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Misremembered.


Eleven years in the writing, "We Remember: A Reflection on the Shoah," released last month by the Vatican's Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews, will not and should not satisfy those on any side of the tortuous debate about the church's responsibility for anti-Semitism and possible complicity in the Nazi extermination extermination

mass killing of animals or other pests. Implies complete destruction of the species or other group.
 of 6 million Jews. Although the sincerity of the statement's desire for genuine reconciliation between Christians and Jews cannot be second-guessed, the document as a whole is a grievous disappointment.

Most notably, some Jewish leaders have expressed sharp exception to, and even anger at, the Vatican's defense of Pius XII's failure to condemn Nazi atrocities in explicit terms. That reaction is understandable, although in fairness to the Vatican it should be said that Pius's alleged moral insensibility in·sen·si·ble  
adj.
1.
a. Imperceptible; inappreciable: an insensible change in temperature.

b. Very small or gradual: insensible movement.
 is not as self-evident as many - thanks largely to the distortions of Rolf Hochhuth's 1963 play, The Deputy - assume. Similarly, the pope's power "To Save Jews From Nazis" (as a recent New York Times headline put it) continues to be much exaggerated, even as the church's actual efforts to help hundreds of thousands of Jews are too easily dismissed. Nonetheless, calls for the opening of the Vatican's diplomatic archives to independent scholars should be heeded. Although it is not likely that Pius's moral culpability culpability (See: culpable)  will be greatly clarified in the process, there is no chance that Pius will be dealt with fairly until all relevant documents are made public.

Other Jewish spokespersons have commended the Vatican statement for its unequivocal condemnation of anti-Semitism, and of past Christian persecution and violence against Jews. The document's embrace of the religious heritage and aspirations shared by Jews and Catholics is another reason for commendation. For many involved in the ongoing Catholic-Jewish dialogue, "We Remember" is rightly seen as an incremental step in a long journey, in this regard resembling Nostra aerate aerate Physiology verb To add air or O2 into a liquid. See Waste treatment.  (1965), Vatican II's groundbreaking repudiation of the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Christ's death and affirmation of God's continuing covenant with the Jews. No one familiar with these issues can expect two thousand years of misunderstanding and worse to be set straight in a few decades.

Or without missteps along the way. In that regard, certain aspects of "We Remember" will need revising. Most unsatisfactory is the statement's refusal to attribute any fault or error for anti-Semitism to the church itself. "Erroneous and unjust interpretations of the New Testament regarding the Jewish people," Christian teachings that engendered "feelings of hostility," are acknowledged. But "the church as such," according to the Vatican, was never responsible. "The Catholic church desires to express her deep sorrow for the failures of her sons and daughters in every age," but never, it seems, does the church as a responsible entity have anything to repent for.

Catholics familiar with the traditional theological distinction that places the "church as such" over and above its fallible human members will understand how this kind of language is being used. The tradition holds that any suggestion of error on the part of Christ's mystical body is a theological oxymoron. But that very subtle distinction, expressing as it does a valid understanding of the church's unique access to religious truth, will certainly be lost on most readers of "We Remember." More likely, this assertion of the church's metaphysical reliability will be read, with reason, as the worst kind of this-worldly moral evasion. If over the course of centuries anti-Semitism was rarely if ever condemned but rather ignored, tolerated, even encouraged; if it infected not only the laity but priests and bishops; if church councils promulgated prom·ul·gate  
tr.v. prom·ul·gat·ed, prom·ul·gat·ing, prom·ul·gates
1. To make known (a decree, for example) by public declaration; announce officially. See Synonyms at announce.

2.
 laws segregating and discriminating against Jews; if until very recent times anti-Semitism was given vivid expression in the Good Friday liturgy (the "perfidious perfidious

Albion Napoleon’s epithet for England, “perfide Albion.” [Fr. Hist.: Misc.]

See : Treachery
 Jews") and in religious art; and if this led to pogroms, to the terrors of the Inquisition - if, in short, anti-Semitism suffused suf·fuse  
tr.v. suf·fused, suf·fus·ing, suf·fus·es
To spread through or over, as with liquid, color, or light: "The sky above the roof is suffused with deep colors" 
 much of Catholic culture for nineteen centuries, it is hard to see how "the church as such" can be held guiltless guilt·less  
adj.
Free of guilt; innocent.



guiltless·ly adv.

guilt
.

However one wants to understand the relationship between the mystical and the visible elements of the church, the incontrovertible in·con·tro·vert·i·ble  
adj.
Impossible to dispute; unquestionable: incontrovertible proof of the defendant's innocence.



in·con
 historical record attests to the fact that "the church," and not just its members, taught erroneously, even perniciously, about Judaism and the Jews. If the Vatican statement means only that no pope or ecumenical council or curial body ever elevated anti-Semitism to the level of formal doctrine, that is not so large a claim and will not, in the eyes of most people of any faith or none, absolve ab·solve  
tr.v. ab·solved, ab·solv·ing, ab·solves
1. To pronounce clear of guilt or blame.

2. To relieve of a requirement or obligation.

3.
a. To grant a remission of sin to.
 "the church as such" of responsibility for policies, attitudes, and actions that taught as clearly as any encyclical encyclical, originally, a pastoral letter sent out by a bishop, now a solemn papal letter, meant to inform the whole church on some particular matter of importance. Benedict XIV circulated the first known encyclical in 1740. .

Sad to say, "We Remember" is also tendentious ten·den·tious also ten·den·cious  
adj.
Marked by a strong implicit point of view; partisan: a tendentious account of the recent elections.
 and unpersuasive in its analysis of the nature of Nazi anti-Semitism and its relationship to what the document calls historic Christian anti-Judaism. Nazi racial anti-Semitism is attributed to "a false and exacerbated nationalism....essentially more sociological and political than religious." The document insists that the Holocaust; had "its roots outside of Christianity" as the "work of a thoroughly modern neo-pagan regime."

To be sure, there are important distinctions to be made between Christian anti-Semitism and Nazi race hatred. The Vatican is right to remind the world that the church condemned the "idolatry of race and of the state." Although it proved to be a woefully woe·ful also wo·ful  
adj.
1. Affected by or full of woe; mournful.

2. Causing or involving woe.

3. Deplorably bad or wretched:
 ineffective obstacle to the Nazis, and millions of Catholics rallied to the Nazi cause, the Catholic church did not in any sense perpetrate per·pe·trate  
tr.v. per·pe·trat·ed, per·pe·trat·ing, per·pe·trates
To be responsible for; commit: perpetrate a crime; perpetrate a practical joke.
 the Holocaust. However, to argue that there was no connection between nearly 2,000 years of church-inspired anti-Semitism and the Nazi assault on European Jewry is utterly fallacious and offensive. Similarly, for "We Remember" to rehearse the political history of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and not acknowledge how the church's opposition to liberalism and democracy weakened the forces best able to deter fascism is equally disingenuous.

Nazi totalitarianism was, as the document argues, an unprecedented modern horror whose unique evil was difficult for all but the most prescient to grasp at to catch at; to try to seize; as, Alexander grasped at universal empire,

See also: Grasp
 first. But Nazism did not spring full grown from the atheistic a·the·is·tic   also a·the·is·ti·cal
adj.
1. Relating to or characteristic of atheism or atheists.

2. Inclined to atheism.



a
 brow of the modern world. It had obvious roots in Europe's near and ancient Christian past.

How the church can repent or correct the manifest errors of its past if it cannot honestly admit to any errors at all is, to say the least, something of a problem. This is brought home again when "We Remember" calls Western democracies to account for their failure to give refuge to Jews seeking asylum from the Nazis. That failure to act placed a "heavy burden of conscience on the authorities in question," judges the Vatican. Fair enough. But is no similar burden to be placed on the shoulders of church authorities who failed to act in their own sphere?

Various contemporary challenges to Catholic teaching seem to make the appeal to church inerrancy in·er·ran·cy  
n.
Freedom from error or untruths; infallibility: belief in the inerrancy of the Scriptures.

Noun 1.
 an increasing temptation on the part of the Vatican. But as "We Remember" exemplifies, the doctrine of inerrancy errantly applied is no real help to authority in the end.
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Title Annotation:assessment of the Vatican's actions against anti-Semitism and Nazi hatred
Publication:Commonweal
Date:Apr 10, 1998
Words:1162
Previous Article:There goes the Church.(The Last Word)(Column)
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