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Rome, Italy - Rabbi in Vatican Says Wartime Pope Let Jews Down

Published on:   Oct 06, 2008 at 08:47 AM
News Source: Reuters
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Rabbi Shear-Yashuv Cohen, Chief Rabbi of Haifa, is interviewed by a television crew at his hotel in Rome October 6, 2008.
Rabbi Shear-Yashuv Cohen, Chief Rabbi of Haifa, is interviewed by a television crew at his hotel in Rome October 6, 2008.
Rome, Italy - The first Jew to address a Vatican said today that wartime Pope Pius XII should have done more to help Jews during the Holocaust.

Rabbi Shear-Yashuv Cohen said he might have stayed away if he had known the major Church gathering coincided with ceremonies to honor Pius on the 50th anniversary of his death.

"We feel that the late pope (Pius) should have spoken up much more strongly than he did," Cohen, 80, said in an interview hours before he was due to address the gathering of Catholic bishops from around the world.

Cohen said that in his speech he planned to make an indirect reference to Jewish disappointment about Pius as well as an appeal to all religious leaders to denounce Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

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Last month Pope Benedict forcefully defended Pius, saying he "spared no effort" on behalf of Jews during World War II.

Some Jews maintain Pius did not do enough to save Jews while the Vatican says he worked behind the scenes to help because more direct intervention would have worsened the situation.

"He may have helped in secrecy many of the victims and many of the refugees but the question is 'could he have raised his voice and would it have helped or not?'" Cohen said.

"We, as the victims, feel yes. I am not empowered by the families of the millions of deceased to say 'we forget, we forgive,'" said Cohen, who is chief rabbi of Haifa in Israel.

Pius is one of the most difficult issues in Catholic-Jewish relations. On Thursday the Vatican marks the 50th anniversary of his death.

"I did not know (the anniversary commemorations) happened during the same meeting. If I had known ... I might have refrained from coming because we feel that the pain is still here," Cohen said.

"I have to make it very clear that we, the rabbis, the leadership of the Jewish people, cannot as long as the survivors still feel painful agree that this leader of the Church in a time of crisis should be honored now. It is not our decision. It pains us. We are sorry it is being done," he said.

Cohen said only God knows if Pius spoke out enough against the Holocaust: "God is the judge ... he knows the truth."

Cohen said he would also appeal to the synod to denounce Ahmadinejad, who made another virulent anti-Israel speech last month at the United Nations. He said he would "appeal to the leaders of religion not to keep quiet, not to stand aside."

"He says that he wants to annihilate Israel and destroy it. The problem in the days of the Second World War was that people didn't believe that what Adolf Hitler was saying, he really meant to fulfill.

"Unfortunately we had the Holocaust and I am sure that if we have a painful memory it is because we don't feel that enough was done by the leadership of the religions in the world and other powerful leaders to stop it at that time. We expect them to do it today," he said.


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Read Comments (2)  —  Post Yours »

1

 Oct 06, 2008 at 10:23 AM Understatement Says:

The Catholic Church AKA Edom didnt do alot to help Jews during Shoah... That could be the understatement of the year! Why would our enemy help us? All Edom has sought to do since inception is destroy us physically and spiritually.

2

 Oct 06, 2008 at 11:36 AM Lawrence M. Reisman Says:

To our point of view, what he did or didn't do for the Jews during WWII is the central issue. If we look around the edges, what we see isn't pretty either. In 1941, knowing that the Ustachi was massacring Serbian civilians, he sent them his X-mas blessings. In 1944, when Rome had been liberated by the Allies and he had nothing to fear personally, he was notably silent about the massacre of Jews in Hungary. In 1946, after the Kielce progrom, he refused, having been asked, to condemn post-WWII Polish anti-Semitism. And let us not forget the Vatican role in the ratlines that allowed thousands of genocidal war criminals to escape allied justice. The evil at the outside points to the evil at the core.

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