High Holidays 2005/5766

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Belonging to the Jewish PEOPLE.

The Pope Who Turned 
Anti-Semitism Aside
 
by Jeff Jacoby,
The Boston Globe

As a young boy in the 1930s, my father attended public school in Snina, a town in eastern Czechoslovakia. Twice a week, a Catholic priest would come in to teach the catechism, during which the few children who were Jewish were sent to wait outside. As they left the classroom, my father recalls, the priest invariably made some insulting remark about the Jewish people. 

For Jews in the Europe of my father’s youth, such Christian contempt was a fact of life. Its origins lay in the church’s ancient claim that God had rejected the Jews when they rejected Jesus and that his covenant with Israel had been superseded by a new covenant with a "new Israel" — namely, the Christian church. This teaching of contempt fed an often-virulent anti-Semitism that created the climate for Europe’s long history of persecuting Jews. Sixty-five years ago that history culminated in the Holocaust. 

Yet not every priest in that era treated Jews with disdain. 

Consider the story of Moses and Helen Hiller, a Jewish couple in Nazi-occupied Poland who entrusted their 2-year-old son to a Catholic family named Jachowicz in November of 1942. The Hillers begged their friends to keep their child safe — and, should they not survive, to send him to family members abroad who would bring him up as a Jew. Soon after, the Hillers were deported to Auschwitz. They never returned. 

The Jachowiczes came to love the little boy as their own and decided, when the war was over, to adopt him. Mrs. Jachowicz asked a young priest in Krakow to baptize the child, explaining that he had been born Jewish and that his parents had died. But when the priest, some of whose friends had also died in Auschwitz, learned of the Hillers’ wish that their son not be lost to the Jewish people, he refused to perform the baptism. Instead he insisted that the Jachowiczes contact the child’s relatives. 

Today that boy is a middle-aged man, an observant Jew with children of his own. The young priest, whose name was Karol Wojtyla, died last week. He will be buried on Friday as Pope John Paul II, in St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome. 

When it came to the Jews, John Paul’s attitudes were revolutionary. He had grown up with Jews as neighbors and classmates; he and his father rented the second floor of a house whose Jewish owners lived below. At a time when the Polish church could be vilely anti-Semitic — in 1936 the Catholic primate of Poland, Cardinal Augustus Hlond, issued a pastoral letter declaring that ‘‘there will be a Jewish problem as long as Jews remain" and painting Jews as corrupters and atheists guilty of ‘‘spreading pornography" and ‘‘perpetrating fraud, practicing usury, and dealing in prostitution" — the future pope’s closest friend was a Jewish boy, Jerzy Kluger. To the young Father Wojtyla, the contempt for Jews and Judaism that came so readily to priests like the one in my father’s school must have always rung false, even heretical. 

And so he fought it. As a priest in Krakow, he would not countenance the betrayal of murdered Jewish parents by baptizing their child. As a young bishop at the Second Vatican Council, he spoke up powerfully in support of Nostra Aetate, the landmark Vatican declaration that renounced the idea of Jewish guilt for the death of Jesus and affirmed that God’s covenant with the Jews is unbroken. 

In 1979, on his first papal visit back to Poland, John Paul journeyed to Auschwitz, taking pains to emphasize what the communist government of the day took pains to obscure: the Jewish identity of the Holocaust. ‘‘The very people that received from God the commandment ‘Thou shall not kill,’ itself experienced in a special measure what is meant by killing." 

‘It is not permissible for anyone to pass by this," he continued, ‘‘with indifference." 

Milestone followed milestone. In 1986 he paid the first visit by a pope to the Great Synagogue in Rome,where he stressed the debt that Christians owe to the Jews, ‘‘our elder brothers." In 1993, he formally recognized the state of Israel, repudiating forever the old theology that Jews were doomed to everlasting exile, never again to be sovereign in their homeland. He became the first pope to publicly beg forgiveness for Christian wrongs done to Jews. 

And in 2000, on a deeply emotional pilgrimage to the Holy Land, he became the first pope to pray at the Western Wall, a moment of reverence for the Jewish faith — and for the Temple that was once its beating heart — that would have been unthinkable for most of the preceding two millennia. 

If John XXIII was the ‘‘good pope" who set in motion the great shift in the church’s relations with the Jewish people, John Paul II was the great pope who made it undeniable and irrevocable. As he is laid to his rest, Jews and Christians will weep together. 

Jeff Jacoby is a columnist for The Boston Globe, where this column originally appeared in April. It is reprinted with permission. To receive his columns by email, visit www.JeffJacoby.com.
An Answer to the Wade Boggs Question 
by Nate Bloom
 


In last year’s High Holidays issue we included a box about Wade Boggs, one of baseball’s best hitters.Wade, who is not Jewish, has a superstition of making a sign in the shape of a
chai as he steps into the batters box.We were looking for the answer to the question "why?" Nate Bloom, a writer living in Oakland, California sent us the following. 

For years people had been telling me that Wade Boggs was Jewish, but I couldn’t figure out why they thought that until someone told me he drew the letter chai in the dirt before batting. Since I was pretty sure he wasn’t Jewish, I tried to research the reason for his superstition. All over the web, you can find references to him drawing the chai, but nobody seemed to know why. I sent a letter to my friends to see if any of them knew. Finally, a friend sent me a portion of an interview with Boggs from Cooperstown just before his induction into the Hall of Fame in July of this year. In the interview with Mark Groenich (Empire Network, Albany) he finally spilled the beans about why he made the chai in the dirt for so many years. 

By coincidence, the friend I sent the letter to knows the reporter who asked the question. They stand near each other when they say kaddish at their synagogue in Albany, New York. 

MARK GROENICH: I have an offbeat question that one of my clients wants to know about.You write the word chai by home plate. How did that come about? Where and when did you first start doing it? How did you first learn about what chai meant? 

WADE BOGGS: I was seven years old and in Brunswick, Georgia. I was going through a magazine and there were symbols in the back of the magazine. One of them was the chai sign for good luck and life. I looked at it and said, well, I’ll just wish myself good luck when I get into the batter’s box and I drew it with my feet. I just continued to do that throughout my career. I would draw the chai sign in the dirt before I got into the batter’s box, not being Jewish, but, it was just a symbol that I used throughout my career — just wishing myself good luck when I got up, before I got into the box. 

GROENICH: It would help? 

BOGGS: Along with the other 85 (superstitions) that I had — they all helped. 

Nate Bloom lives in Oakland, California and writes a column on Jewish celebrities carried in five Jewish papers. He also edits Jewhoo, a Jewish biographical site that is now down for re-programming.

 

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