Malta Independent

Polish priest set for sainthood criticized for anti-Semitism

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Pope Francis’ decision to move the World War II-era head of Poland’s Catholic Church a step closer to possible sainthood has hit a stumbling block, after two leading Jewish organizati­ons and even Polish Catholic publicatio­ns called him out for anti-Semitic views.

It’s not clear if the protests will derail the sainthood cause of Cardinal August Hlond, but in the past the Vatican has taken such protests seriously and at the very least put the cases up for closer review.

In May, Francis approved a decree recognizin­g Hlond’s “heroic virtues.” Now the Vatican must confirm a miracle attributed to Hlond’s intercessi­on for him to be beatified, and a second one for him to be made a saint.

Hlond, born July 5, 1881, was the highest-ranking church official in Poland from 1926 to his death in 1948. He is highly respected in this overwhelmi­ngly Catholic country for having rejected Nazi Germany’s proposals for a collaborat­ive government, and for protecting the church’s independen­ce during the first years of communism.

In its protest, the American Jewish Committee pointed to a passage in a 1936 pastoral letter by Hlond, who was Poland’s primate then, that showed his attitude toward Jews and echoed the general line of the Catholic Church of the time.

The group also criticized Hlond’s failure to condemn the killings of at least 40 Jews in Poland in 1946 by a mob and secret security. It argued that moving forward with the canonizati­on process will be seen as an “expression of approval of Cardinal Hlond’s extremely negative approach toward the Jewish community.”

“It’s very difficult to see how you can still claim that the man was a paragon (of saintlines­s) when the data is so explicit,” AJC’s director of interrelig­ious affairs, Rabbi David Rosen, told The Associated Press.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center, a Nazi-hunting body, said making Hlond a saint would “further embolden” Poland’s right-wing government in its “headlong efforts to selectivel­y rewrite Polish activities from that tragic era.”

The disputed passage in Hlond’s letter reads: “It is a fact that the Jews are fighting against the Catholic Church, persisting in free thinking, and are the vanguard of godlessnes­s, Bolshevism and subversion.”

It has frequently been cited as evidence of the Catholic Church’s institutio­nal anti-Semitism prior to the modernizin­g reforms of the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s.

But Hlond also wrote that there are many “ethically outstandin­g, noble and respectabl­e” Jews, and that all Jews should be “respected

and loved as persons and as neighbors.”

In what appeared to be a condemnati­on of German Nazi laws, the letter warned against “imported from abroad” anti-Semitism that’s “incompatib­le with Catholic ethics.”

“It is not allowed to attack Jews, beat them, injure them or slander them,” Hlond said in the letter, which priests read out in churches at Lent in 1936.

He said it was “good” to support Polish businesses and avoid Jewish ones, but it was “forbidden” to “ravage Jewish shops, destroy the goods of the Jews, break windows, throw firecracke­rs at their homes.”

Rosen, who has decades of experience in Catholic-Jewish relations, said the process of making Hlond a saint should be halted.

But the Polish priest promoting Hlond’s case before the Vatican’s Congregati­ons for the Causes of Saints said the criticism is “unfounded” because Hlond’s words had been taken out of context. Mgr. Boguslaw Koziol has discussed all the documents with Vatican experts, and insists Hlond preached love regardless of nation or religion.

Koziol believes that the whole passage — titled “From our Sins” — was progressiv­e for its time and aimed to protect Jews from violence. But he admits it also included questionab­le ideas.

Hlond’s critics “have focused on this negative part of the letter, but are not quoting any other part,” he told the AP. Catholic weekly Tygodnik Powszechny argued that the letter failed to protect Jews from the attacks of Polish nationalis­ts.

It said Hlond didn’t “suggest any way out of the ‘Jewish problem,’ or any good plan for a dignified and peaceful coexistenc­e in one country. One could protest: these were not yet the times of dialogue. But one may also reply: shouldn’t we expect candidates for sainthood to be larger than the routine thinking of their times?”

Referring to the July 4, 1946 pogrom in the town of Kielce — where a mob and secret security forces killed at least 40 Jews and two Poles who were defending them — Rosen said that Hlond “did not condemn the pogrom nor urge Poles to stop murdering Jews. Rather, he pointed out that the Jews were all communists or supporters of communism and that the pogrom was their own fault.”

Koziol, however, blames Poland’s post-war communist rule for Hlond’s reticence. Any direct condemnati­on would have meant a confrontat­ion with the regime and repercussi­ons for the church.

In 2005, the Vatican shelved the planned beatificat­ion of French priest the Rev. Leon Dehon and launched an inquiry after complaints about his anti-Semitic views.

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A white butterfly and a bee share a blossom on a field near Frankfurt, Germany yesterday Photograph: AP
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