Pope condemns antisemitism and vows to fight it as tensions rise over Israel's war in Gaza
- - Pope condemns antisemitism and vows to fight it as tensions rise over Israel's war in Gaza
NICOLE WINFIELD October 29, 2025 at 10:33 AM
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1 / 5Vatican PopePope Leo XIV delivers his message on the occasion of the weekly general audience in st. Peter's Square, at the Vatican, Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)
ROME (AP) ā Pope Leo XIV acknowledged Wednesday that there had been misunderstandings and conflicts with Jews over Israelās war in Gaza. But he strongly confirmed the Catholic Churchās condemnation of antisemitism and commitment to fighting it as part of Christiansā Gospel-mandated friendship with the Jewish people.
At a time of rising antisemitism stemming from Israelās war, Leo adopted as his own the Vaticanās official position abhorring antisemitism as he marked the 60th anniversary of a landmark Vatican document that revolutionized the Catholic Churchās relations with Jews.
Leo dedicated his Wednesday general audience to the anniversary of the āNostra Aetateā declaration, speaking to a crowd that included several Jewish leaders and representatives of other religions who had come to Rome this week to participate in anniversary celebrations.
In the text, āNostra Aetate,ā Latin for āIn Our Time,ā the Catholic Church deplored antisemitism in every form and repudiated the ādeicideā charge that blamed Jews as a people for Christās death.
The idea of Jewish collective guilt for the crucifixion had fueled antisemitism for centuries. The Vatican crafted the document repudiating it as the church reckoned with the role traditional Christian teaching had played in the Holocaust.
Leo quoted the document as saying the Catholic Church decries āhatred, persecutions, displays of antisemitism, directed against Jews at any time and by anyoneā and noted that all his predecessors since then had clearly condemned antisemitism.
āAnd so I, too, confirm that the church does not tolerate antisemitism and fights against it, on the basis of the Gospel itself,ā he said.
āWe cannot deny that there have been misunderstandings, difficulties and conflicts in this period, but these have never prevented the dialogue from continuing,ā he added. āEven today, we must not allow political circumstances and the injustices of some to divert us from friendship, especially since we have achieved so much so far.ā
This yearās anniversary comes amid a surge in antisemitism linked to Israelās military actions in Gaza following the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas attacks. In the United States alone, the Anti-Defamation League says the number of antisemitic incidents reached a record high last year, with 58% of the 9,354 incidents related to Israel, notably chants, speeches and signs at rallies protesting Israeli policies.
The war has similarly strained the Vaticanās relations with the Jewish community. Pope Francis repeatedly angered Jewish and Israeli leaders with comments they perceived as drawing a moral equivalence between the Hamas attacks and Israelās military actions.
Francis did meet with relatives of hostages taken by Hamas and called repeatedly for them to be returned. But he called for an investigation to determine if Israelās attacks in Gaza constitute genocide and said Israelās military response was disproportionate.
Leo didnāt minimize the strain when he met with Jewish leaders and faith leaders who attended his installation as pope in May. In greeting the Jewish leaders present, he recalled Christiansā special relationship with Jews.
āEven in these difficult times, marked by conflicts and misunderstandings, it is necessary to continue the momentum of this precious dialogue of ours,ā Leo said in May.
Rabbi Noam Marans, director of interreligious affairs at the American Jewish Committee, said Leoās acknowledgment of the problems was in itself a big step forward. In Rome to mark the anniversary, Marans said he hoped for continued, firm position from the Vatican repudiating antisemitism.
āNever in the relationship of Catholics and Jews since āNostra Aetateā has the Jewish people been more in need of friends who commit themselves to combating antisemitism with every fiber of their being,ā he said in an interview.
āThe Catholic Church has one of the largest megaphones available. It has moral suasion that is unparalleled. We hope that they will use all of the tools in their arsenal to double down in that effort,ā he added.
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Source: āAOL Breakingā