
Following the Canonization of Edith Stein
: The Aftermath 
"Edith Stein stands out as a beacon
of light amid the terrible darkness which
has marred this century." (Pope John
Paul II)
"For the honor of the Blessed Trinity,
the exaltation of the Catholic faith and
the fostering of the Christian life, by the
authority of our Lord Jesus Christ, of the
holy Apostles Peter and Paul, and our own,
after due deliberation and frequent prayers
for the divine assistance, and having sought
the counsel of our Brother Bishops, we declare
and define that Blessed. Teresa Benedicta
of the Cross, Edith Stein, is a saint and
we enroll her among the saints, decreeing
that she is to be venerated in the whole
Church as one of the saints. In the name
of the Father, and of the Son and of the
Holy Spirit".
Many Rejoiced
With these solemn words pronounced in Latin,
Pope John Paul II canonized St. Teresa Benedicta
of the Cross, Edith Stein, a Jewish philosopher,
convert to the Catholic faith, Carmelite
nun and martyr at Auschwitz. The canonization
took place during a solemn concelebrated
Mass in Saint Peter's Square on Sunday, October
11, 1998. The square was packed. The weather
was beautiful. The Pope was dressed in red.
The Catholic Church rejoiced that one of
her children was affirmed as a role model
for Christians and in fact for anyone who
is searching for truth. "Men and women
of today with a great nostalgia for God who
anxiously seek the truth in a world of ideological
and religious trends may find an enlightening
answer in the experience and teachings of
Teresa Benedicta of the Cross: the answer
of a woman of our time, who walked in the
night of the drama of our century, restless
and thirsting always for the truth, until
she finally found Christ and, with Him, the
meaning of life and the peace she had yearned
for so long," concluded Father Camilo
Maccise, the OCD General, in his Circular
Letter "Losing to Win" announcing
the canonization of Edith Stein. She is the
first Jewish-born saint of the modern era
to be canonized by the Catholic Church.
The Carmelite family rejoiced that another
one of her daughters has been recognized
a role model for all Christians. As the Pope
said, "Now alongside Teresa of Avila
and Thérèse of Lisieux, another Teresa takes
her place among the host of saints who do
honor to the Carmelite Order."
"In the martyr, Sister Teresa Benedicta
of the Cross, so many differences meet and
are resolved in peace,'' Pope John Paul affirmed.
It was a ceremony filled with remarkable
gestures of reconciliation. The Church exerting
all its ceremony and solemnity in a tribute
to a woman of Jewish heritage. Relatives
of holocaust victims, Stein's family, sharing
a dais with the outgoing German Chancellor
Helmut Kohl.
But this conciliatory spirit was not shared
by all.
Many Protested
Anyone following the news on the secular
media received another message. The three
main news agencies, CNN, Associated Press
and BBC took a controversial stand. This
canonization was termed "problematic,
"offensive" and "an attempt
to appropriate the Holocaust without coming
to grips with it".
"Jews angry over sainthood for Jew-turned-Catholic
nun" the CNN announced, and later, "Canonization
of Jewish-born nun outrages some Jewish leaders".
"Dubious Saints" stated dogmatically
The Washington Post. Time Magazine asked
the question : "A Martyr - but Whose?".
In England, The Guardian asserted : "Auschwitz
saint angers Jews" and The Times Of
London, "Fury as Jewish nun who died
in Auschwitz is made saint". Most of
the press, which I had the possibility to
have access, followed the same furrow : "Despite
protests, nun made a saint" (Los Angeles
Times), "Nun's atonement for church
stirs sainthood controversy" (Detroit
News), "Catholics, Jews divided over
Auschwitz martyr's canonization" (Miami
Herald), "Jewish Saint a Sin - Critics"
(New York Daily News), "A canonization
with controversy" (Philadelphia Inquirer),
"Pope Canonizes Jewish-Born Nun; Jews
Protest" (Reuter)...
It is significant that all quoted the same,
identical four sources, Zuroff, Rosen, Zevi
and Farhi. It makes one wonder.
Efraim Zuroff, head of the Simon Wiesenthal
Centre's Jerusalem office, who spelled out
his position in this way, "It is outrageous.
"This is a very public slap in the face
to the Jewish community. The Pope is sending
an extremely negative message to the Jewish
community that, in the eyes of the Catholic
church, the best Jews are those that convert
to Catholicism". Rabbi David Rosen,
director of the Anti-Defamation League's
Israel office, claimed that the Catholic
Church failed to emphasize Stein's Jewish
roots. "She wasn't killed because she
was a Catholic ... she was killed because
she was born to Jewish parents, and that
is what needed to be emphasized in any statement
about her death". Tullia Zevi, the former
president of Italy's Jewish communities,
called it "an ambiguous choice which
could hurt dialogue between Catholics and
Jews". In Paris Rabbi Daniel Farhi,
head of the French Jewish Liberal Movement,
claimed that the canonization ceremony "a
new stumbling block. She was murdered because
she was Jewish, not because she was Christian.
This canonization will inflict a fresh wound
in the hearts of the descendants of the victims
of the Holocaust and of its survivors".
Anti-Semitism and Assimilation
Why all this uproar? What is behind this
agitation? Why did the Pope's actions have
the opposite effect of what was originally
intended? "We see her canonization as
a unique opportunity for Jews and Catholics
for reflection and reconciliation,'' said
the Rev. Remi Hoeckman, secretary of the
Vatican's commission for relations with Jews.
"It in no way lessens, but in reality
strengthens, our need to honor the six million
Jews who died in the Shoah,'' Hoeckman said.
Why did then many Jewish organizations turn
critical?
Cardinal William Keeler is the the US Catholic
Bishops episcopal moderator for Catholic-Jewish
relations. Just six days before Edith Stein
was to be canonized, he wrote an Advisory
Update to the Bishops, in which he specified
what are the two main concerns among a section
of the Jewish community. The first one, he
states, is "that the raising up of a
convert of Jewish background for Catholic
veneration might occasion the development
of organized movements within the church
to proselytize and convert other Jews".
The second concern is "I".
In fact the papers were relentless in affirming
this. Richard Cohen in The Washington Post
affirmed : "Jewish groups fear that
the enormity of the Holocaust will slowly
shrink until, years from now, it will be
subdued into a universal experience: Everyone
suffered, Jews too. But Jews disproportionately
suffered. It was the intention of the Nazis
to kill them all -- and they nearly succeeded.
Polish Christians suffered enormously, it's
true, but Jewish life in Poland was virtually
extinguished."
According to many of these newspaper reports,
the Pope has his own agenda which he wants
to impose on the Christian and secular world.
"As a Catholic and as a Pole, he seems
determined to make history conform to his
own experience -- the Nazis' persecution
of the Polish people in general and Catholic
clergy and intellectuals in particular. It
was not just the Jews who suffered, this
Pope seems to be saying."
On one hand, Jews and Christians agree that
no-one more than the present Pope, worked
towards the normalization of relations between
the Catholic Church and the Jewish community.
Even his critics admit that his actions in
this area have been courageous and unprecedented.
The Pope lost many good Jewish friends to
Hitler's Nazi regime and hence has a personal
interest to stamp out anti-Semitism and promote
an honest respect between the two faiths.
He suffered in his own flesh the effects
of the holocaust. Even the Time magazine
states clearly that the Jewish leaders regard
this canonization as only "a dissonant
motif in Pope John Paul II's otherwise triumphant
symphony of Catholic-Jewish brotherhood -
a master work that is very much part of his
grand plan for the church's millennial jubilee."
It was Pope John Paul II who established
Vatican recognition of Israel, visited the
synagogue of Rome (in 1986), had many contacts
with various Rabbis and Jewish political
leaders, was host of a huge commemorative
concert for the Shoah's victims, and even
in the actual ceremony decreeing Stein's
sainthood, reached out in a very explicit
way to the Jewish community "The value
of her testimony is to render ever more firm
the bridge of mutual understanding between
Christians and Jews," he appealed.
In March 1998, the Holy See's Commission
for Religious Relations with the Jews issued
a public statement of repentance titled "We
Remember". "At the end of this
millennium the Catholic Church desires to
express her deep sorrow for the failures
of her sons and daughters of every age. ...
The church approaches with deep respect and
great compassion the experience of extermination,
the Shoah suffered by the Jewish people during
World War II. It is not a matter of mere
words, but indeed of binding commitment.
We pray that our sorrow for the tragedy which
the Jewish people have suffered in our century
will lead to a new relationship with the
Jewish people. We wish to turn awareness
of past sins into a firm resolve to build
a new future in which there will be no more
anti-Judaism among Christians.... The spoiled
seeds of anti-Judaism and anti-Semitism must
never again be allowed to take root in any
human heart."
The media however reply that within the Catholic
Church there seems to be conflicting interests
and concerns. In the late 1980s accusations
intensified when a conflict arose over a
Carmelite cloistered convent at the edge
of the Auschwitz concentration camp - the
convent was eventually moved away from the
camp's wall at the specific request of Pope
Paul II. Just before the canonization of
Edith Stein, many criticized the Pope's decision
to beatify Alojzije Cardinal Stepinac, the
Croatian courageous Bishop who was persecuted
by the Communists and who saved many Jews
during World War II but who, many Serbs and
Jews claim symbolizes the Croatian church's
co-operation with the wartime fascist regime.
The main fear however, seems to be the drive
- according to these critics - which is being
made to canonize Pope Pius XII by the year
2000.1 For a long time, Pope Pius XII was
honored as a friend by the Jews around the
world. But in 1963 the situation changed
drastically after the play 'The Deputy"
written by Rolf Hochhhuth, where Pope Pius
XII is portrayed as a a coward or even worse,
as a calculated political opportunist, who
preferred to remain silent in face of the
the atrocities which were committed in the
second world war.2 The Pope did condemn the
Nazi and did defend and help the many Jews,
saving thousand from certain death - but
this is not considered sufficient by these
critics. Nor the fact that an open and public
condemnation would have harmed, not aided
the Jews, is accepted by these same critics.
This is the immediate historical and cultural
background to the restlessness which the
canonization of this Jew-turned-into-Catholic
martyr created.
Was Edith a Christian martyr?
The whole question hinges on her identity
as a Catholic martyr. The Nazi killed her
because she was a Jew. She came from a Jewish
family and was thus considered racially Jewish.
Witnesses reported that when she tried to
confess her faith, an Auschwitz guard rebuffed
her with the words, "You damned Jew."
When the Nazi soldiers came to arrest her,
Edith Stein herself encouraged her hesitant
sister Rosa with these words, "Let us
go go our people...". In his homily,
the Pope is very clear. "Because she
was Jewish, Edith Stein was taken with her
sister Rosa and many other Catholic Jews
from the Netherlands to the concentration
camp in Auschwitz, where she died with them
in the gas chambers. Today we remember them
all with deep respect. A few days before
her deportation, the woman-religious had
dismissed the question about a possible rescue:
"Do not do it! Why should I be spared?
Is it not right that I should gain no advantage
from my Baptism? If I cannot share the lot
of my brothers and sisters, my life, in a
certain sense, is destroyed". And further
on, the Pope reiterates, "Aware of what
her Jewish origins implied, Edith Stein spoke
eloquently about them: "Beneath the
Cross I understood the destiny of God's People...."
In her mind, Edith never for a moment felt
that she had ceased to be a Jew.
She is definitely an "eminent daughter
of Israel". No one doubts that.
Yet she is at the same time a "faithful
daughter of the Church". Holocaust scholar
Zev Garber wrote a very beautiful study "Edith
Stein : Jewish perspectives on Her Martyrdom".
In it he states that, "Her act of Christian
martyrdom gives the church every right to
claim her ultimate sacrifice as an act of
testimony to the passion of Jesus, preparing
the world for the kingdom of God."
The roundup that doomed her was an explicitly
announced reprisal for a brave Catholic stance:
the Dutch bishops' public denunciation of
the German persecution of Jews in a pastoral
letter one week before. (3) "It was
revenge." says Father Peter Gumpel,
a quiet, resourceful Jesuit scholar, who
is the relator of the cause of Pope Pius
XII and whose family was furiously persecuted
by the German Nazis. "Were it not for
the bishops' statement, she wouldn't have
been killed. In simple words, it is true
that if she was not Jewish, Edith Stein would
not have been deported and killed. But it
is also true that if the Catholic Bishops
did not manifest publicly against the deportation
of the Jews, she would most probably have
lived. So being the victim of the hatred
and vengeance of the Nazis against the Catholic
Church, we venerate her as martyr. She went
towards the cross of Auschwitz not just as
a Jew but as Catholic Jew. Nazi wanted to
punish the Catholic Church in Holland for
its stand against the Jewish deportation."
The Pope Speaks
During the canonization celebration, the
Pope tried to bridge these differences. He
also went beyond.
On Sunday October 11, he spoke three times.
First during mass, then during the midday
Angelus and in the evening during a concert
by the Symphonic Orchestra and the choir
of "Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk" at
Pope Paul VI Hall to honor this occasion
and also to commemorate the twentieth anniversary
of his election as Pope. In this Magisterium,
he outlined two areas of specific interest
to the contemporary person - the intrinsic
relationship between love and truth and the
value of the cross when freely accepted in
union with Christ.
Only the love of Christ makes us truly free,
he states. We live in a society which is
guided by the pleasure principle - I do it
because I like it. Everything is an open
door. Try it - if you like it, if it gratifies
you, enter. If you do not like it, if it
smacks of sacrifice or renunciation, just
quit. A very superficial attitude of life
which is feeding us bitter fruit. Edith Stein,
the Pope says, liked freedom. She broke of
her protective familial ties. She even "consciously
and deliberately stopped praying" at
the age of 14. She always wanted to make
her own decisions... family, school, college,
career, working as a nurse, friends... And
yet, "at the end of a long journey,
she came to the surprising realization: only
those who commit themselves to the love of
Christ become truly free."
"For a long time Edith Stein was a seeker.
Her mind never tired of searching and her
heart always yearned for hope. She traveled
the arduous path of philosophy with passionate
enthusiasm. Eventually she was rewarded:
she seized the truth. Or better: she was
seized by it. Then she discovered that truth
had a name: Jesus Christ. From that moment
on, the incarnate Word was her One and All.
Looking back as a Carmelite on this period
of her life, she wrote to a Benedictine nun:
"Whoever seeks the truth is seeking
God, whether consciously or unconsciously".
The love of Christ and human freedom are
intertwined. Truth is not the opinion of
the majority. One cannot use truth against
love or love against truth. Many deny this
in their practical life and suffer the consequences.
"St Teresa Benedicta of the Cross says
to us all: Do not accept anything as the
truth if it lacks love. And do not accept
anything as love which lacks truth! One without
the other becomes a destructive lie."
This new Saint teaches us also that love
for Christ undergoes suffering. "Whoever
truly loves does not stop at the prospect
of suffering: he accepts communion in suffering
with the one he loves... The mystery of the
Cross gradually enveloped her whole life,
spurring her to the point of making the supreme
sacrifice. As a bride on the Cross, Sr Teresa
Benedicta did not only write profound pages
about the "science of the Cross",
but was thoroughly trained in the school
of the Cross."
The prevailing tendency today is to value
life only to the extent that it brings pleasure
and well-being. Suffering seems like an unbearable
setback, something from which one must be
freed at all costs. "Death is considered
"senseless" if it suddenly interrupts
a life still open to a future of new and
interesting experiences. But it becomes a
"rightful liberation" once life
is held to be no longer meaningful because
it is filled with pain and inexorably doomed
to even greater suffering." (Evangelium
Vitae).
The Church knows and human experience testifies
that suffering can always become a source
of good. "The true message of suffering
is a lesson of love. Love makes suffering
fruitful and suffering deepens love. Through
the experience of the Cross, Edith Stein
was able to open the way to a new encounter
with the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,
the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Faith
and the Cross proved inseparable to her.
"
"Having matured in the school of the
Cross, she found the roots to which the tree
of her own life was attached. She understood
that it was very important for her "to
be a daughter of the chosen people and to
belong to Christ not only spiritually, but
also through blood".
"We give thanks to God for this gift.
May the new saint be an example to us in
our commitment to serve freedom, in our search
for the truth. May her witness constantly
strengthen the bridge of mutual understanding
between Jews and Christians."
The Love of Christ Knows No Borders
Professor Zev Garber underscores a very deep
lesson. "We would suggest, with all
deference that the Church and the Jewish
people can agree that the courage and passion
of Edith Stein should help Christians learn
the lessons of Shoah, but they necessarily
differ in their theology of redemption. For
the Church, it is the Easter faith, spirit
over matter, that enables victory to be proclaimed
over Golgotha and Auschwitz. For the synagogue,
it is the covenanted oath at Sinai, uniting
spirit and matter and resulting in everyday
acts of holiness, that permits Zion to triumph
over Auschwitz."
In this context, the Pope made this impassioned,
fervent plea. "From now on, as we celebrate
the memory of this new saint from year to
year, we must also remember the Shoah, that
cruel plan to exterminate a people, a plan
to which millions of our Jewish brothers
and sisters fell victim." It will remind
us of our sin. It will remind us of our commitment
never to repeat such ethnic cleansing. "We
must all stand together: human dignity is
at stake. There is only one human family.
The new saint also insisted on this: "Our
love of neighbor is the measure of our love
of God. For Christians and not only for them
no one is a "stranger'. The love of
Christ knows no borders"."
St Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, pray for
us! Amen. (4)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. "Now, the pope moves on to Pius XII.
His elevation to sainthood is on the fast
track. With him, even more than the others,
this sprint to sainthood seems a transparent
attempt to pardon the wartime church for
its thundering silence as the Jews of Europe
were being slaughtered." The Washington
Post
2.Only days before assuming the Chair of
Peter as Pope Paul VI, Cardinal Giovanni
Montini wrote to The Tablet correcting Hochhuth.
His words are perhaps the best commentary
on Pope Pius XII attitude during World War
II, "Let us suppose that Pius XII had
done what Hochhuth blames him for not doing.
His actions would have led to such reprisals
and devastations that Hochhuth himself, the
war being over and he now possesses of a
better historical, political and moral judgment,
would have been able to write another play,
far more realistic and far more interesting
than the one he has in fact so cleverly and
ineptly put together : a play that is a about
a Deputy, who through political exhibitionism
or psychological myopia, would have been
guilty of unleashing on the already tormented
world still greater calamities involving
innumerable innocent victims, let alone himself..."
3. In fact Pope Pius XII was about to issue
a sternly worded protest against the Jews'
deportation on the Osservatore Romano, when
he got word of the Nazis' vicious reaction
to the Dutch church's defiance. He decided
to burn his statement.
4. The OCD General House in Rome prepared
an excellent WWW resource center on Edith
Stein. It includes the full homily of the
Pope on her canonization, a life of Edith
Stein in different languages, a Circular
Letter of Father General Father Camilo Maccise
"Losing To Win" and all the talks
in their respective languages given by international
experts on Edith Stein during the International
Symposium which was held in Rome October
7-9, 1998.
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
is
hereby granted for any non-commercial
use,
provided that the content is unaltered
from
its original state, if this copyright
notice
is included.
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