitors are drawn into the world of European Jewry, moving closer and closer to impending destruction, sharing in some way the immense tragedy that is beyond words, beyond human imagination except that it did happen, to us, to our families and relatives, to the Jewish people. All of the familiar historical mark- ers are there to mark the descent into this nightmare, but this museum searches for something different, to help us connect to who the victims were as people, surrounding us with bits and pieces of their lives, melodies they sang as we are sur- rounded by stark, haunting photo- graphs. Excellent explanations accompany Can New Pope Transcend His Past? Philadelphia he name of the first pope, Peter ("Petros"), meant "Rock." According to the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus said, "Upon this Rock — this Petros — I will build my church." But if Peter was a rock, he was a rock of future solidity and solidarity — not a fossil from the past. Living through the earthquake that the Roman Empire brought to his coun- try, he sought to dance in the earth- quake — to renew and transform the Judaism and the Hellenism he grew up in. Walking now in the earthquake of modernity, the Catholic Church has just chOsen not to dance in the earthquake by renewing itself. Instead, it chose to search for a fos- silized rock of the past — a rock of certainty that it hopes will not be shaken by the earthquake. T JN 4/28 2005 38 Rabbi Arthur Waskow is director of the Shalom Center, www.shalomctrorg. He is the author of books on public policy, religious renewal and the Jewish renais- sance, including "Godwrestling-Round 2" (Jewish Lights). Yet does the name of the new pope matter — the name he chose for himself? John Paul II balanced seeking the future through renewal and hanging on to the past through restoration. He sought to renew the Church by abandoning its old hostility to Judaism and Islam. Yet when it came to the role of women and issues involving sexuality, not only in his Church but also beyond it, he made every effort to restore the past. Pope John Paul II's appointments to the College of Cardinals made a miracle of renewal almost impossi- ble. Indeed, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was even more anchored in the past than was the pope who gave him such latitude. Cardinal Ratzinger was the pope's bulldog on many of these issues. He became the Prince of No in the Church: "No!" to married priests, "No!" to women priests, "No!" to birth con- trol (even as protection against AIDS), "No!" to vigorous action to reveal and correct sexual abuse' by priests, "No!" to civil rights (let alone holy rites) for gay and lesbian each presentation through- will ponder the unbearable out, to help absorb the inhumanity that this muse- intense sensory impact as one um documents and question struggles to comprehend the how the world allowed this meaning and the brutal reali- to happen. It may even ty of such immense human prompt a renewal of human loss, the systematic attempt dignity in efforts to prevent to annihilate Europe's entire such tragedies from re-occur- population of Jews. MO SHE ring. They may even help A book called To Bear D ANN combat growing anti- Witness is available at the Semitism and Holocaust Sp ecial museum. It includes many of Comm entary denial. the pictures and explanations For those who plan to visit included in the exhibits. And this museum during your that is how one feels as one walks next trip to Israel, I suggest that you towards the exit; one has become a allot several hours (at least) to this witness. We cannot forget or allow experience and that it be scheduled the memory of those who perished to in the morning when you are physi- be forgotten. That is, in itself, a cally and emotionally stronger. A transforming experience and our kosher cafeteria is available and the obligation. museum provides well-trained I experienced this museum as a guides. Jew; this is what was done to Jews. It I also suggest that you take some is about us. But for a quirk of fate, I time afterwards to digest what you would have been there. Perhaps my have been through, personally and as soul was there. a group, or family. That may include I don't know how others will react. a walk around the site, including Perhaps they will say, "Oh, them," some of the other places of interest. and walk quickly away. Perhaps they Because this is visually powerful, people, "No!" to abortion He described inter-reli- under any circumstances at gious dialogue as part of the all (even rape, incest, mortal ‘`evangelizing mission" of the danger to the mother), "No!" Church, "just one of the • to stem-cell research, "No!" actions of the Church in her to liberation theology, "No!" mission to the nations." For to exploration of new ideas Jews, Muslims, Buddhists by eminent scholars within and others, this may drop the Church, "No!" to full a poisoned pill into the RABBI respect for other religious shared cup of interfaith ARTHUR traditions. dialogue. WAS KOW Indeed, where John Paul So is there any hope at Sp ecial went further than Vatican II all, any sign that the new Commentary along the path shaped by Benedict XVI might give Pope John XXIII to open hope to some aspects of doors to Jews and other religious renewal and faiths, Cardinal Ratzinger in 2000 prophetic witness? One hint: his proclaimed the absolute primacy of name. Benedict XV was the pope of the Roman Catholic Church and World War I. He tried hard — condemned other religious commu- though utterly unsuccessfully — to nities as "deficient." urge a general Christmas truce in His paper on other religions, 1914, and on Aug. 1, 1917, he "Dominus Jesus," denounced "the issued a peace proposal rooted in theology of religious pluralism." He reconciliation rather than victory for insisted on the Catholic Church's either side. But he did not try to traditional claim to be the unique mobilize the grass roots of the and universal means to salvation: Church to make it real — by refus- "Followers of other religions can ing to bear arms, for instance. receive divine grace ... [but] objec- Perhaps by choosing his name, the tively speaking, they are in a gravely new pope is trying to stir himself deficient situation in comparison and his Church to address the grow- with those who, in the Church, have ing dangers of worldwide religious the fullness of the means of salva- war. Is he ready to commit himself tion." to seek an end to the U.S. occupa-