Israel and the Last Three Popes. The Account of Rome’s Chief Rabbi

In the dia­lo­gue bet­ween the chief rab­bi of Rome, Riccardo Di Segni (in the pho­to), and the “dis­si­dent” Jewish jour­na­li­st Gad Lerner – col­lec­ted in a book just relea­sed in Italy, enti­tled “Jews at war” – a who­le chap­ter is dedi­ca­ted to rela­tions bet­ween the Church of Rome and Israel. With obser­va­tions of great inte­re­st, all the more after the yes from Hamas to the relea­se of all hosta­ges and after the remarks of Vatican secre­ta­ry of sta­te Cardinal Pietro Parolin to "L’Osservatore Romano,"on the second anni­ver­sa­ry of the slaughter of October 7.

Di Segni imme­dia­te­ly makes it clear that “the Jewish con­di­tion is com­plex ; it is a mix­tu­re of reli­gion and nation.” And it is pre­ci­se­ly the Catholic Church’s respon­ses to this com­ple­xi­ty, with their oscil­la­tions and con­tra­dic­tions, that have mar­ked the ups and downs of the rela­tion­ship bet­ween the two fai­ths in recent deca­des.

In the judg­ment of Rome’s chief rab­bi, the high point of this dia­lo­gue was rea­ched with Benedict XVI, who “wro­te very impor­tant and posi­ti­ve things about Judaism.”

Benedict XVI was able to get to the heart of the “incom­pre­hen­sion” bet­ween the two fai­ths. “While Christians find it incom­pre­hen­si­ble that Jews should not belie­ve in Christ, Jews find it incom­pre­hen­si­ble that Christians should belie­ve in him. This mutual incom­pre­hen­sion can lead to aggres­sion or a lack of com­mu­ni­ca­tion, or it can be avoi­ded by post­po­ning it until the end of time, thin­king instead about what to do toge­ther today.” And it is this “prac­ti­cal aspect of the dia­lo­gue that essen­tial­ly pre­vai­led with Benedict XVI, in spi­te of his tou­gh­ness of prin­ci­ple.”

In fact, with Joseph Ratzinger as pope this is pre­ci­se­ly what hap­pe­ned. In the fir­st of his three volu­mes on “Jesus of Nazareth,” com­men­ting on the Sermon on the Mount, he cre­di­ted the wri­tings of the American rab­bi Jacob Neusner, who ima­gi­ned him­self as a con­tem­po­ra­ry and hea­rer of Jesus, with having “ope­ned my eyes to the great­ness of Jesus’ words and to the choi­ce that the gospel pla­ces befo­re us,” throu­gh the “frank­ness and respect” with which that belie­ving Jew said that he could not fol­low Jesus.

And again, to show how much Benedict XVI went to the heart of the two fai­ths, one can cite his rejec­tion of the expres­sion “elder bro­thers,” with which many popes, from John XXIII to Francis, addres­sed the Jews. For him this expres­sion “can­not be well recei­ved by them, becau­se in Jewish tra­di­tion the ‘elder bro­ther,’ name­ly Esau, is also the abject bro­ther.” In his judg­ment the Jews are rather “our ‘fathers in faith,’” an expres­sion that “descri­bes our rela­tion­ship more clear­ly.”

But then with Francis much was chan­ged, in Di Segni’s judg­ment. And for the wor­se.

A pre­mo­ni­to­ry sign, rela­ted in the book by Lerner, was Francis’s visit to the Great Synagogue of Rome on January 17, 2016, on which the pope “care­ful­ly avoi­ded men­tio­ning the State of Israel” and the­re­fo­re “the spe­cial bond with the land” that cha­rac­te­ri­zes the Jewish peo­ple.

On that occa­sion the chief rab­bi of Rome, in wel­co­ming his gue­st, did not fail to pro­te­st this silen­ce : “So many signs,” he said, “reaf­firm the essen­tial and reli­gious rela­tion­ship that we have with the land that was pro­mi­sed to us. Understanding this bond should not be a dif­fi­cul­ty for tho­se who respect the Bible, but it still is.”

In effect the Holy See, in its approach to the exi­sten­ce of the State of Israel, has always moved from “a per­spec­ti­ve that is not reli­gious in itself, but refers to the com­mon prin­ci­ples of inter­na­tio­nal law,” as set forth in “La Civiltà Cattolica” of May 16, 2024, by David Neuhaus, a Jewish Jesuit and Israeli citi­zen, a great expert on Judeo-Christian dia­lo­gue.

But it is evi­dent that this tou­ches on a very sen­si­ti­ve point in the rela­tion­ship bet­ween the Catholic Church and Israel, and in his book Rabbi Di Segni has ful­ly brought this to light.

Christians and Jews, he says, have the Hebrew Bible in com­mon, but “the inter­pre­ta­tions can be radi­cal­ly dif­fe­rent. From the ope­ning pages of the fir­st book, Genesis, the the­me of the pro­mi­se of the land to the descen­dan­ts of the patriar­chs is cen­tral, at lea­st in the Jewish expe­rien­ce.” But “for Christians the cen­tral the­me is ano­ther : the pro­cla­ma­tion of the Messiah.” And for cen­tu­ries their con­vic­tion had been that the Jews could not return to their land until they reco­gni­zed the Messiah in Jesus, whom they had instead kil­led.

But now that “the old answer no lon­ger works,” Di Segni con­ti­nues, “a Catholic belie­ver should con­si­der a pro­blem of inter­pre­ta­tion. Pope Benedict XVI had said some­thing to this effect, even if not so expli­ci­tly from the doc­tri­nal point of view.”

But with Francis ? Rabbi Di Segni’s judg­ment on the penul­ti­ma­te pope is very cri­ti­cal.

Regarding the con­flict in Gaza, “Pope Francis’s choi­ce of which side to take was alrea­dy clear in the after­math of October 7, 2023, when he denoun­ced as ter­ro­ri­sm both the action of Hamas and the fea­red Israeli respon­se, wha­te­ver it might have been.”

This equa­ting was fle­shed out in par­ti­cu­lar by the audien­ce on equal terms that Francis gave on November 22 to the fami­lies of Jewish hosta­ges held by Hamas and to the rela­ti­ves of Palestinian ter­ro­rists held in Israeli pri­sons, accom­pa­nied by the decla­ra­tion that the war laun­ched by Israel “is ter­ro­ri­sm,” and indeed “is geno­ci­de.”

After October 7, Di Segni says, “one would have expec­ted empa­thy and soli­da­ri­ty from friends.” On the con­tra­ry, “they have come to a cold neu­tra­li­ty, if not open ali­gn­ment with the other side […], to the point of prai­sing the Iranian govern­ment,” as would in fact take pla­ce after an audien­ce of the pope with Ebrahim Raisi, accor­ding to the account relea­sed by the then-president of Iran.

And at the root of this atti­tu­de of Francis’s, accor­ding to the chief rab­bi of Rome, the­re were “two spe­ci­fic moti­ves”: the fir­st, “con­cern for the fate of Christians in Arab coun­tries,” with the resul­ting “com­pro­mi­ses with Islamic regi­mes”; the second, “Pope Francis’s pro­ve­nan­ce and ori­gi­nal cul­tu­re, more Third Worldist than Western.”

That Jorge Mario Bergoglio’s geo­gra­phi­cal ori­gins influen­ced his geo­po­li­ti­cal vision is a the­sis also shared and expres­sed by David Neuhaus, in his afo­re­men­tio­ned arti­cle in “La Civiltà Cattolica.”

So it comes as no sur­pri­se that Francis should have recei­ved much public cri­ti­ci­sm from repre­sen­ta­ti­ves of the rab­bi­na­te and of Judaism all over the world. Without that pope ever sho­wing he had taken note.

Because in Francis’s atti­tu­de toward Judaism his silen­ces also made news.

Lastly with his sud­den deci­sion to break off with rapid gree­tings, without rea­ding the speech pre­pa­red for the occa­sion, the audien­ce gran­ted on November 6, 2023, to a dele­ga­tion of European rab­bis.

But even befo­re that, not to be for­got­ten is a pre­ce­dent from May 9, 2019, which had to do with his habit of disqua­li­fy­ing his oppo­nen­ts by apply­ing the epi­thet “Pharisees” to them, in the sen­se of hypo­cri­tes, gree­dy, lega­lists, vain.

In a con­ver­sa­tion that they had had with Francis, the rab­bis Di Segni and Giuseppe Laras had plea­ded with him to stop using the term “Pharisee” in an offen­si­ve way. And Cardinal Kurt Koch, head of rela­tions with Judaism, had arran­ged to reme­dy this by pre­pa­ring a speech for the pope to read at an inter­na­tio­nal con­fe­ren­ce at the Pontifical Gregorian University, dedi­ca­ted pre­ci­se­ly to the topic “Jesus and the Pharisees.”

The speech highlighted that in the New Testament the­re are not only the cla­shes bet­ween Jesus and the Pharisees. In it are also found the prai­ses of the two Pharisees Gamaliel and Nicodemus. Jesus him­self says that the­re are Pharisees “clo­se to the king­dom of hea­ven” becau­se of the pri­ma­cy that they give to the com­mand­ment of love of God and nei­gh­bor. There is the pri­de with which the apo­stle Paul descri­bes him­self as a Pharisee. Just the oppo­si­te of the nega­ti­ve ste­reo­ty­pe often used by the pope.

But incre­di­bly, Francis decli­ned to read that speech and limi­ted him­self to gree­ting tho­se pre­sent.

Also with Pope Francis’s accu­sa­tion of “geno­ci­de” again­st Israel the­re were repea­ted attemp­ts to dam­pen its effect, on the part of the Vatican secre­ta­riat of sta­te and press offi­ce. Without resul­ts.

With the new pope, Leo XIV, the Israel chap­ter is still enti­re­ly to be dealt with. But at lea­st, right from the start, with an abun­dan­ce of cla­ri­ty in the distinct and some­ti­mes far dif­fe­rent posi­tions, as was seen after the bom­bing of the Catholic church in Gaza and after his ten­se con­ver­sa­tion with Israeli pre­si­dent Isaac Herzog, rela­ted in respec­ti­ve sta­te­men­ts of great dis­so­nan­ce. In his inter­view with Elise Ann Allen in the book relea­sed on September 18, the­re is lit­tle on Israel, except this cla­ri­fi­ca­tion on “geno­ci­de”:

“Officially, the Holy See does not belie­ve that we can make any decla­ra­tion at this time about that. There’s a very tech­ni­cal defi­ni­tion about what geno­ci­de might be, but more and more peo­ple are rai­sing the issue, inclu­ding two human rights groups in Israel.”

(Translated by Matthew Sherry : traduttore@​hotmail.​com)

— —  — —

Sandro Magister is past “vati­ca­ni­sta” of the Italian wee­kly L’Espresso.
The late­st arti­cles in English of his blog Settimo Cielo are on this page.
But the full archi­ve of Settimo Cielo in English, from 2017 to today, is acces­si­ble.
As is the com­ple­te index of the blog www.chiesa, which pre­ce­ded it.

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