Rome – B’nai B’rith Calls For Closer Jewish-Catholic Relations During Meeting With Pope

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    File Photo: Pope Francis and the Rabbi of the Western Wall Shmuel Rabinovitch walk towards the Western Wall, Judaism's holiest prayer site, in Jerusalem's Old City May 26, 2014. Reuters‎Rome – B’nai B’rith International called for closer ties between Jews and Catholics during an audience with Pope Francis on Thursday, during the pontiff’s first meeting with a Jewish group following the Vatican announced that it was entering into a treaty on religious issues with the “state of Palestine.”

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    The document, which was signed last week, elicited fierce opposition in Jerusalem, with the Foreign Ministry asserting that it “harms the international effort to convince the PA to return to direct negotiations with Israel.”

    Raising the issue with Francis, B’nai B’rith President Allan J. Jacobs stated that he believed that “no enduring Palestinian-Israeli peace can be possible as long as powerful forces deny the right of a Jewish state to live within any boundaries in Jews’ only ancestral homeland.”

    “It is in light of this that it is so important that Palestinians not be afforded incentives to pursue political aims outside of meaningful and direct negotiations, compromise and comprehensive bilateral agreement with Israel,” he said.

    Jacobs also praised the Pope for his close relations with the Jews, citing his commitment to “advancing the path of your predecessors in signaling the Church’s commitment to the Jewish people, its respect for Judaism, its denunciation of persisting anti-Semitism, and its due recognition of the State of Israel.”

    Francis has maintained close ties with the Jewish community of Argentina during his time as a Cardinal there and was widely feted by Jewish organizations when he ascended to the papacy in 2013.

    The B’nai B’rith delegation presented Francis with a copy of the Jerusalem Post from 1965 announcing the Vatican’s Nostra aetate declaration, which absolved the Jewish people of any collective guilt over the death of Jesus and condemned anti-Semitism.

    Jacobs said that Nostra aetate provides hope for the resolution of other religious conflicts, praising Israel’s religious freedom and offering sympathies for the suffering of Christians in the middle east.

    The “continuing, extraordinary transformation in the relationship between our faith communities can serve as a source of inspiration and optimism for so many others around the world, not least at a time of tensions and conflicts too often influenced by religion,” Jacobs said.

    “Looking back on these fifty years of regular dialogue between the Catholic Church and Judaism, I cannot help but thank the Lord for the great progress that has been made,” the Pope replied.

    “Many initiatives fostering reciprocal understanding and dialogue have been undertaken; above all a sense of mutual trust and appreciation has developed. There are many areas in which we as Jews and Christians can continue to work together for the good of the peoples of our time. Respect for life and creation, human dignity, justice and solidarity unite us for the development of society and for securing a future rich in hope for generations to come. In a particular way, we are called to pray and work together for peace. Unfortunately, there are many countries and regions of the world that live in situations of conflict – I think in particular of the Holy Land and the Middle East – and that require a courageous commitment to peace, which is not only to be longed for, but sought after and built up patiently and tenaciously by everyone, especially believers.”

    Content is provided courtesy of the Jerusalem Post


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    8 years ago

    lo meiktzuch vlo medivshuch

    yidele1
    yidele1
    8 years ago

    this bum place nice politics on one hand he angers israel by interfering with israeli politics and with the other hand he plays nice to the jews , antisemite to its fullest

    shvigger
    shvigger
    8 years ago

    Feh!

    8 years ago

    I don’t want to sound silly but I just don’t get it. Can someone tell me Who’s that guy in the funny white clothes next to Rabbi Rabinowitz.

    8 years ago

    The galach-in-chief is a very holy man and a big friend of EY and yidden. He disagrees with the politics of the current government on the settlements issue but so does half of the American Jewish community. We are much better off with him in Rome than virtually any other galach-in-chief in recent memory.