It’s impossible to ignore Pope Francis’s growing Jewish problem

L | A
By John L. Allen Jr.
image.jpg
Pope Francis at the separation wall between Israel and Palestine in 2014.

DENVER – When Pope Francis was elected in 2013, the forecast among those invested in Jewish-Catholic dialogue generally was rosy. The new pope brought considerable background to the relationship, given that Argentina has the largest Jewish population in Latin America and the sixth largest outside Israel – indeed, the first kosher McDonalds outside Israel was located in a Buenos Aires shopping center.

As Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the future pontiff cultivated close relations with Jews, most prominently Argentine Rabbi Abraham Skorka, with whom he coauthored the book “On Heaven and Earth.”

Since his election that outreach has continued, featuring visits to Israel in 2014 and the Roman synagogue in 2016, as well as regular audiences and meetings with Jewish leaders in the Vatican and frequent statements of concern about anti-Semitism, most recently in a Nov. 1 interview with Italian television.

“Unfortunately, anti-Semitism remains hidden. You can see it, for example, in young people, here and there,” the pope said. “It is not always enough to see the Holocaust they committed in the Second World War, these six million killed, enslaved … I won’t be able to explain it and I have no explanations, it’s a fact that I see and I don’t like.”

And yet, the fact of the matter is that Pope Francis long has had a Jewish problem, and it’s come to the fore anew amid the current war in Gaza.

To some extent, the issue is political, having to do with the instinctive sympathy history’s first pope from the developing world feels for the Palestinian cause.

On that 2014 trip to the Holy Land, for instance, Francis made an impromptu stop to pray at the separation wall in Bethlehem, under a piece of graffiti that read “Free Palestine,” in what many Israelis regarded as a bit of agit-prop.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas immediately promised to create a postage stamp commemorating the moment, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called on the pontiff to make an unscheduled visit the next day to a memorial for Israeli victims of terrorism.

In June 2015, the Vatican signed its first-ever treaty with what it officially recognized as the “State of Palestine,” another move that irritated many Israelis.

The fact that Francis delayed meeting a group of family members of Israeli hostages, an encounter originally requested in October but denied on the grounds that he was too busy with the Synod of Bishops, until he could also see on the same day a group of relatives of people from Gaza affected by the war, created the latest frisson in terms of his perceived pro-Palestinian tilt.

There’s also a theological dimension to the angst Francis has generated in Jewish circles, including his frequently disparaging references to the “Pharisees.”

Such vocabulary led to a 2017 accusation by Italian RabbiGiuseppe Laras, the former chief rabbi of Milan and president emeritus of the Italian Rabbinical Assembly, who accused the pontiff of indirectly promoting a revival of Marcionism, an ancient heresy that contrasted the spiteful and vindictive God of Judaism with the loving and merciful God of Christianity.

“One need think only of the law of ‘an eye for an eye’ recently evoked by the pope carelessly and mistakenly…[recalling] anti-Judaism on the Christian side,” Laras wrote.

In a similar vein, controversy erupted after an August 2021 comment by Francis to the effect that the Jewish Torah does not “give life.”

“It does not offer the fulfillment of the promise because it is not capable of being able to fulfill it,” the pope said, adding, “Those who seek life need to look to the promise and to its fulfillment in Christ.”

At the time, Rabbi Rason Arussi, Chair of the Commission of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel for dialogue with the Holy See, and Rabbi David Sandmel, Vice-Chair of the New York-based International Jewish Committee for Interreligious Consultations, both wrote letters to the Vatican seeking clarification, forcing Swiss Cardinal Kurt Koch, the Vatican’s top official for relations with Judaism, to scramble to put out the fire.

It’s not that anyone suspects Francis of repudiating the theological advances in Catholic understanding since 1965’s Nostra Aetate, the document of the Second Vatican Council on relations with Judaism. It’s rather that appropriating those insights, and translating them into both his rhetoric and his pastoral agenda, sometimes just don’t seem that much of a priority.

Moreover, there’s a perception that Francis’s campaign to build bridges with Islam sometimes comes at the expense of solidarity with Jews.

That point recently was voiced by Lucetta Scaraffia, former editor of a women’s insert to the Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano, who complained about the pope’s budding relationship with the Grand Imam of the Al-Azhar Mosque in Cairo despite what she described as his tendency to make anti-Semitic remarks “every two minutes.”

These three sources of tension – the politics of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, the theological approach to Judaism, and the inter-faith balancing act vis-à-vis Islam — are all coming to a head amid the current conflagration.

The criticism of the pope’s response to the Gaza war started almost immediately. In mid-October, for example, the French philosopher Alain Finkielkraut, the son of a Polish Jew who survived Auschwitz, asserted that Francis “is now totally discredited” for his failure to clearly face the reality of Islamic-inspired terrorism, and “represents a catastrophe for the church and for Europe.”

This past week, a public statement from the Council of the Assembly of Rabbis in Italy reflected frustration in Jewish circles after the pontiff essentially accused both sides in the Gaza conflict of “terrorism.”

In so doing, the rabbis asserted, Francis placed “innocent people torn from their families on the same level as people detained often for very serious acts of terrorism.”

The rabbis wondered aloud what the point has been of decades of Jewish-Catholic dialogue when, in a time of need, what Jews get from the pope isn’t solidarity but “diplomatic acrobatics, balancing acts and icy equidistance, which is certainly distance but is not fair.”

Aides to the pope quickly dismissed the criticism, but it’s unlikely to disappear just because senior Vatican diplomats describe it as unwarranted.

The letter from the rabbis followed an earlier plea from a group of Jewish leaders in Catholic-Jewish dialogue, asking that the pope act as “a beacon of moral and conceptual clarity amid an ocean of disinformation, distortion and deceit” by distinguishing Hamas’s attacks “from the civilian casualties” of Israel’s war, which they described as a “war of self-defense.”

Among the signatories to that letter was Rabbi David Meyer, who teaches at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, sponsored by Francis’s own Jesuit order.

It also followed a stinging essay in late October by the Chief Rabbi of Rome, Riccardo Di Segni, after Francis called for prayer for peace but without directly condemning the Hamas attacks that launched the war.

“Prayer can become an alibi for unburdening one’s conscience, for establishing inappropriate equidistance, for erasing moral evaluations,” Di Segni wrote.

To be clear, not that there’s no good news on the Jewish-Catholic front. In late October, for instance, the World Jewish Congress opened a “representative office to the Holy See” in Rome.

In general, an enormous infrastructure of dialogue has been built up over the almost 60 years since the issuance of Nostra Aetate and it’s deeply unlikely simply to crumble overnight, especially given that both sides in the Catholic-Jewish relationship have keen motives for not allowing that to happen.

Yet equally, it’s impossible to ignore the signs of growing tension.

Recently an Italian Jew named Vittorio Mascarini, who leads a Zionist organization in Italy, wrote in the Jewish News Syndicate: “If it continues to maintain its ambiguous position, the Holy See risks its entire relationship with Israel and world Jewry.”

The war in Gaza has already taken an enormous toll. For Francis, who clearly aspires to be a peace-maker, it undoubtedly would be especially agonizing should his relationship with Jews and Judaism end up being among the casualties.
 
Yeah I'm sure the Palestinian Muslims didn't just murder them first.

Suuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuure.
You're simply highlighting your own ignorance here. Arab Christians are absolutely a thing. Not to say that they get on perfectly well with Muslims of course (especially in Lebanon there's... a bad recent history), but in cities in the West Bank like Hebron and Bethlehem the situation is largely the Muslims and Christians on one side and Jews on the other.
 
You're simply highlighting your own ignorance here. Arab Christians are absolutely a thing. Not to say that they get on perfectly well with Muslims of course (especially in Lebanon there's... a bad recent history), but in cities in the West Bank like Hebron and Bethlehem the situation is largely the Muslims and Christians on one side and Jews on the other.
I don't buy the bullshit that there are Christians in Gaza, sorry. I'm also well aware there's Arab Christians, and they're constantly on thin ice with the Muslims that surround them because Muslims are always looking for an excuse to kill somebody not on their team, if they can even be assed to wait for a reason that is.

You yourself just gave an example of a group of Arab Christians getting fucked with by Muslims.

I really, seriously don't understand why people have this Pitbull-coddling attitude toward Muslims, and the only rational explanation for why is they're Muslim themselves, which is a perfectly fair thing to say seeing as how many retards have called me Jewish because I don't coddle Gaza Jihadists.

Regardless of the who and why, fuck Muslims.
 
I don't buy the bullshit that there are Christians in Gaza, sorry. I'm also well aware there's Arab Christians, and they're constantly on thin ice with the Muslims that surround them because Muslims are always looking for an excuse to kill somebody not on their team, if they can even be assed to wait for a reason that is.

You yourself just gave an example of a group of Arab Christians getting fucked with by Muslims.

I really, seriously don't understand why people have this Pitbull-coddling attitude toward Muslims, and the only rational explanation for why is they're Muslim themselves. Regardless of the who and why, fuck Muslims.
In Gaza? Then you're correct. But there are a lot of people who conflate "Palestinian" with "Muslim".
 
The fact that Francis delayed meeting a group of family members of Israeli hostages, an encounter originally requested in October but denied on the grounds that he was too busy with the Synod of Bishops, until he could also see on the same day a group of relatives of people from Gaza affected by the war, created the latest frisson in terms of his perceived pro-Palestinian tilt.
Equal treatment means pro-Palestinian. These fucking Jews man, I swear.
 
In Gaza? Then you're correct. But there are a lot of people who conflate "Palestinian" with "Muslim".
Are there any Christians in the West Bank?

Speaking of which, since you're knowledgeable on the matter, do West Bank Palestinians ever pull terrorism shit like Gazans do?
 
Are there any Christians in the West Bank?
Yes.
Speaking of which, since you're knowledgeable on the matter, do West Bank Palestinians ever pull terrorism shit like Gazans do?
The PLO (the largest Palestinian terrorist organization/freedom fighters/whatever you want to call them during the Cold War) is a secular Palestinian nationalist organization, so some of its members and supporters are Christians. In contrast, Hamas is explicitly Islamist, and one of their slogans is "After Saturday comes Sunday" (i.e, after we kill the Jews we will kill the Christians).
 
I don't buy the bullshit that there are Christians in Gaza, sorry. I'm also well aware there's Arab Christians, and they're constantly on thin ice with the Muslims that surround them because Muslims are always looking for an excuse to kill somebody not on their team, if they can even be assed to wait for a reason that is.

You yourself just gave an example of a group of Arab Christians getting fucked with by Muslims.

I really, seriously don't understand why people have this Pitbull-coddling attitude toward Muslims, and the only rational explanation for why is they're Muslim themselves, which is a perfectly fair thing to say seeing as how many retards have called me Jewish because I don't coddle Gaza Jihadists.

Regardless of the who and why, fuck Muslims.

I mean not anymore since the Jews bombed them so you're partially right.
 
Yes.

The PLO (the largest Palestinian terrorist organization/freedom fighters/whatever you want to call them during the Cold War) is a secular Palestinian nationalist organization, so some of its members and supporters are Christians. In contrast, Hamas is explicitly Islamist, and one of their slogans is "After Saturday comes Sunday" (i.e, after we kill the Jews we will kill the Christians).
I don't see how anyone rational can come to the defense of Hamas or Gaza in general. Clearly, their open-air prison turned microwave is well earned. I feel no pity for people who pride themselves on barbarism getting glassed. I'm beginning to think the only people I despise more than Hamas are their ProgLeftie stans.
 
one of their slogans is "After Saturday comes Sunday"
Public education in Gaza must be pretty dire if they don't understand that Sunday is the start of the week...
I don't see how anyone rational can come to the defense of Hamas or Gaza in general. Clearly, their open-air prison turned microwave is well earned. I feel no pity for people who pride themselves on barbarism getting glassed. I'm beginning to think the only people I despise more than Hamas are their ProgLeftie stans.

Not for defending Hamas so much as I find the Israeli government fully culpable for the current state of affairs, a position that started as a hunch that has only solidified the more I learn about it.

To reiterate I hate shadowy 5d chess realpolitik government fuckery more than I have any animosity towards anyone involved in the conflict.
 
I don't see how anyone rational can come to the defense of Hamas or Gaza in general. Clearly, their open-air prison turned microwave is well earned. I feel no pity for people who pride themselves on barbarism getting glassed. I'm beginning to think the only people I despise more than Hamas are their ProgLeftie stans.
You complain that people call you Jewish for defending indiscriminate bombing of civilians, then think that anyone against that is "ProgLeftie". I hope some Settlers move into your backyard, maybe you'd gain some perspective. They bombed a 12th Century church where people were taking shelter because surely the Jews wouldn't be so barbaric that they would attack it. Christians who have sympathy for Israel after that are assholes. They'd bomb you and your church without a second thought. This is what "allies" look like.
 
You complain that people call you Jewish for defending indiscriminate bombing of civilians, then think that anyone against that is "ProgLeftie". I hope some Settlers move into your backyard, maybe you'd gain some perspective. They bombed a 12th Century church where people were taking shelter because surely the Jews wouldn't be so barbaric that they would attack it. Christians who have sympathy for Israel after that are assholes. They'd bomb you and your church without a second thought. This is what "allies" look like.
Sounds like you only read the headline of this article.
The blast resulted in the collapse of a building adjacent to the church where dozens of people were sheltering and killed two people. Hundreds were sheltering on the campus of the church. The Israeli military said a wall of a church in the area was damaged. “The incident is under review,” it said. The Patriarchate of Jerusalem didn't respond to request for comment Friday. On Thursday, it denounced the incident as an Israeli bombing.
From this reading, the damaged wall on the church campus was incidental and not an intentional target. But I'm sure this collapsed wall is tantamount to the October 7th attacks, right?

Hamas and their supporters believe in the genocide of everyone outside of Islam. How does that calculate into your champagne humanitarianism? Or do you disregard it because they're your dindu pitbull?
 
Back