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Elijah and the News: Special April 2010 EditionIn an effort to share reflections with our readers close to when news occur, we are sending out the present issue with two items related to recent news events. 3. Sharing Wisdom: Rabbi Alon Goshen-Gottstein's Op-Ed Piece If you have trouble viewing this newsletter in your email browser, please click here http://www.elijah-interfaith.org/index.php?id=947 News Update: Poland's Tragedy - Elijah's Personal Contact Together with the rest of the world, we share in Poland's pain during a moment of shock and berievement. Poland has been close, especially following the recent Figure of Reconciliation Award (see Wisdom February Issue). Each person who died in the
With Poetry in his Pockets by Father Wieslaw Dawidowski The airplane crash in which the Polish President and his entourage perished on Saturday, the April 10th was a tragedy that took away a priest whose name will surely be remembered by many Jews and Catholics alike. It was Rev. Fr. Roman Indrzejczyk, the 79 year old chaplain of President Kaczyński, who was an extraordinary Roman- Catholic priest that contributed immensely to the improvement of Catholic and Jewish relationships and to the dialogue of cultures. For many years he was close friend of Kaczynski family. He made an incredibly patient and humble priest, not to mention a poet. He was always close to people who were on the margin of the Polish society and of his own church. He was a man of the Gospel who without hesitating opened his parish for the feast of Simchat Torah to welcome Jews in the midst of Christians! This celebration is organized every year in Warsaw by Polish Council of Christian and Jews to which Fr. Roman was a faithful member and a vice-chairman for two years. He was born in 1931 and was ordained a priest in 1956. For over 20 years he worked as a chaplain for a psychiatric hospital. In 1986 he became a pastor of a small parish in Warsaw Żoliborz, a section of the Capital that gathered many members of Polish Underground anti-communist opposition. He was a mountain guide and a friend of many opposition leaders from left to the right wing. That was his character: a man who searched for what united people and not what divided them. His nomination to the office of President Kaczynski’s chaplain came as a big surprise. The then-Primate of Poland, Cardinal Glemp, commented to the President “But he is a leftist priest!” Kaczyński’s response was: “That’s the point!” And so Father Indrzejczyk moved to the Presidential Palace. Fr. Indrzejczyk introduced many ideas into the spiritual life of the Kaczynski family. It was after his advice that the President initiated ecumenical prayers in president’s chapel. It was Fr. Indrzejczyk’s idea to invite Jews to the Presidential Palace for a celebration of Chanukah. Thanks to him, in the heart of Roman Catholic Poland, Chanukah lights were lit in the windows of Presidential residence. Finally, President Kaczyński became the first president of Poland who paid an official visit to the Warsaw Synagogue. Fr. Indrzejczyk was behind all this, but he humbly commented: “Mr. President is an open minded man”. In 2008 we had the great privilege to be with Fr. Indrzejczyk at the Van Leer Institute in Jerusalem to attend a Jewish –Christian seminar. Fr. Indrzejczyk was one of the speakers. He knew only a little bit of English. He spoke very softly using the most simple of words, words of a basic vocabulary. He said that it is important not to hurt each other. Words are important. Because it is with a word that we hurt one another. He stressed that for the Christians and Jews there is only one way left: a way of common understanding. In addition,. Fr. Indrzejczyk often carried small booklets containing his poetry in the pocket of his coat. These were home made products. Never to be sold. He kept them for those whom he thought would be good to endow with a word of metaphysics, that touch the reality of human life. Like many people I feel privileged and endowed by him. I knew him just a little bit, but long enough to realize that he was truly a figure of reconciliation. The Catholic Church in Poland and Polish Council of Christian and Jews lost a great man. His loss is truly hard to accept…
News Update: The Cantalamessa Storm - Taking Another Look Good Friday and Easter were the subject of yet another small controversy in the field of Jewish-Christian relations. The Good Friday homily of Papal Household preacher Fr. Raniero Cantalamessa drew, and continues to draw, international attention. Alon Goshen-Gottstein's op-ed piece in the Jerusalem Post of April 11th tells another side of this story.The piece is reproduced in the Sharing Wisdom section below.
Sharing Wisdom: Rabbi Alon Goshen-Gottstein's Op-Ed Piece We are bad listenersBy ALON GOSHEN-GOTTSTEIN Last week has provided us with some important lessons on Jewish-Christian relations, and in particular on how storms on the horizons of these relations come and go. Just a week ago, in his Good Friday sermon, the Papal household preacher, Father Raniero Cantalamessa, compared the treatment the Church is currently receiving in conjunction with the international pedophilia scandals with anti-Semitism. He has been legitimately called to task and has appropriately apologized. But we too need to express our regret at failing to hear the message as it was delivered and for allowing the media to create the wrong story, while missing the true story. The battle against selective and superficial representation of our religious message is a common battle, on which thoughtful religious voices from all religions must collaborate.
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