Pope remembers Jewish Holocaust victims during Israel visit

By Victor L. Simpson, Gaea News Network
Monday, May 11, 2009

Pope pays homage to Holocaust victims in Israel

JERUSALEM — Pope Benedict XVI pledged to remember the six million Jews killed in the Holocaust on Monday, as he sought to repair strains created by his decision to lift the excommunication of a bishop who denied the genocide took place.

Other tensions dated back even further to the Vatican’s wartime legacy. The pope said said the cry of the victims “still echoes in our hearts” as he paid his respects during an emotional ceremony at Israel’s national Holocaust memorial, Yad Vashem.

But the German-born pontiff did not delve into any of the Holocaust-related controversies during the start of a visit to Israel and the Palestinian territories. And Yad Vashem officials gave the speech a lukewarm response.

His earlier calls for the establishment of a Palestinian homeland also put a damper on the high-profile trip, just the second official visit by a pope, by putting him at odds with Israel’s new government.

Benedict, who briefly spent time in the Hitler Youth corps as a teen, shook hands and spoke to six elderly Holocaust survivors and rekindled Yad Vashem’s eternal flame before addressing the audience.

“I have come to stand in silence before this monument erected to honor the memory of the millions of Jews killed in the horrific tragedy of the Shoah,” he said, his voice shaking, as he used the Hebrew word for Holocaust. “They lost their lives but they will never lose their names.”

“As we stand here in silence, their cry still echoes in our hearts. It is a cry raised against every act of injustice and violence. It is a perpetual reproach against the spilling of innocent blood,” he added, saying the church is “working tirelessly to ensure that hatred will never reign in the hearts of man again.”

In an inscription at the visitor’s book at the memorial, he quoted from the Book of Lamentations: “His mercies are not spent.”

Benedict is using a weeklong pilgrimage to the Holy Land to reach out to both Muslims and Jews. He spent three days in neighboring Jordan before arriving in Israel.

While Israel’s relations with the Vatican have improved greatly since Benedict’s predecessor, John Paul II, visited in 2000, differences remain, none deeper than the widespread belief in Israel that the Vatican did not do enough to halt the Nazi genocide of European Jewry.

Israel and the Vatican are at odds over the legacy of World War II pontiff Pius XII, a candidate for sainthood. Benedict has referred to Pius as a great churchman, and in September, he praised what he called Pius’ “courageous and paternal dedication” in trying to save Jews by quiet diplomacy.

At Yad Vashem, Benedict did not visit the main part of the museum, where a photo caption says Pius did not protest the Nazi genocide of Jews and maintained a largely “neutral position.”

Benedict himself has faced questions for his involvement in the Hitler Youth. Benedict says he was coerced.

The pope also outraged Jews earlier this year when he revoked the excommunication of a British bishop who denies the Holocaust. Ties were further strained when a senior Vatican official said during Israel’s recent military campaign in Gaza that the territory resembled a “big concentration camp.”

Rabbi Israel Meir Lau, chairman of Yad Vashem’s board of directors and a former chief rabbi of Israel, called the speech important but said he also found it lacking.

“There is a clear difference between ‘killed’ and ‘murdered.’ There is a difference between saying millions in the Holocaust and saying six million. The word six was not said,” Lau, himself a Holocaust survivor, told Israel TV. “There was certainly no apology here.”

Avner Shalev, Yad Vashem’s chairman, also praised the speech in general terms but said two of his expectations had not been met: The pope did not mention anti-Semitism or explicitly say who perpetrated the Holocaust. “He didn’t mention Nazis or German Nazis or collaborators,” Shalev said.

But Edward Mosberg, one of the survivors who met the pope, said he was satisfied. “This was very important,” he said.

Earlier Monday, the pope waded into Middle Eastern politics, urging Israelis and Palestinians to resolve their differences.

“In union with people of goodwill everywhere, I plead with all those responsible to explore every possible avenue in the search for a just resolution of the outstanding difficulties, so that both peoples may live in peace in a homeland of their own within secure and internationally recognized borders,” he told a welcoming ceremony at Israel’s airport.

While Benedict has spoken in favor of a Palestinian homeland in the past, the timing and location of his comments were noteworthy. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has pointedly refused to endorse the two-state solution since his election, was in the audience. Netanyahu did not speak at the ceremony, then flew to Egypt for talks on regional issues with President Hosni Mubarak.

The pope has tried to improve interfaith relations throughout his four-year papacy, and as a cardinal, had a long record of promoting dialogue with other faiths. But Benedict has had to tread carefully on his Middle East visit because of past gaffes.

Benedict angered many in the Muslim world three years ago when he quoted a medieval text that characterized some of Islam’s Prophet Muhammad’s teachings as “evil and inhuman,” particularly “his command to spread by the sword the faith.” He later expressed regret that his comments offended Muslims.

Before leaving Jordan, he said he had a “deep respect” for Islam.

After arriving at the airport, the pope flew by helicopter to Jerusalem for another red-carpet ceremony. Mayor Nir Barkat handed Benedict a replica of an ancient map of the world, with Jerusalem in the center and dozens of children from three schools — Christian, Jewish and Muslim — welcomed him. The children waved Israeli and Vatican flags and red carnations, and many wore T-shirts that read, “I’m with the pope in Jerusalem.”

“He loves us and wants peace,” said David Sahagian, a 10-year-old from a Christian school in east Jerusalem. “I want there to be peace in Jerusalem and I want him to give us his blessing.”

He later headed to the residence of Israel’s ceremonial president, Shimon Peres.

Peres and Benedict planted an olive tree together, and the Israeli president presented the pope two gifts: wheat stalks developed by Israeli scientists and called Benedict XVI in his honor, and a 300,000-word Hebrew text of the Jewish Bible inscribed on a tiny silicon particle, using nanotechnology.

“I don’t think you have one of these at the Vatican,” Peres quipped.

Before speaking, the pope met privately with Peres and the parents of Israeli soldier Gilad Schalit, who was captured by Hamas militants three years ago and remains in captivity in the Gaza Strip.

In the Gaza Strip, Palestinians were angry that the pope met the family of the captive Israeli soldier, but would not meet with relatives of any of the 11,000 Palestinian prisoners imprisoned in Israel.

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