Posted on 04/27/2006 11:21:15 AM PDT by lizol
Jewish group slams Polish religious rite as anti-Semitic
April 27, 2006
WARSAW -- A Jewish rights group on Wednesday protested to the Polish government over an Easter ritual held at a famous Roman Catholic sanctuary in southern Poland, claiming that the ceremony was tainted by anti-Semitism.
The Simon Wiesenthal Center urged Polish foreign minister Stefan Meller to discipline organizers of the Stations of the Cross ceremony at Kalwaria Zebrzydowska, a site to be visited by Pope Benedict XVI during his trip to Poland in May.
Shimon Samuels, director for International Relations at the Simon Wiesenthal Center, which tracks down Nazi war criminals and fights anti-Semitism, urged Poland "to take measures to discipline the organizers in order to ensure that this anti-Semitic desecration is never repeated".
Samuels protested against costumes worn by people taking part in the ritual, which he said were "Jewish stereotypes in garb, beards and Stars of David".
The Kalwaria Zebrzydowska sanctuary hosted its annual Stations of the Cross ceremony on Good Friday, April 14, a ritual that involves scenes depicting the Passion of Christ.
The procession draws tens of thousands of the faithful. This year it was presided over by the Archbishop of Krakow, Stanislaw Dziwisz.
"This ceremony contravenes Polish responsibility to combat anti-Semitism under its obligation to the European Union and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe [OSCE]," Samuels said in a statement.
Kalwaria Zebrzydowska was a favorite site of Polish-born Pope John Paul II, where he came to pray as a child and that he visited during pilgrimages to his homeland.
John Paul's successor Pope Benedict XVI is to visit the sanctuary on May 27 during his four-day trip to Poland.
Good grief! The Passion Play at Kalwaria Zebrzydowska is attended each year by tens of thousands of people, and has been for centuries. The effect of the play is to inspire piety and devotion, not hatred.
I'd be more concerned if there was one untoward incident anyone could point to stemming from this. All I see is some fundraiser in LA issuing a fatwa against the play, in a ploy to raise money from his gullible and excitable donor base, and to vent his spleen against Christianity in general and Polish Catholicism in particular.
How about a deal? I won't tell you how to practice your religion, and you won't tell me how to practice mine.
Actually, in Mel Gibson's The Passion of The Christ Pilatus' role was played by a Bulgarian actor. And several smaller parts, too. So, yes, in some sense they were.
There is one more thing to consider.
As you said - the Passion Play in Kalwaria Zebrzydowska has been organised for centuries, and no one complained.
And out of a sudden all this thing.
Is it a coincidence, that His Holliness Benedict XVI is going to visit the place next month?
Well, maybe it is.
But if it's not? What a publicity, isn't it?
I read that all the time, but have never actually seen a link that proves such. Does one exist?
>>>>>>>Well, maybe it is.
>>>>>>>>But if it's not? What a publicity, isn't it?
Yes, I'm sure the attack on the Kalwaria just before the Pope's visit is no coincidence.
If those are supposed to be horns on their heads than I would agree with you. When I saw the picture it didn't occur to me that they were horns... I would think of horns on a head being like what people depict on Vikings. I just thought that they were funny looking hats. Are we sure that they are supposed to be horns as opposed to funny looking hats?
It has to do with Poland in general embracing traditional conservative values. The SWC once served a good purpose, now it is just another liberal front group. Poland is ground-zero for the battle for family values. The Poles are resolutely rejecting EU "modernity" and if they win than it might spread. The left is trying to put a stop to it.
All I could see there was political correctness in extreme, certainly not some special fear of Poles or Catholics.
I was for several years on the board of the Council of Christians and Jews, worked just nicely with all Christian denominations (especially with the Salvation Army and one Catholic nun) and left the body in protest against its hijacking by liberal Musli-a$$ kissers...
Well, maybe it is.
But if it's not? What a publicity, isn't it?
Another Jewish conspiracy theory, huh buddy?
And you pretend to be serious about that?
>>Star of David didn't exist until about the 17th century. In the first century AD they would have been out of place simply because they didn't exist.<<
I don't know where, but there is a Polish Joke here somewhere!
That is so true. Poland is public enemy #1 for liberals.
"Jewish conspiracy theory"
Not necessarily.
There may be one organisation, that has not much left to do. Not to much in media about them.
And now? Mhmmmm.
I'm only waiting for demands, that the the Pope condemns the Kalwaria Passion, or gives up the visit.
That said, this argument of yours:
I would think of horns on a head being like what people depict on Vikings. I just thought that they were funny looking hats.
is lame and not of the quality your other writings are.
My point was simply that it did not occur to me that those were horns until someone said they were.. so, that being said, I just want to make sure that they are in fact supposed to be horns. If they are, then, well, that's pretty rotten to put horns on their heads. But as I said, it would not have occured to me had others not pointed it out.
I appreciate your criticism of the political correctness run amok here, and would probably agree with you on the latter as well if there were a reputable organization involved, rather than the Simon Wiesenthal Center. Its director, Rabbi Marvin Hier, has a history of sensationalism and making inflammatory comments, including in the case of Gibson's movie.
From Jewish Encyclopedia.com:
Owing to the representations of the old painters and sculptors, it has become a wide-spread belief that Moses, when he came down from Mount Sinai with the tables of the Law, had two horns on his forehead. This strange idea, however, is based upon a wrong interpretation of Ex. xxxiv. 29, 35, ("And behold the skin of his face shone"), in which means "to shine" (comp. Hab. iii. 4, = "brightness was on his side").Michaelangelo's Moses has horns . . . and you needn't go to the Koran for the horns on Alexander the Great, they were on all his coinage.The old translations give "shine," with the exception of Aquila and the Vulgate, which read "his face had horns." This misunderstanding, however, may have been favored by the Babylonian and Egyptian conception of horned deities (Sin, Ammon), and by the legend of the two-horned Alexander the Great (see the Koran, sura xviii. 85).
Probably the confusion wasn't helped by the expression "horns of the altar".
So while it may now offend, it has little or nothing to do with the Blood Libel or the devil . . .
I will say that after all the hue-and-cry over The Passion, I am inclined to take this outrage with a grain of salt. Somebody who is looking for a reason to be insulted can ALWAYS find one.
True, the Poles' rebellion against the EU "polit-commissars" is very valliant, as is that about family values... but SWC trying to buttle it?!
Too far fetched. Au pair with lizol's Jewish conspiracy theory.
I certainly don't see it as any sort of Jewish conspiracy, what I see is another in a long line of civil rights groups that, having largely outlived its orginial purpose, now serves mainly as another branch of leftist politics.
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