Vatican
City, 11 October 2013 (VIS) – We publish below the message
presented to the Riccardo Di Segni, chief rabbi of the Jewish
community of Rome, to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the
deportation of Roman Jews on 16 October 1943.
“I
wish to join with you, in spiritual closeness and prayer, in the
commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the deportation of the Jews
of Rome. While we return in memory to the those tragic hours of
October 1943, it is our duty to keep before our eyes the destiny of
those deportees, to imagine their fear, their pain, their
desperation, so as not to forget them, to keep them alive in our
memory and in our prayer, along with their families, their relatives
and friends who mourned their loss and who remain disheartened by the
depths of barbarity to which humankind can sink”.
However,
to conserve the memory of an event “does not simply mean having a
recollection; it also and most importantly means making the effort to
understand what message this may represent for our times, so that the
memory of the past may offer a lesson for the present day and become
a light to illuminate our future path. Blessed John Paul II wrote
that memory is called upon to carry out 'a necessary role in in the
process of shaping a future in which the unspeakable iniquity of the
Shoah will never again be possible', and at Auschwitz Benedict XVI
commented, 'the past is never simply the past. It always has
something to say to us; it tells us the paths to take and the paths
not to take'.”
Therefore,
today's commemoration “could be defined as a 'memoria futuri', a
call to the new generations not to allow themselves to merely fall
into line, not to let themselves be caught up by ideologies, never to
justify the evil they encounter, and not to lower their guard against
anti-Semitism and against racism, regardless of where they are from.
I hope that initiatives like this one may promote the interweaving
and growth of networks of friendship and brotherhood between Jews and
Catholics in this, our beloved city of Rome”.
The
Pope quoted the prophet Jeremiah, according to whom the Lord said,
“For I know the plans I have for you, plans to prosper you and not
to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future”, and added, “The
memory of past tragedies becomes a commitment for all of us to adhere
with all our strength to the future that God wishes to prepare and
build for and with us. Shalom”.
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