Medicine Hat News

Mormon baptisms of Holocaust victims draw ire

- BRADY MCCOMBS

SALT LAKE CITY Mormons are posthumous­ly baptizing Holocaust victims as well as grandparen­ts of public figures like Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton and Steven Spielberg, despite church rules intended to restrict the ceremonies to a member’s ancestors, according to a researcher who has spent two decades monitoring the church’s massive genealogic­al database.

The discoverie­s made by former Mormon Helen Radkey and shared with The Associated Press likely will bring new scrutiny to a deeply misunderst­ood practice that has become a sensitive issue for the church. The church, in a statement, acknowledg­ed the ceremonies violated its policy and said they would be invalidate­d, while also noting its created safeguards in recent years to improve compliance.

Proxy baptisms are tied to a core church teaching that families spend eternity together, but the baptisms do not automatica­lly convert dead people to Mormonism. Under church teachings, the rituals provide the deceased a choice in the afterlife to accept or reject the offer of baptism.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the only major religion that baptizes the dead, and the ritual has contribute­d to struggles by the faith to combat the mischaract­erization of its beliefs.

The church’s stance on family and the afterlife is behind a massive collection of genealogic­al records the Utah-based church compiles from around the world and makes available to the public through its website www.familysear­ch.org . Proxy baptisms are recorded in a password-protected part of the database accessible only to church members.

The ceremonies first drew public attention in the 1990s when it was discovered they were performed on a few hundred thousand Holocaust victims, which Jewish leaders condemned as grossly insensitiv­e.

The posthumous baptizing of Holocaust victims reopens Jewish wounds from being forced in the past to convert to Christiani­ty or face death or deportatio­n, Jewish genealogis­t Gary Mokotoff said.

“The more she digs, the more she uncovers,” Mokotoff said. “It’s not like a chance circumstan­ce.”

After discussion­s with Mokotoff and other Jewish leaders, the LDS church in 1995 establishe­d a rule barring baptisms of Holocaust victims except in rare cases where they are direct ancestors. It also bars proxy baptisms on celebritie­s.

But periodic controvers­ies erupted when new proxy baptisms were found listed in the church’s genealogic­al database, including Radkey’s 2012 discovery of one performed on Anne Frank. The church apologized then, sent a letter to members reiteratin­g its guidelines and announced the creation of a firewall aimed at preventing the inappropri­ate use of proxy baptisms.

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