 |
APOSTOLIC JOURNEY
TO THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND CANADA
MEETING WITH THE REPRESENTATIVES OF
THE JEWISH ORGANIZATIONS OF THE UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA
ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS
JOHN PAUL II
Dade County, Miami
Friday, 11 September 1987
Dear Friends, Representatives of so many Jewish organizations
assembled here from across the United States.
My dear Jewish Brothers and Sisters,
1.
I am grateful to you for your kind words of
greeting. I am indeed pleased to be with you, especially at this time when the
United States tour of the Vatican Judaica Collection begins. The wonderful
material, including illuminated Bibles and prayer books, demonstrates but a small
part of the immense spiritual resources of Jewish tradition across the centuries
and up to the present time–spiritual resources often used in fruitful
cooperation with Christian artists.
It is Sitting at the beginning of our
meeting to emphasize our faith in the One God, who chose Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob, and made with them a Covenant of eternal love, which was never revoked (Cfr.
Gen. 27, 12; Rom. 11, 29). It was rather confirmed by the gift of the
Torah to Moses, opened by the
prophets to the hope of eternal redemption and to the universal commitment for
justice and peace. The Jewish people, the Church and all believers in the
Merciful God – who is invoked in the Jewish prayers as ‘Av Ha-Rakhamîm – can find in
this fundamental Covenant with the Patriarchs a very substantial starting point
for our dialogue and our common witness in the world.
It is also fitting to recall God’s
promise to Abraham and the spiritual fraternity which it established: "in your
descendants all the nations shall find blessing – all this because you obeyed my
command" (Gen. 22, 18). This spiritual fraternity, linked to obedience to God, requires
a
great mutual respect in humility and confidence. An objective consideration of
our relations during the centuries must take into account this great need.
2.
It is indeed worthy of note that the United States
was founded by people who came to these shores, often as religious refugees.
They aspired to being treated justly and to being accorded hospitality according
to the word of God, as we read in Leviticus: "You shall treat the alien who
resides with you no differently than the natives born among you; have the same
love for him as for yourself; for you too were once aliens in the land of Egypt.
I, the Lord, am your God" (Lev. 19, 34). Among these millions of immigrants there was a large
number of Catholics and Jews. The same basis religious principles of freedom and
justice, of equality and moral solidarity, affirmed in the Torah as well as in
the Gospel, were in fact reflected in the high human ideals and in the
protection of universal rights found in the United States. These in turn
exercised a strong positive influence on the history of Europe and other parts
of the world. But the paths of the immigrants in their new land were not always
easy. Sadly enough, prejudice and discrimination were also known in the New
World as well as in the Old. Nevertheless, together, Jews and Catholics have
contributed to the success of the American experiment in religious freedom, and,
in this unique concept, have given to the world a vigorous form of interreligious dialogue between our two ancient traditions. For those engaged in
this dialogue, so important to the Church and to the Jewish people, I pray: May
God bless you and make you strong for his service!
3.
At the same time, our common heritage, task and
hope do not eliminate our distinctive identities. Because of her specific
Christian witness. " The Church must preach Jesus Christ to the world". In so
doing we proclaim that "Christ is our peace" (Guidelines, 1974.
I). As the Apostle Paul said: "All
this is from God, who through Christ reconciled us to himself and gave us the
ministry of reconciliation" (2 Cor. 5, 18). At the same time, we recognize and appreciate the
spiritual treasures of the Jewish people and their religious witness to God. A
fraternal theological dialogue will try to understand, in the light of the
mystery of redemption, how differences in faith should not cause enmity but open
up the way of "reconciliation", so that in the end "God may be all in all"
(1 Cor. 15, 28).
In this regard I am pleased that the
National Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Synagogue Council of America are
initiating a consultation between Jewish leaders and bishops which should carry
forward a dialogue on issues of the greatest interest to the two faith
communities.
4.
Considering history in the light of the principles
of faith in God, we must also reflect on the catastrophic event of the Shoah,
that ruthless and inhuman attempt to exterminate the Jewish people in Europe, an
attempt that resulted in millions of victims – including women and children, the
elderly and the sick – exterminated only because they were Jews.
Considering this mystery of the suffering
of Israel’s children, their witness of hope, of faith and of humanity under
dehumanizing outrages, the Church experiences ever more deeply her common bond
with the Jewish people and with their treasure of spiritual riches in the past
and in the present.
It is also fitting to recall the strong,
unequivocal efforts of the Popes against anti-Semitism and Nazism at the height
of the persecution against the Jews. Back in 1938, Pius XI declared that "anti-Semitism
cannot be admitted", and he declared the total opposition between Christianity
and Nazism by stating that the Nazi cross is an "enemy of the Cross of Christ"
(Eiusdem Allocutio in die Navitatis Domini, 1938).
And I am convinced that history will reveal ever more clearly and convincingly
how deeply Pius XII felt the tragedy of the Jewish people, and how hard and
effectively he worked to assist them during the Second World War.
Speaking in the name of humanity and
Christian principles, the Bishop’s Conference of the United States denounced the
atrocities with a clear statement: "Since the murderous assault on Poland,
utterly devoid of every semblance of humanity, there has been a premeditated and
systematic extermination of the people of this nation. The same satanic
technique is being applied to many other peoples. We feel a deep sense of
revulsion against the cruel indignities heaped upon the Jews in conquered
countries and upon defenceless peoples not of our faith" (Conf. Episc.
Foederatarum Civitatum amer. Sept. Declaratio, die 14 nov. 1942).
We also remember many others, who, at
risk of their own lives, helped persecuted Jews, and are honoured by the Jews
with the title of "Tzaddigę ‘ummôt ha-’olâm" (Righteous of the Nations).
5.
The terrible tragedy of your people has led many
Jewish thinkers to reflect on the human condition with acute insights. Their
vision of man and the roots of this vision in the teachings of the Bible, which
we share in our common heritage of the Hebrew Scriptures, offer Jewish and
Catholic scholars much useful material for reflection and dialogue. And I am
thinking here above all of the contribution of Martin Buber and also of Mahler
and Levinas.
In order to understand even more deeply
the meaning of the Shoah and the historical roots of anti-Semitism
that are related to it, joint collaboration and studies by Catholics and Jews on the
Shoah should be continued. Such studies have already taken place through many
conferences in your country, such as the National Workshops on Christian-Jewish
Relations. The religious and historical implications of the Shoah for Christians
and Jews will now be taken up formally by the International Catholic-Jewish
Liaison Committee, meeting later this year in the United States for the first
time. And as was affirmed in the important and very cordial meeting I had with
Jewish leaders in Castelgandolfo on 1 September, a Catholic document on the
Shoah and anti-Semitism will be forthcoming, resulting from such serious
studies.
Similarly, it is to be hoped that common
educational programs on our historical and religious relations, which are well
developed in your country, will truly promote mutual respect and teach future
generations about the Holocaust so that never again will such a horror be
possible. Never again!
When meeting the leaders of the Polish
Jewish community, in Warsaw, in June of this year, I underscored the fact that
through the terrible experience of the Shoah , your people have become "a loud
warning voice for all of humanity, for all nations, for all the powers of this
world, for every system and every individual... a saving warning" (Ioannis
Pauli PP. II Allocutio ad hebraicam communitatem in Polonia commorantem,
die 14 iun. 1987: Insegnamenti di Giovanni Paolo II, X, 2 (1987) 2221).
6.
It is also desirable that in every diocese
Catholics should implement, under the direction of the bishops, the statement of
the Second Vatican Council and the subsequent instructions issued by the Holy
See regarding the correct way to preach and teach about Jews and Judaism. I know
that a great many efforts in this direction have already been made by Catholics,
and I wish to express my gratitude to all those who have worked so diligently
for this aim.
7.
Necessary for any sincere dialogue is the intention
of each partner to allow others to define themselves "in the light of their own
religious experience" (Guidelines, 1974, Introd.). In fidelity to this affirmation, Catholics recognize
among the elements of the Jewish experience that Jews have a religious
attachment to the Land, which finds its roots in biblical tradition.
After the tragic extermination of the
Shoah , the Jewish people began a new period in their history. They have
a right to a homeland as does any civil nation, according to international law. "For the
Jewish people who live in the State of Israel and who preserve in that land such
precious testimonies to their history and their faith, we must ask for the
desired security and the due tranquillity that is the prerogative of every
nation and condition of life and of progress for every society" (Ioannis
Pauli PP. II Redemptionis Anno, die 20 apr. 1984: Insegnamenti di
Giovanni Paolo II, VII, 1 (1984) 1072).
What has been said about the right to a
homeland also applies to the Palestinian people, so many of whom remain homeless
and refugees. While all concerned must honestly reflect on the past– Muslims no
less than Jews and Christians – it is time to forge those solutions which will
lead to a just, complete and lasting peace in that area. For this peace I
earnestly pray.
8.
Finally, as I thank you once again for the warmth
of your greeting to me, I give praise and thanks to the Lord for this fraternal
meeting, for the gift of dialogue between our peoples, and for the new and
deeper understanding between us. As our long relationship moves towards its
third millennium, it is our great privilege in this generation to be witnesses
to this progress.
It is my sincere hope that, as partners
in dialogue, as fellow believers in the God who revealed himself, as children of
Abraham, we will strive to render a common service to humanity, which is so much
needed in this our day. We are called to collaborate in service and to unite in
a common cause wherever a brother or sister is unattended, forgotten, neglected
or suffering in any way; wherever human rights are endangered or human dignity
offended; wherever the rights of God are violated or ignored.
With the Psalmist, I now repeat: "I will
hear what God proclaims; the Lord – for he proclaims peace to his people, and to
his faithful ones, and to those who put in him their hope" (Ps. 85,
9).
To all of you, dear friends, dear
brothers and sisters; to all of you dear Jewish people of America: with great
hope I wish you the peace of the Lord: Shalom! Shalom! God bless you on this
Sabbath and in this year: Shabbath Shalom! Shanah Tovah weHatimah Tovah!
© Copyright 1987 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
|