The Record Newspaper 09 February 1995

Page 1

eccor PERTH, WA: February 9, 1995

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MacKillop painting a winner ry1HE ARTIST of this special prize-winning MacKillop painting is 52-year-old Chinese born Jaiwei Shen who came to Australia in 1989.

John Paul at Sydney's Powerhouse museum says: "I used a pure, realist style and tried to show Mary travelling by coach in the 1880's, symbolically accompanied by the hungry, The self taught artist, who orphans, the eldery, poor and explained his work to Pope the oppressed.

Museum director Terry Measham said it was an unusual late 20th century example of 19th century narrative painting in which artists told the heroic stories - now taken over by cinema. i.ammommism

ea Pope to study Jewish plea for an encyclical condemning anti-semitism ITATICAN CITY (CNS) Pope John V Paul will carefully study a Jewish request for an encyclical condemning antisemitism. To mark the 50th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, members of the American Jewish Committee governing board met Pope John Paul. Pope John Paul also told the group "the horrors of the Shoah," or Holocaust, must lead to a greater commitment by Catholics and Jews to work together for justice. He asked the delegates "to pray and to work, together and with others, in order to foster peace in the Holy Lind, which is so dear to Jews, Christians and Muslims alike."

Robert S. Rifkind. president of the American Jewish Committee, thanked the pope for consistently recognizing that it is important for the world to remember the Holocaust. "We and you share the view that the Shoah stands as a monument to the danger of moral relativism, to the reality of man's capacity for evil, to the wickedness of denying the humanity of any of God's children and to the need for collective action in resisting evil," he told the pope. He said an encyclical condemning antiSemitism would "represent an enduring contribution to human welfare and a crowning achievement of your ministry." As early as 1983, the Vatican said it was

considering issuing a document on antiSemitism. The project is still under consideration. The Jewish delegation also raised its concern about those who distort the history of the Holocaust, and Rifkind asked the pope to open relevant Vatican archives from 1933-45 to Catholic and Jewish scholars for further research on the Holocaust. The meeting with the pope also marked the 30th anniversary of "Nostra Aetate," the Second Vatican Council's document on relations with non-Christians. The pope spoke of "profound changes" in Catholic-Jewish relations since the document was published in 1965. "The misunderstandings and difficulties

of former times are gradually being replaced by trust and mutual esteem," the pope said. Rifkind said the document "has been a foundation stone" for improving relations between Catholic and Jews over the last 30 years. The pope and the Jewish leaders said that putting what has been said in the dialogues into practice is the next task for Catholics and Jews. "One of our greatest mutual challenges remains at the level of education and information, where the results of our cooperation must ultimately be implemented," Pope John Paul said.

Never, never, never again TATICAN CITY (CNS). "Never V again anti-semitism. Never again the arrogance of nationalism. Never again genocide," proclaimed Pope John Paul from his midday audience window on the 50th anniversary of the Auschwitz liberation. "God does not want us to be weeping tomorrow over other Auschwitzes of our own day. Let us pray and work so that this does not happen," he said. And to mark the moment, two Italian youths standing with him at the window released doves of peace, but one flew back and settled on the pope's head. "It looks like he feels at home here," the pope quipped.

What happened at Auschwitz can only fill people with "deep bitterness" and sympathy for those who suffered there the pope continued. Pope John Paul lived not far from the camp during the war and has on several occasions visited former Nazi camps. The victims, he said, were innocent people from many nationalities, in particular " the sons and daughters of the Jewish people whose systematic extermination was planned by the Nazis." The Jewish Holocaust was a "blackout of reason, of conscience, of the heart." It must serve as a warning for our times, he said. • See page 7


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