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NEWSLETTER No: 57 - March 2004
Christian & Jewish
SCENE
Australian CCJ to hold first ever
national conference over the
June Long Weekend
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South Australian CCJ co-chair honoured
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With arrangements still in the planning stages,
the Australian Council of Christians and Jews has confirmed it will hold its
first ever major National Conference in Melbourne over the June long weekend
from June 12 to 14.
A full program of sessions is being planned to deal with the manifold issues
with which the Australian Council and its State branches are concerned and
culminating in a major public forum presentation on the Sunday evening.
This will take place in the Slome Hall of Temple Beth Israel, situated in Alma
Road 8t Kilda which will be preceded by a cocktail party for delegates and
invited guests.
The business sessions will take place on Sunday afternoon and Monday morning and
will also be held at Temple Beth Israel. Australian Chairman, Henry Mendelson
and CCJ Victoria chairman, Michael Cohen, who was recently elected Vice Chairman
of the National Council, are finalising Conference arrangements. While details
were not available at press time for this issue of Scene, members will
receive notification by mail.
Meanwhile, the Victorian Council is seeking billets from its members. Anyone
in a position to offer accommodation is asked to contact the CCJ office in Kew,
on Tel/Fax: (03) 9817 3848 or email to:
Anglican primate announces his early retirement
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The head of the Anglican Church in Australia, Archbishop Dr Peter Carnley,
has announced that he will step down next year. Dr Carnley said he was
announcing his retirement early to provide an opportunity for a successor to be
appointed and to take up the position with minimal interruption. Dr Carnley's
liberal stance on many issues has attracted criticism from church conservatives.
NSW Council holds planning day
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A full day was appropriated last month by the NSW Council to examine its
programming content and to plan ahead for the remainder of the year.
NSW President, Rabbi Jeffrey Cohen, outlined the need for the Council to
outreach further into its constituency with meaningful programs in addition to
the staple fare of commemoration services, discussion groups and panel sessions
on which it has based its programming philosophy in past years.
A series of working groups were appointed, each to examine new initiatives
and programming formats. “We want to present a more meaningful presence in
2004 and bring the Council more to the forefront of community awareness?,
Rabbi Cohen said.
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The SA Council’s Co-Chair, Rev. Margaret Polkinghorne received an A.M.
(Member of the Order of Australia) in the New Year Honours List. The award was
given in part for her services to better inter-faith relations in SA’s Council
for Christians and Jews.
Margaret Polkinghorne, South Australia’s second woman to be ordained a
minister in the Methodist Church was cited as a role model for women who are
leaders in Christian organisations.
Ordained a Methodist minister in 1976, The 69-year-old mother of three has
tirelessly contributed to the Uniting Church Adult Fellowship, including a
recent two-year stint as president. In addition she is a council member for
Prince Alfred College and the incoming president of the SA Council of Churches.
“I believe that this award not only shows how valuable Margaret’s
contribution has been to Australia, but also to our own work in the Council. It
underlines as well how important our Council’s work is seen to be by the
government and to us?, said co-chair, Evan Zuesse who recently also presented
a paper on "Ecology, Biodiversity and the Jewish Tradition? at Flinders
University.
From a Christianity perspective, Father Denis Edwards spoke on the
application of Trinitarian categories to ecological concerns, and for Islam Dr.
Arthur Saniotis of the University of Adelaide, on Islamic attitudes to ecology.
Also during the last few months the south Australian Council of Christians
and Jews has held discussion groups on the important Jewish concept of the
Noahite laws. Rabbi Yossi Engel, of the Adelaide Hebrew Congregation and a CCJ
member, delivered an excellent review of this concept.
Victorian Council’s AGM hears from both sides of the
table
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After the brief Annual General Meeting’s brief business session as promised
by its Chairman, Michael Cohen (pictured below) Victorian CCJ was privy to a
conversation earlier this month between Mt. Scopus Jewish Studies teacher, Paul
Forgasz and North Balwyn Trinity Uniting Church Minister, Paul Tonson, on the
place of the other in Jewish and Christian traditions, themed as “Stranger
danger.? After the two conversationalists had dealt with the story of Hagar
and Ishmael, the audience was split into small groups and invited to dialogue on
the topics.
There
ensued some lively exchanges of views and a healthy component of differences
laced with commonality from both sides of the table. Consensus at the end of the
evening was that this type of exchange makes for positive outcomes and the
Council was encouraged to organise similar evenings in the future.
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ETHICS
AND GLOBALIZATION:
THE INTERRELIGIOUS CHALLENGE
An edited version* of The 2003 Meriol Trevor Lecture
presented at the University of Bath by Rev. John T. Pawlikowski, OSM, Ph.D.,
Professor of Social Ethics, Director, Catholic-Jewish Studies Program Catholic
Theological Union Chicago, President, International Council of Christians &
Jews
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Globalisation" is certainly a term that generates great passion today
nearly everywhere. Whether people are supportive or in strong opposition to the
reality of globalisation they very often express their viewpoint with great
gusto. I personally tend to believe the process has a considerable number of
positive features, but I also recognize the profound dislocation and misery it
has brought to many.
My perspective in part is based on the recognition that
"globalisation" in one form or another has in fact been taking place
for most of human history as people have continued to move out of very confined
geographic and cultural settings into ones of increasing diversity. The worlds
of Rome and Greece represented such an early form of globalisation in my view.
The missionary activity of Christianity in fact represented another period of
intense globalisation with all the ambiguities that are evident in the present
form of globalisation. And I could cite many later examples. To the extent that
the globalisation process enables us to break down cultural, ethnic and
religious barriers and brings us into increased human understanding and
solidarity it is a good thing. Insofar as it becomes a generator of cultural and
economic hegemony by rich and powerful nations over other peoples it deserves
strong condemnation. As I look at the process of globalisation today I think it
is in fact doing both. The challenge before us is how to erase its shadow side.
Something went terribly wrong
In most cases, globalisation also has resulted in the penetration and
expansion of Western food, films, clothing, music, sports, media and many other
forms of popular culture into all parts of the world. Personal benefits promised
by globalisation include a significant rise in the standard of living on a mass
scale and the accumulation of goods combined with rapid transportation and
communication.
But clearly something went terribly wrong with such optimistic assurances.
Even people directly connected with the globalisation process on the economic
level have now spoken to its failures. The 2001 Nobel Prize winner in economics,
Joseph Stiglitz, in his much discussed volume Globalisation And Discontents
is one who has severely critiqued the Bretton Woods system from within.
The utopian promises proclaimed at the creation of the present global
economic system have not on the whole come to realization. Hence for many
throughout the world, including many deeply involved with the religious
community, "globalisation" has become a four-letter word. These
critics view globalisation as a monster that devours traditional cultures and
religious beliefs, condemning millions of people on the globe to a permanent
prison of economic depression and political anger. That anger, it is charged
with considerable justification, fuels anti-Western terrorist groups and
destabilises fragile regimes.
Constructive involvement
Today millions of people in the West are bewildered and even stunned by the
strident rejection of globalisation and its rich promises of a new world order.
Facing this reality, I would like t to reflect on ways in which religious
communities can enter the increasingly strident debate about globalisation in a
constructive way. One vital part of this process is the recognition of how
religious communities in the past have often been involved in
"dehumanising" others, including people in other religious traditions,
and even participating in their actual destruction. The era of missionary
expansion by Christianity certainly involved violence against indigenous people
even if we view evangelisation as an integral component of Christian
self-understanding.
Certainly Pope John Paul II has recognized this dark reality and expressed
contrition during the moving liturgy of reconciliation he celebrated on the
first Sunday of Lent 2000 as part of Catholicism's millennium observance. And
the same holds true for the long history of Christian antisemitism for which
John Paul II also apologized in that same ceremony and subsequently during his
historic visit to Jerusalem. And we are quite aware of how religion in many
cases sustained the vicious Apartheid system in South Africa and how the
churches' missionary effort, intentionally or not, was instrumental in
establishing a social order in Rwanda, the most Catholic country in Africa, in
which the seeds of eventual genocide were planted.
If religious communities fail to cleanse their language and practice of
religious violence toward the other they will eliminate themselves as effective
agents of humanization and solidarity in the global era. Hans Küng's often
quoted dictum that there cannot be peace in the world without peace among
religions remains as true as ever. Religion also has a role to play in ensuring
that groups in a society are not "neutralized" in terms of their
fundamental humanity. The Holocaust scholar Henry Friedlander showed some years
ago how the neutral language in reporting daily death counts in the Nazi
extermination camps paralleled the language used by the United States military
in reporting Vietnamese casualties during the Vietnam War. Religion must always
fight against such neutralization, even of an enemy. For if neutralization of
particular groups in society is allowed a foothold, it exposes these groups to
the possibility of more violent attacks which again, in times of social crisis,
can turn into genocidal or near-genocidal actions against them.
Impact on reconciliation
The role of religions in international peacemaking and reconciliation is
rapidly becoming a central activity of religious communities in our day.
Religious communities cannot enter the effort at peacemaking and reconciliation
successfully and with integrity unless they first confront the violence they
have often promoted in language and action. But having done this, I believe
religious communities can have a significant impact on peacemaking and
reconciliation. For one, they have the grassroots connections already mentioned.
Secondly, many present conflicts involve conflicting religious beliefs, at
least in part. We have seen religiously-based communities operate with
considerable success through such organizations as the World Conference of
Religions for Peace and the San Egidio community. A number of organizations tied
to Asian religions have also made important contributions in this regard.
Caritas International, a Catholic based organization with ties to the Vatican,
has worked extensively on reconciliation. Caritas recently produced a
comprehensive handbook on reconciliation by my colleague at Catholic Theological
Union in Chicago, Professor Robert Schreiter.
As with ecology, there may be significant differences within religious
communities on the interpretations of peacemaking and reconciliation. Some
religious communities see absolutely no role for the military in this process.
Others believe force, whether by an official army or a revolutionary military,
can still constitute a legitimate response to gross injustice.
Nelson Mandela, often honoured today as a champion of peace in post-Apartheid
South Africa, endorsed the violent activities of the African National Congress,
which found religious support in the Kairos Declaration endorsed by many
prominent Christian leaders in the country. And some would argue the perspective
of the International Criminal Court that any authentic reconciliation must
include the trial and punishment of those responsible for gross violations of
human rights.
In the Christian-Jewish dialogue I notice a growing disparity of viewpoints
on peacemaking and reconciliation, especially with regard to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the war in Iraq. Nonetheless, despite the
obstacles, I remain convinced religious communities can make a major
contribution on a global level to peacemaking and reconciliation.
* The full text of Fr. Pawlikowski’s speech is available on
request
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Editorial
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Guidelines for Interfaith Dialogue
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The word on everyone’s lips at the moment ?unfortunately ? is Passion.
Passionate as we may be from whatever point of view, the fact remains that what
we have on our hands is a film. A piece of entertainment. Were cynicism not to
rule the roost any more than at any other time, one might even be inclined to
suggest that it is a pure piece of commercial undertaking designed more to make
money than maintain the message of a relatively obscure and unreservedly radical
form of Catholic conservatism. If Gibson’s exercise in horror and sadism is to
follow in the footsteps of its many previous films on the life of Jesus, it will
fade into the dust-laden archives of celluloid obscurity within the foreseeable
future. That, in the meantime, it has served the cause of bringing the Gospels
? in whatever form of interpretation, accurate or otherwise, can well be seen
in some church circles as a positive effect. Certainly it has served and will
continue to serve well the cause of Bible publishing and Bible sales and if it
achieves little more than that, it will be able to lay claim to a positive
outcome. On the other hand, it is sad to reflect on the fact that Jewish critics
of the film in many parts of the world have made statements which can only be
described as alarmist, sensational and sometimes even bordering on the
demagogic. Fortunately we live in a society here in Australia which is not
threatened by violence of the kind that harks back to the Crusader, the Nazi or
the Czarist eras. We do not see our society being undermined or threatened and
we serve our cause best by striving to continue the work of dialogue and mutual
understanding which has been under way in Australia for the past 30 or so years.
Indeed, there is in the phenomenon of this film a challenge as never before.
International Council President, John Pawlikowski recognised this when he
described the film ? however much he may dislike it ? as a teaching tool to
bolster our efforts at reconciliation and communication between far sighted
Christians and Jews. The Reform Judaism Union’s US President, Rabbi Eric
Yoffie goes even further. His words should resonate throughout the Council of
Christians and Jews’ 38 global branches like a clarion call: “This is the
moment for which all those relationships have been built and if we haven’t
been building those relationships, we need to start immediately.“ A successful
response to The Passion of Christ will not be measured by the numbers of
speeches we give or the numbers of articles we write but by what our Christian
friends say in their churches and schools?, he said.
The editor welcomes letters on any subject relative to the interests of
Jewish Christian dialogue. Please address these to “Scene?
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In a world in which Christians have many neighbors, dialogue is not only an
activity of meetings and conferences. It is also a way of living out Christian
faith in relationship and commitment to those neighbors with whom Christians
share towns, cities, nations, and the earth as a whole. This in no way replaces
or limits our Christian obligation to witness, as partners enter into dialogue
with their respective commitments. Neighbours may be partners in common socio-
economic and political crises and quests; companions in intellectual and
spiritual exploration; or, literally, the people next door.
In some places, Christians and the church as an institution are in positions of
power and influence, and their neighbors are without power. In other places it
is the Christians who are powerless.
There are also situations of tension and conflict where dialogue may not be
possible or opportunities very limited. In many places people of different
living faiths interact not only with each other but also with people of various
ideologies. The emergence of new religious groups has brought new dimensions and
tensions to interreligious relationships.
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Churches should seek ways in which Christian communities can enter into
dialogue with their neighbors of different faiths and ideologies. They
should also discover ways of responding to similar initiatives by their
neighbors.
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Dialogues should normally be planned together. They may well focus on
particular issues: theological or religious, political or social.
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Partners in dialogue should take stock of the religious, cultural and
ideological diversity of their local situations. Only by being alert both to
the particular areas of tension and discrimination and to the particular
opportunities for conversation and cooperation in their own context will
Christians and their neighbors be able to create the conditions for dialogue.
They should be especially alert to infringements of the basic human rights of
religious, cultural, or ideological minority groups.
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Partners in dialogue should be free to define themselves. One of the
functions of dialogue is to allow participants to describe and witness to their
faith in their own terms. Self-serving descriptions of other people's faith are
one of the roots of prejudice, stereotyping, and condescension. It should be
recognized by partners in dialogue that any religion or ideology claiming
universality will also have its own interpretations of other religions and
ideologies as part of its own self-understanding. Dialogue gives an opportunity
for a mutual questioning of the understandings partners have about themselves
and others.
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Dialogue should generate educational efforts in the community. In many
cases Christians must take the initiative in education in order to restore the
distorted image of neighbours that may already exist in their communities. Even
where Christians do not live in close contact with people of various religious
traditions, they should take seriously the responsibility to learn.
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Dialogue should be pursued by sharing in common enterprises in community.
In the search for a just community of humankind, Christians and their neighbours
will be able to help each other break out of cultural, educational, political,
and social isolation in order to realize a more participatory society. It may
well be that such common enterprises will generate interreligious committees.
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Dialogue should be planned and undertaken ecumenically whenever possible.
Churches should move forward in planning for dialogue in cooperation with one
another.
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Abridged from the World Council of Churches, Guidelines on
Dialogue with People of Living Faiths and Ideologies
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’Passion’ not for the squeamish
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Marianne Dacy, NDS
Mel Gibson’s twenty five million dollar saga, The Passion of the Christ
is a deeply disturbing film. The focus is on an unrelentlessly brutal portrayal
of the sufferings of Jesus. More disturbingly, it reinforces the anti-Semitic
stereotypes of the Jews that have been developed in Christianity over the last
two thousand years. The tone of the film is one that bypasses the reconciliatory
nature of the statements of Vatican II, and the efforts at reconciliation that
have followed since that day.
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“IF YOU ARE A PERSON OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH, IT IS QUITE
IMPOSSIBLE NOT TO BE MOVED BY A RENDITION OF THE PASSION OF THE SAVIOR THAT IS
NOT A TRAVESTY?: ANDREW SULLIVAN
Author, columnist, and former editor-in-chief of The New Republic
magazine, Andrew Sullivan, wrote of having seen The Passion of the Christ
and being “deeply moved in parts?. He goes on to say that the very story
stirs the emotions and prayers of a lifetime. Seeing it rendered in a believable
setting in languages that, however inaccurate (his words), give you an
impression of being there, is arresting. He pointedly adds that “you can see
why Passion plays were once performed?. Sullivan continues: “At the same
time the movie to me was deeply disturbing. In a word, it is pornography. By
that I mean the reduction of all human thought and feeling to mere flesh. The
centerpiece of the movie is an absolutely disgusting and despicable piece of
sadism that has no real basis in any of the Gospels. It shows a man being flayed
alive?slowly, methodically and with increasing savagery. We see muscled thugs,
exhausted from shredding every inch of a man’s body. Yet for Gibson, it is the
hors d’oeuvre for his porn movie... some sick combination of the theology of
Opus Dei and the film making of Quentin Tarantino."
Jesus suffered more than any human being ever has
There is nothing in the Gospels that indicates this level of extreme,
endless savagery and there is no theological reason for it. Over two hours,
about half the movie, is simple wordless sadism on a level and with
relentlessness that I have never witnessed in a movie before.
You have to ask yourself: why? The suffering of Christ is bad and gruesome
enough without exaggerating it to this insane degree. Theologically, the point
is not that Jesus suffered more than any human being ever has on a physical
level. It is that his suffering was profound and voluntary and the culmination
of a life and a teaching that Gibson essentially omits.
One more example: toward the end, unsatisfied with showing a many flayed
alive, nailed gruesomely to a cross, one eye shut from being smashed in, Gibson
has a large crow perch on the neighbouring cross and peck another man’s eye
out. Why? Because the porn needed another money shot.
Is it antisemitic?
The question has to be placed in the context of the Gospels and it is hard
to reproduce the story without risking such inferences. But in my view Gibson
goes much further than what might be forgivable. In Caiaphas’ first scene he
tells Judas how much money he has agreed to hand over for Jesus?the Jew
fussing over money again!
There are actors who look like classic hook-nosed Jews of Nazi imagery,
hissing and plotting and fulminating against Christ. Gibson has the Jewish
priestly elite beat Jesus up before handing him over to the Romans and he has
Jesus tell Pilate he is not responsible, the Jewish elite is.
I wouldn’t say the movie is motivated by anti-Semitism. It is motivated by
psychotic sadism. Gibson does nothing to mitigate the dangerous anti-semitic
elements of the story and goes some way toward exaggerating and highlighting
them.
Anti-Semitism is the original sin of Christianity. Far from expiating it, the
movie clearly enjoys taunting those Catholics as well as Jews who are determined
to confront the legacy.
In that sense alone, it is a deeply immoral work of art.
The Passion of the Christ is, as it were, caught in a time warp. The
film strongly reflects Gibson’s fundamentalist stance. Gibson’s
embellishments of the gospel stories add touches of melodrama. The devil is
personified as a woman who appears at crucial moments dressed in a dark cowl,
sometimes with fiendish children. During his agony in the garden, Jesus crushes
the head of a snake, recalling in a somewhat bizarre interpretation, the Genesis
curse. After Jesus is brutally scourged and reduced to a bleeding mass in a
particularly prolonged scene, Pilate’s wife supplies both Mary the mother of
Jesus and Mary Magdalene with a white towel. In a macabre twist, each mops up
the pools of Jesus’ blood from the stone pavement of the praetorian. The
fourteen stations of the cross, a devotion originating in medieval times are
interwoven throughout the drama.
This is not a film for the squeamish
The overwhelming emphasis is on the sufferings of Jesus. The atmosphere of
the film is dark and heavy, the costumes are sombre, the landscape, filmed round
Rome and parts of Italy, is dry and inhospitable. Jesus is shown as a skilled
linguist, switching from Aramaic to Latin when conversing with Pilate, and Herod
speaks in Greek. After the long drawn out gory depictions of the atrocities
enacted against Jesus, one is left completely exhausted. The resurrection scene
comes as an anti-climax, a very small ray of light on that overwhelming dark
canvas depicted in Gibson’s portrayal.
Fr John Pawlikowski, the current President of the International Council of
Christians and Jews has said that rather than spend energy condemning the film,
it should be used as an educative tool. It is up to Christian leaders to speak
out against the negative stereotypes it portrays and educate Christians on the
difficult passages in the New Testament.
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Let’s go to work
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President of the Union for Reform Judaism in the US, Rabbi Eric Yoffie went
to so see The Passion of the Christ in a theatre on Times Square and came
out with some insightful conclusions . . .
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Our dilemma is this: how do we demonstrate respect for this woman’s
feelings and beliefs while guarding against antisemitic seeds that may have been
planted by the movie? And the answer is: first, we avoid hysterical and
overheated rhetoric. We will speak about the issues sincerely and openly, but in
moderate and respectful tones, recognising the sincerity of other people’s
religious convictions. And most important: coalition. If the woman in the next
seat is going to be comfortable discussing these issues she will be most
comfortable with someone who shares her deeply held Christian beliefs and who
can understand the film in ways I cannot.
This is where we come in. We need do on a massive scale what so many of our
rabbis and congregations have already begun. We need to dialogue with Christian
leaders, encouraging them to educate their congregations just as we will educate
ours. We need to welcome their input into our congregational courses and suggest
they welcome our input into theirs.
This is the moment for which all those relationships have been built and if we
haven’t been building these relationships we need to start immediately. A
successful response to The Passion of Christ will not be measured by the number
of speeches we give or how many articles we write but by what our Christian
friends and neighbours say in their Churches and Schools. So let’s get to
work.
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Rabbi David Rosen’s comments on Pope John Paul II
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Late
last year Pope John Paul II celebrated the silver anniversary of a papacy which
has left a decisive mark on the world, on Catholicism and in particular on the
long troubled relationship between Catholics and Jews. Former International CCJ
President, Rabbi David Rosen, has met the Pope more than a dozen times and is
better than most able to comment on the impact of this particular Pope
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"The
Pope has understood what Israel means to the Jewish people and thus the
importance of the establishment of full relations between the Holy See and
Israel, to which he lent his personal weight?, Rosen (pictured) said. The Pope’s
historic visit to Israel in March 2000 marked a culmination of that process.
Though the visit was described as a pilgrimage to the Holy Land to mark the
beginning of the Third Millennium of Christianity, it was nonetheless brimming
with significance for the Jewish people, not merely in Israel but throughout the
world. John Paul visited the Yad Vashem Holocaust Centre in Jerusalem and the
Western Wall where he bowed his head in prayer and slipped a note into one of
the cracks between the stones. “We are deeply saddened by the behavior of
those who in the course of history have caused these children of yours to suffer
and, asking your forgiveness, we wish to commit ourselves to genuine brotherhood
with the People of the Covenant? the Pope’s signed note said after the
visit. As his health has visibly declined in recent weeks, questions have been
raised as to whether his teachings regarding Jews will endure and whether they
will trickle down fully to the more than one billion Catholics worldwide.
Commenting on the implications of papal succession, one of America’s leading
senior advisers on international religious affairs, Rabbi A. James Rudin said:
“This is a major challenge for the post-John Paul II church?.
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Sydney Club has “interesting Australians? for Lunch
SYDNEY CCJ LUNCHEON CLUB
CONVENORS, RABBI RAYMOND APPLE, AM RFD, BRIAN BENNETT
The NSW Council’s long-established Luncheon Club’s 2004 theme lists “Interesting
Australians? ? the program for the rest of the year is:
April 1 Professor Rifaat Eibied
June 3 Rev. Gordon Moyes
August 5 Major Gen. Paul Cullen
October 4 Rev. Fr. Tony Doherty
December 2 Rabbi Raymond Apple |
Moderator: Sr. Marianne Dacy ND
Moderator: Herman Eisenberg
Moderator: Wesly Brown OAM
Moderator: Rev. Paul Weaver
Moderator: Dr. Leanne Piggott |
The Luncheon Club meetings are held in the Great Synagogue Centre, 166
Castlereagh Street, Sydney Time: 12.30?2.00 pm. A Sandwich lunch is served and
to assist with catering, a telephone booking is requested (02) 9267 2477
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