Papal Legacy Interfaith exhibit in Cincinnati traces John Paul Ifs relationship with the Jewish people. Pope John Paul II talks about the exhibit explaining his lifelong rela- tionship with the Jewish people during an October 2003 audience at the Vatican. From left are Dr. Yaffa Eliach of the Shtetl Foundation in New York, Rabbi Abie Ingber of the Hillel Jewish Student Center in Cincinnati, Dr. James Buchanan of Xavier University's Brueggeman Center and Dr. William Madges of Xavier's Department of Theology. Pope John Paul II greets Rabbi Elio Toaff chief rabbi of Rome, during his visit to the Synagogue of Rome on April 13, 1986 The rabbi was one of two living people the pope singled out in his will. IRIS RUTH PASTOR The American Israelite DENNIS O'CONNOR The Catholic Telegraph Cincinnati ne of the fascinating legacies of Pope John Paul II's papacy was his lifelong affirming relation- ship with the Jewish people. That lega- cy is being acknowledged in an impor- tant exhibit, "A Blessing to One Another: Pope John Paul II and the Jewish People," which opened yester- day, May 18, at Xavier University in Cincinnati on what would have been the pope's 85th birthday. Transcripts, photos, prayer books, vestments and other important items have been gathered from around the world for the first-ever exhibition on the subject, a partnership of the Shtetl Foundation, Xavier University and Hillel of Cincinnati. 0 The 1,500-square-foot exhibit runs through July 15. It will then move to the Pope John Paul II Cultural Center in Washington, D.C. From there, it will tour Jewish and Catholic colleges and universities and other venues throughout the United States before traveling to Europe and becoming a permanent display in Israel. As visitors walk through the exhibit, symbolically retracing the pope's steps, they will see his childhood church in Wadowice, Poland, as the pope saw it from his own bedroom window; they will learn about Jewish life in World War II after walking through a re-cre- ation of the gate of the Krakow ghet- to. At the exhibit's end, they will be able to write prayers and place them in a replica of the Western Wall in Jerusalem, just as the pope did during his visit to Israel in 2000. These prayers will be transferred to Jerusalem after the exhibit closes. Pope's Blessing Last October, the pope gave his bless- ing to the project after hearing a brief presentation about the exhibit by Rabbi Abie Ingber, executive director of the local Hillel Jewish Student Center of Cincinnati; Dr. Yaffa Eliach, former Brueggeman Chair at Xavier University and president and founder of the Shtetl Foundation in New York; Dr. William Madges, chairman of the Theology Department at Xavier; and Dr. James Buchanan, director of the Edward B. Brueggeman Center for Dialogue. At that meeting, they presented the pope with a leather-bound overview of the project, a copy of which will be displayed at the exhibit. "The genesis of this project goes to the fall of 2003, when Eliach was at Xavier as the Brueggeman professor," said Madges. "While she was here, she had several conversations with James [Buchanan] and me about her research about the pope as a priest and bish- op.'' Eliach provided fascinating details about his lifelong relationship with the Jews, beginning with Karol Jozef Wojtyla's childhood in Wadowice. In this small town of 8,000 souls — 2,000 of whom were Jewish — Wojtyla spent the first 18 years of his life in an apartment rented in the home of a Jewish merchant, Yechiel Balamuth. There, he forged friend- ships with Jewish comrades such as Jerzy Kluger, Zygmut Selinger, Leopold Zweig and Poldek Goldberger. The exhibition features a videotaped interview with Kluger, who was the pope's closest friend growing up in Wadowice. Kluger is now a resident of Rome and remained a friend until the pope's death. Genesis Of The Exhibit "Yaffa laid out the story to us, saying that this was a very important part of John Paul's life that needed to be told," Madges said. "Yaffa said she would work on the project, and we all gave our skeptical coys' and moved for- ward." Eliach, a child survivor of the Holocaust, established the first center for Holocaust studies, documentation and research in the United States. She helped introduce Holocaust studies into colleges and universities in North and South America. Eliach had prior experience in con- structing teaching exhibits. Her cre- ation of a permanent exhibit at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., called "The Tower of Life," is both well known and heavily visited. From that focus on life, Eliach later founded the Shtetl Foundation. Her enthusiasm for the project con- tinued to grow and her leadership was an important impetus for getting the exhibit off the ground. Xavier President Jesuit Father Michael Graham gave his commit- ment as well and ultimately worked together with Cincinnati's Jewish Foundation to bring the project to fruition. The lead financial sponsor- ship of the exhibit is the Jewish Foundation of Cincinnati and Xavier University. Madges noted that the project is sig- nificant for numerous reasons. Pope John Paul II was the first pope since the first century to visit a synagogue, as well as being the pope who estab- lished diplomatic relations between the Vatican and Israel. "This exhibit is the kind of thing a Catholic university and a department of theology should be doing, namely bringing the Catholic tradition into fruitful dia- logue with others," Madges said. Rabbi Ingber concurred. "It was the first time since St. Paul that a pope had been into a syna- gogue," said Rabbi Ingber, whose grandfather was killed by the Nazis. "The pope carried 2,000 years of his- tory by going across the Tiber River in Rome [and entering a Roman syna- gogue]," said Rabbi Ingber. "Maybe God's plan for healing the world after the Holocaust was John Paul II." ❑ "A Blessing to One Another: Pope John Paul II and the Jewish People" runs through July 15 at the Xavier Art Gallery in the A.B. Cohen Center at Xavier University, 3800 Victory Parkway, in Cincinnati. Hours are 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Mondays- Fridays and 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays-Sundays (verify times for specific dates on the Web site as there are some days with early closing times). Admission is free. Additional tour times are avail- able for groups. For more infor- mation, call (513) 745-3007 or go to www.blessingexhibit.org . JET 5/19 2005 103