As the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising approaches, together
with the whole Church I wish to remember those terrible days of the Second World
War, days of contempt for the human person, manifested in the horror of the
sufferings endured at that time by so many of our Jewish brothers and sisters.
It is with profound grief that we call to mind what happened then, and indeed
all that happened in the long black night of the Shoah. We remember, and we need
to remember, but we need to remember with renewed trust in God and in his all–healing
blessing.
In their Pastoral Letter of 30 November 1990, the Polish Bishops wrote about
what took place in Poland then, but also about the present–day responsibility of
Christians and Jews: "the mutual loss of life, a sea of terrible suffering and
of wrongs endured should not divide but unite us. The places of execution, and
in many cases, the common graves, call for this unity".
As Christians and Jews, following the example of the faith of Abraham, we are
called to be a blessing for the world (Cf. Gen 12: 2ss.). This is the common task awaiting us. It
is therefore necessary for us, Christians and Jews, to be first a blessing to
one another. This will effectively occur if we are united in the face of the
evils which are still threatening: indifference and prejudice, as well as
displays of anti–Semitism.
For what has already been achieved by Catholics and Jews through dialogue and
cooperation I give thanks with you to God; for what we are still called to do I
offer my ardent prayers. May God further guide us along the paths of his
sovereign and loving will for the human family.
From the Vatican, 6 April 1993.
IOANNES PAULUS PP. II
© Copyright 1993 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana