Pope Francis has repeatedly called on
Israel to lay down arms in its defensive war against Hamas, whose Oct. 7
terrorist attack was the bloodiest day for Jews since the Holocaust.
It’s “forbidden to respond to terror with
terror,” the pontiff reportedly told Israeli President Isaac Herzog last
month. On Sunday, the pope said, “Some say, ‘This is terrorism and war.’ Yes, it is war. It is terrorism.”
The Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, which is based in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, stated
on Dec. 16 that an Israeli sniper “murdered” two Christian women in a
Gaza church. “No warning was given, no notification was provided,” it
said. “They were shot in cold blood inside the premises of the parish,
where there are no belligerents.”
On Oct. 7, the patriarchate blamed Israel
for being a victim. “The cycle of violence that has killed numerous
Palestinians and Israelis in the past months has exploded this morning,
Saturday Oct. 7, 2023,” it posted.
“The operation launched from Gaza and the reaction of the Israeli Army
are bringing us back to the worst periods of our recent history.”
It also called for “the international community” to “de-escalate” the situation and for a ceasefire and for negotiation of peace.
In some of the worst periods in less
recent history than what the patriarchate referenced, the Catholic
Church is accused of turning a blind eye to Nazi atrocities and it
murdered and oppressed Jews over many centuries.
“My conscience and moral duty require me
to state clearly that what happened on Oct. 7 in southern Israel is in
no way permissible and we cannot but condemn it. There is no reason for
such an atrocity,” Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin patriarch of
Jerusalem, wrote in an Oct. 24 letter to the diocese which now yields an error message.
“The same conscience, however, with a
great burden on my heart, leads me to state with equal clarity today
that this new cycle of violence has brought to Gaza over 5,000,
including many women and children, tens of thousands of wounded,
neighborhoods razed to the ground, lack of medicine, lack of water and
of basic necessities for over 2 million people,” he added. “These are
tragedies that cannot be understood and which we have a duty to denounce
and condemn unreservedly.”
He added that “It is only by ending
decades of occupation and its tragic consequences, as well as giving a
clear and secure national perspective to the Palestinian people that a
serious peace process can begin. Unless this problem is solved at its
root, there will never be the stability we all hope for.” (He also
referred to “the Queen of Palestine.”)
Warren Goldstein, chief rabbi of The Union
of Orthodox Synagogues of South Africa, said that the pope’s recent
comment that it is “forbidden to respond to terror with terror” compares
“Israel’s just war of self-defense to the barbarism of Hamas.” In so
doing, the pope “repeats the sins of Pope Pius the XII, from the Nazi
era, of surreptitiously supporting the forces of evil who seek to
annihilate the Jewish people,” Goldstein said.
“If Israel’s war is not just, then there has never been a just war,” he added. (He noted a Dec. 13 Wall Street Journal article,
in which David Rivkin and Peter Berkowitz note the pope’s “primitive
pacifism,” and that the “Catholic Church developed just-war theory, but
the pontiff doesn’t seem to understand it.”)
“It is a matter of public record that the
IDF has done more in this war and previous wars to minimize civilian
casualties than any other army in recorded history,” Goldstein said.
“International law accepts, unequivocally, that even a just war can, and
inevitably will, result in civilian casualties.”
Pope Pius XII, prior to his papacy, was
the Vatican ambassador to Nazi Germany and was “at the very least a
passive bystander to the Holocaust, if not an active supporter,”
Goldstein said.
“Pope Francis, I turn to you and say: ‘God
has given you an historic opportunity to atone for the sins of Pope
Pius XII and the Catholic Church, during the Holocaust,” he added.
“Pope Francis, to repent on behalf of the
Catholic Church, you must not stand by as a passive bystander like Pope
Pius did during the first Holocaust, while Iran seeks to perpetrate a
second one,” he said.
1 comment:
Let's see...Millions missing from the Vatican Bank. Child predator priests who are simply transferred to other locations as punishment and that is only the tip of the iceberg. Pope Francis should study Catholicism forced upon indigenous people throughout the Americas. Slavery, torture and killings in the name of the church. His stance on enforcing our borders isn't noble either. Yet, he lives behind 30' walls. The Catholic Church should mind its own business.
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