|

|
|
|
|
|
Resources |
|
|
|
Gentile and Jew
| Article
# : |
13423 |
|
|
Section : |
BOOK WORLD
|
| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1987 |
2,928 Words |
| Author
: |
Lionel Abel Lionel Abel is professor emeritus at the State University of
New York at Buffalo and the author of Metatheatre and The
Intellectual Follies. |
A HISTORY OF THE JEWS
Paul Johnson
Harper & Row, 1987
644 pp., $25
There was a declaration this June past by the United Church of Christ that is of the greatest importance to Jews. Judaism, it stated, is in no sense the inferior of, or the mere precursor to, the faith that Christians cherish. Until this declaration, there had been, since the last war, three judgments of great significance about the relation of Jews to gentiles.
Right after World War II, Jean-Paul Sartre published his brilliant essay on the anti-Semite, in which he characterized anti-Semitic opinion as an incitement to murder, and anti-Semites as murderers. I recall asking when I met him: "Isn't your rhetoric excessive? You seems to be arguing for murdering anti-Semites, or at least for arresting all who hold such opinions." As I remember, his answer left me quite dissatisfied. All the same, his essay - whatever its faults - must be judged the great response by a non-Jew to the Nazi exterminations (hardly noted by churchmen, or leftist journalists, for that matter, until more than a decade after the Jewish victims had been gassed and burned).
The second response of importance to Jews was the statement made by the Second Vatican Council in 1965, that the Church would no longer regard Jews as responsible for the death of Jesus Christ. Welcome as this statement was to Jews, there was nevertheless a certain sting in it. The Jews had been murdered in the camps. And it was now asserted, at long last, that their ancestors had not been
... (1996 of 17086 Characters)
Read Full Article
|
|