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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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time
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091189
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09118900.076
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1990-09-17
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RELIGION, Page 77 Harsh HomilyPoland's Primate aggravates a Catholic-Jewish controversy
Jewish outrage over a Carmelite convent at Auschwitz seemed to
be settling into a tense stalemate. Then Poland's Roman Catholic
Primate, Jozef Cardinal Glemp, sparked a new flare-up. Speaking at
his nation's holiest shrine on Aug. 26, the Cardinal voiced Polish
resentment with words that struck Jews -- and many Christians --
as anti-Semitic.
"Dear Jewish people, do not talk with us from the position of
a nation raised beyond all others," admonished Glemp. "Your power
lies in the mass media easily at your disposal." Admitting that
Poles had mistreated Jews in the past, he insisted that Jewish
businessmen also "ignored and disdained Poles." Glemp said seven
Jewish protesters who invaded the cloistered grounds in July were
"apprehended before the sisters were killed or the convent
destroyed" -- an inflammatory misrepresentation of the
demonstrators' intentions. Glemp glossed over the fact that four
Cardinals had agreed that the nuns would be moved by last February,
and that one of them, the local archbishop, had since suspended
that deal.
As Western Jewish organizations reacted with anger and
indignation, the official daily newspaper of Poland's Solidarity
movement expressed "sorrow and regret" over Glemp's words. Although
Pope John Paul II has eloquently decried anti-Semitism, the Vatican
continues to insist that this controversy is purely local. But with
the latest international uproar, it is obvious that the Pontiff
must persuade his fellow Poles to settle matters or risk a
poisoning of Jewish-Catholic relations for years to come.