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| DATE: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CARDINAL CONDEMNS ‘REVISIONIST’ HISTORY OF THE HOLOCAUST, SAYS REMEMBERING THIS EVENT IS CENTRAL TO CATHOLIC TEACHING The Cardinal cited a December 12 statement issued by the Holy See alluding to the teaching of Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI: “The Shoah (the Holocaust) was an enormous tragedy, before which one cannot remain indifferent…the memory of those terrible facts must remain a warning for consciences with the aim of eliminating conflicts, respecting the legitimate rights of all peoples and calling for peace in truth and justice.” “Here in the “First, the Holocaust was not a random act of mass murder but ‘a war against the Jews as the People of God, the First Witness to God’s revelation and the eternal bearers of that witness through all the centuries,’” the Cardinal stated. “Second, future generations need to be ever vigilant so that ‘the spoiled seeds of anti-Judaism and anti-Semitism (will) never again be allowed to take root in the human heart.’” Cardinal Keeler issued the statement against the background
of a December 11-12 conference in Cardinal Keeler, Archbishop of Baltimore, is Episcopal Moderator for Catholic-Jewish Relations for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). Below is the full text of the statement by Cardinal Keeler. We Must Remember the Shoa On
December 11-12 a conference, "Review of the Holocaust: Global Vision,"
took place in On December 12, the Holy See issued a statement that echoed the words of Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI: "The past century witnessed the attempt to exterminate the Jewish people with the consequent killing of millions of Jews of all ages and social categories simply for the fact that they belonged to that people. The Shoah (the Holocaust) was an enormous tragedy, before which one cannot remain indifferent . . . The memory of those terrible facts must remain a warning for consciences with the aim of eliminating conflicts, respecting the legitimate rights of all peoples and calling for peace in truth and justice.” The
Catholic bishops of the Let us take this occasion to renew our commitment both to remember the great irruption of evil into human history that was the Shoah and to use that memory to fight the evils that led to it.
Cardinal William H. Keeler Archbishop
of Episcopal Moderator for Catholic-Jewish Relations For
the
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