Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Europe’s bishops mark Auschwitz

They denounce ‘manipulati­on’ of truth as anniversar­y nears

- VANESSA GERA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Nicole Winfield of The Associated Press.

WARSAW, Poland — Europe’s Catholic bishops are marking the 75th anniversar­y of the liberation of Auschwitz with a statement denouncing anti-Semitism and the “manipulati­on” of the truth for political aims.

The statement was released Saturday, also in a Hebrew version, two days ahead of the anniversar­y of the Soviet army’s liberation of the camp on Jan. 27, 1945.

It comes amid a rise in Holocaust denial and other forms of historical whitewashi­ng. In a period of rising nationalis­m, even some government­s have sought to replace honest historical inquiry with mythologiz­ing their nations’ behavior during the war.

The bishops did not single out any specific case of historical manipulati­on. Instead, they called for prayers and for candles to be lit “for people murdered in death camps of all nationalit­ies and religions.”

“On this anniversar­y, we appeal to the modern world for reconcilia­tion and peace, for respect for each nation’s right to exist and to freedom, to independen­ce, to maintain its own culture,” the statement said. “We cannot allow the truth to be ignored or manipulate­d for immediate political needs.”

The bishops describe the power of Auschwitz as a symbol of the Nazi German horror, noting that the last three popes, St. John Paul II, Benedict XVI and Francis, have all visited the site of the former camp.

They also noted that communist totalitari­anism — like Nazism — claimed millions of lives.

“Here, the Nazis took the power to decide who is human and who is not. Here, euthanasia met with eugenics. Auschwitz-Birkenau is a result of the system based on the ideology of national socialism, which meant trampling the dignity of man who is made in the image of God,” the bishops said.

“Another totalitari­anism, namely communism, acted quite similarly, also reaching a death toll of millions,” the bishops added.

The statement was issued by the Council of European Bishops’ Conference­s and the Commission of the Bishops’ Conference­s of the European Union on behalf of the bishops of Europe.

On March 2, the Vatican is due to open to scholars its archives of the World War II-era Pope Piux XII, accused by some Jewish groups of not speaking out enough against the Holocaust.

The Vatican has long defended Pius’ actions, saying his quiet diplomacy helped save lives. But the Holy See has neverthele­ss put on hold his cause for beatificat­ion, and accelerate­d the cataloguin­g of the archives of his pontificat­e, so that scholars can come to their own conclusion­s before the generation of Holocaust survivors dies.

“The church isn’t afraid of history,” Pope Francis told the Vatican archive staff last year as he announced the opening of the archives.

While Jews and Catholics have a long history of mutual suspicion, relations have improved dramatical­ly since the Vatican in 1965 officially condemned anti-Semitism in the landmark document “Nostra Aetate.”

Just this past week, in a meeting with a delegation from the Simon Wiesenthal Center, Francis denounced the “barbaric resurgence of anti-Semitism” in the world today and said populism provides a fertile terrain where “hate rapidly grows.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States