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Golden AWe
05-28-2006, 03:57 PM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/5024324.stm

Pope Benedict XVI has made a historic visit to the former Nazi death camps of Auschwitz and Birkenau at the end of his four-day tour of Poland.

The German-born Pope had personally insisted on visiting the camps where more than a million people, mostly Jews, were killed in World War II.

He prayed for peace in his native tongue at a ceremony at Birkenau.

It was particularly difficult for a Christian - a German pope - to speak from such a place of horror, he said.

"In a place like this, words fail. In the end, there can only be a dread silence - a silence which is itself a heartfelt cry to God: Why, Lord, did you remain silent? How could you tolerate all this?" he said in a speech in Italian.

"Our silence becomes in turn a plea for forgiveness and reconciliation, a plea to the living God never to let this happen again."

Pope greets survivors at Auschwitz
The Pope met 32 survivors of Auschwitz

The pope's prayer was the first time he had publicly spoken German during his visit to Poland, and there had been some uncertainty - and controversy - over whether he would use the language at the camps.

Pope Benedict's visit to the camps began when he walked alone under the infamous "Arbeit Macht Frei" gate at the entrance to Auschwitz, where he met survivors and said prayers.

He was to have been driven everywhere during his visit, but the BBC's David Willey at Auschwitz said he wanted to walk around the camp and meditate alone.

Survivors returned

After entering the camp, he said a prayer in front of a reconstruction of the execution wall where Nazis lined up and shot thousands of prisoners.

He lit a candle in memory of the victims of Auschwitz, before meeting 32 survivors who had returned to the camp to greet him.

Pope Benedict places a candle at the extermination wall at Auschwitz
The Pope lit a candle at the spot where Nazis executed inmates

Pope Benedict, a former member of the Hitler Youth, then visited the cell where Catholic priest Maximilian Kolbe died in 1941, after offering to take the place of a prisoner whom the Nazis had sentenced to death by starvation.

He then left the camp to visit the nearby Centre of Dialogue and Prayer, where he was greeted by nuns from a nearby convent.

The Pope blessed the centre before moving on to the site of the gas chambers of Birkenau, where he stood in reflection at the monument to victims of the camp.

He slowly walked past 22 tablets commemorating the 22 languages spoken by those killed there by the Nazis.

Some 500 people, including former Auschwitz inmates and representatives of Jewish communities around the world, attended the Birkenau ceremony.

The BBC's Adam Easton, who was also at the ceremonies, says the Pope made no apology on behalf of his countrymen, nor did he make a direct reference to anti-semitism.

'I cannot not go'

Before Pope Benedict's visit, some Jewish groups had said a German Pope speaking the language of the Nazis would insult the memory of the million Jews murdered there.


I don't feel any animosity to the people here, even with their prejudices

Auschwitz survivor's return

The Pope's spokesman, Joaquin Navarro-Valls, said the pontiff was making his visit to Auschwitz Birkenau as a "son of the German people".

He revealed that the trip was not originally in Benedict's schedule, but that the 79-year-old pontiff had personally insisted on it.

"In the first draft of the itinerary, there was no Auschwitz visit. The pope said 'I want to go to Auschwitz. I cannot not go to Auschwitz'," said the spokesman.

On Saturday, on his first visit to Wadowice, the birthplace of his Polish predecessor John Paul II, the Pope delighted Poles by saying he hoped to see John Paul II made a saint.

He later told hundreds of thousands of young people who had gathered to see him in Krakow to remain true to the teachings of Jesus, and to avoid being influenced by modern secular values.

Some 900,000 people gathered in Krakow on Sunday morning to see the Pope as he led Mass, the largest audience yet on his four-day visit to Poland. He urged the crowds to help spread the Catholic faith.

binnie
05-28-2006, 04:17 PM
He obviously felt the need to visit and pay his respects as leader of a world faith, but as an ex memeber of the Hitler Youth (which I doubt was voluntary) I'm not too sure he should have gone.

But, it raises the issue and is something that should never be forgotten, it is amazing how adaptable we are and how the extraordinary becomes assimilated: the Holocaust has become just another historical occurrence.

The more we are reminded of how shocking it was, the better.

Seshmeister
05-29-2006, 07:47 PM
Not to mention the catholic church cutting a deal with the Nazi's to turn a blind eye to the holocaust as long as they were left alone.