The New Pope is a Disaster for the World and for the Jews
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Jewish Leader Denounces Selection of Cardinal Ratzinger as New Pope
Rabbi Michael Lerner, editor of the world's largest
circulation progressive Jewish magazine, TIKKUN, and
rabbi of Beyt Tikkun Synagogue in San Francisco,
took the unusual step of criticizing the choice made
by the Catholic Church for its new Pope, Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger. Lerner was careful to make clear that he was NOT
speaking as leader of The Tikkun Community, the interfaith organization
whch he co-chairs, which has NOT taken a stand on these issues, but
only as editor of TIKKUN magazine.
"Since the days in which he served in the Nazi army
in Germany to his role as the leader of the forces
that suppressed the liberatory aspects of Vatican II
and purged or silenced the Church of its most
creative leadership (including German Catholic
theologians Eugene Drewermann and Hans Kung, Brazilian theologian Leonardo Boff, and several
prominent American Catholic thinkers), to the
present moment in which he is recognized as the
leader most identified with the forces of reaction
and suppression of dissent within the Church, Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger has distinguished himself as a man who can
be counted on to side with the most anti-humane and
repressive forces, in opposition to those who
seek to give primacy to a world of peace and
justice, " said Rabbi Lerner.
"Although normally Jews would welcome any choice of leadership by our sister religion, we have particular reason to comment on this choice.
"Jews have a powerful stake and commitment in ending
global poverty and oppression. We fully well
understand that in a world filled with pain and
cruelty, the resulting anger is often channeled in
racist, sexist and homophobic directions. Both as a
matter of principle, based on our commitment to a
prophetic vision, and as a matter of self-interest,
Jews have disproportionately supported liberal and
progressive social change movements seeking to end
war and poverty.
"So it was with great distress that we watched as
Cardinal Ratzinger led the Vatican in the past
twenty-five years on a path that opposed providing
birth control information to the poor of the world,
thereby ensuring that AIDS would spread and kill
millions in Africa.
"And we watched with even greater distress as this
Cardinal supported efforts to involve the Church in
distancing itself from political candidates or leaders who
did not agree with the Church's teachings on
abortion and gay rights, prioritizing these issues
over whether that candidate agreed with the Church
on issues of peace and social justice. As a result,
Cardinal Ratzinger has led the Church away from its
natural alliance with Jews in fighting for peace and
social justice and toward a stance which in effect
allies the Church with the most reactionary
politicians whose policies are militaristic and
offer a preferential option for the rich.
"We can't help but notice that under Cardinal
Ratzinger's tutelage, the Church began moves to
elevate the infamous Pope Pius XII to the status of
saint. Instead of repenting for the failure of the
Church to give unequivocal messages telling all
Catholics that they would be prevented from
receiving communion for collaborating or cooperating
in any way with Nazi rule, or for failing to hide
and protect Jews who were marked for extermination,
Ratzinger has sought to whitewash this disgraceful
moment in Church history. Many Jews are outraged at
a Church that denies communion to those who have
remarried or those who oppose making abortion
illegal but that did not similarly deny communion to
those who participate in crimes against humanity.
"In fact, Cardinal Ratzinger publicly praised the
fascist movement in the Church known as Opes Dei and
supported canonization of Josemaria Escriva, the
founder of Opus Dei, an open fascist who served in
the government of Spain's dictator Franco, and who
publicly praised Hitler.
"While many of us agree with Ratzinger's critique
of moral relativism, he extends that critique in
illegitimate and dangerous ways, equating secularism
with moral relativism and suggesting that secularism
is now repressing religion. Ratzinger also publicly
critiques all those inside the Church who are
tolerant enough to think that other religions may
have equal validity as a path to God. This is a
slippery slope toward anti-Semitism and a return to
the chauvinistic and triumphalist views that led the
Church, when it had the power to do so, to develop
its infamous crusades and inquisitions. In 1997
Ratzinger called Buddhism an "autoerotic
spirituality" that offers "transcendence without
imposing concrete religious obligations." Hindusim,
he said, offers "false hope," in that it guarantees
"purification" based on a "morally cruel" concept of
reincarnation resembling "a continuous circle of
hell." At the time, Cardinal Ratzinger predicted
that Buddhism would replace Marxism as the Catholic
church's main enemy.
"Ratzinger is being falsely described as a
conservative, when in fact he, despite his publicly
genteel manner, is a raging reactionary. Unlike many
American conservatives who oppose gay sexual
practices but not their legal rights, Ratzinger in
1992 argued against human rights for gays, stressing
that their civil liberties could be "legitimately
limited."
"Those of us in the Jewish world who have enormous
respect for Christianity and for the wisdom and
beauty of the Catholic tradition are in mourning
today that the Church has confirmed for itself a
destructive direction that will hurt not only
Catholics but all those who seek peace and justice
in the world."
"We remain hopeful that the new Pope may return to
his original more progressive positions (pre-1968)
and realize that the world needs a church that can
respond compassionately and wisely to what is needed
rather than remain wedded to dogma that is so
destructive. In a statement that Ratzinger made a
few years ago, he seemed deeply aligned with
TIKKUN's critique of the selfishness and materialism
of the contemporary world. We hope that he stops
blaming that on secularists and comes to understand
that secularists too, as well as people from other
faiths, can be allies in the struggle for a new
ethos of love and generosity. We pray that he may
find a way to bring a better, kinder, more loving
and compassionate agenda to the Catholic Church. It is
precisely because we continue to feel allied with
the Church.
Meanwhile, we reaffirm our solidarity
with the many millions of Catholics who had hoped
for a very different kind of Pope who would make the
Church more open to women's leadership, to
prioritizing social justice, and to returning to the
hopeful spirit of Vatican II. We can say publicly
what many of you can only say privately-that this
new Pope does not represent what is most beautiful
and sacred in the teachings of Jesus."
Rabbi Michael Lerner is editor of TIKKUN and author of ten books, including Healing Israel/Palestine (North Atlantic Books, 2003) and Jewish Renewal (Harper Perennial, 1995).
We invite our Catholic brothers and
sisters, and people of all faiths,and secular people with an atunement to spiritual issues, to join with us
in creating a voice for spiritually or religiously
committed progressives--by helping us create The
Network of Progressive Spiritual Activism, at our
founding conference on Spiritual Activism, July
20-23 at the University of California, Berkeley.
We are an international community of people of many faiths calling for social justice and political freedom in the context of new structures of work, caring communities, and democratic social and economic arrangements. We seek to influence public discourse in order to inspire compassion, generosity, non-violence and recognition of the spiritual dimensions of life.



