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ADL: Pope 'Atoned' for Hitler Youth
NewsMax ^ | 4/19/05 | Carl Limbacher

Posted on 04/19/2005 4:49:13 PM PDT by wagglebee

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To: wagglebee; BlackRazor; tarheelswamprat; ThermoNuclearWarrior; A. Pole; wardaddy; Atticus

Too bad Foxman didn't recall here that he was sheltered---and saved from certain death by Catholics-----and actually was a practicing Catholic. Foxman apparently now resents it. In later years, he has spoken critically about the family who sheltered him.


EXCERPT

Abraham H. Foxman's Story: A Life Saved, A Life of Service

Part I: A Life Saved

I was born in 1940, in Baranowicz, Poland. My parents tried to stay ahead of the Germans and so we headed east. The Germans caught up with us in the Lithuanian city of Vilnius in 1941. For my parents, there was nowhere to run.

My nanny, Bronislawa Kurpi was Polish-Catholic and when the order came for Jews to be assembled into the Ghetto, she asked my parents what was to become of me. My mother answered that what was going to happen to them would happen to me. My nanny hastily offered to take me from them, to keep me safe until their return. As my mother recalled, it was a cold autumn day when Ms. Kurpi walked away with me. My mother recalled looking on sorrowfully with my father through the edges of the curtains, not knowing what was to become of me. It was a decision which was incredibly difficult. I guess they never really believed that it was going to be four years before they would see me again. Imagine the confusion and pain this experience inflicted on all involved.

Growing-up for the next four years in German-occupied Vilnius, Lithuania, I was called Henryk Stanislas Kurpi. To the world, Bronislawa Kurpi was my mother. She had me baptized by a priest and raised me as a Catholic. I learned how to pray with a rosary and kneel at the altar of the church. I could not play with other children, as it was too risky. There was always the possibility that someone would see that I was circumcised and discover my Jewish identity. Had my parents died during the Holocaust, it is a possibility that I may have even become a priest when I grew up.

Miraculously, my parents survived the Holocaust. Their first thought was to come and get me, their only child, back. My nanny did not see eye to eye with my parents. She did not want to give me back. There were several custody battles between my parents and my nanny, with my parents winning out in the end. That's when they decided they had no future in Lithuania, which also happened to be under the control of the Soviet Union.

To leave the Soviet Union and the surrounding satellite countries where its influence was felt, was not an easy task, however. We were smuggled across the borders until we got to the American Zone in Austria. At this time, we lived in a Displaced Persons (DP) camp, where I was able to play with children my own age for the first time in my life. Eventually, my family and I were granted visas to the United States, where we moved in 1950. I was 10 years old, and my father always said that in that time, I had lived a lifetime.

After being reunited with my parents, I had to learn how to be Jewish, which was a growing process. One thing I remember is making the sign of the cross in the home of my parents, who were observant Jews. Even once I was reunited with my parents, I was a good practicing Catholic. As a child, I went to church, I said my prayers and I wore a crucifix. I cried when other children called me a Jew. Christianity was my means of survival and it is because of this that I have always had great respect for it.


41 posted on 04/20/2005 6:16:10 AM PDT by Liz (One of it's most compelling tenets is Catholicism's acknowledgement of individual free will.)
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To: wardaddy

Nice take on your part. I do think---as you do---that Pope Benedict XV1's closeness to John Paul 11 was a factor in his elevation to Pope. Since JP11 named all but two of the College of Cardnals, it's a safe bet to conclude that he passed the word that Cardinal Ratzinger was to be his hand-picked successor.


42 posted on 04/20/2005 6:23:12 AM PDT by Liz (One of it's most compelling tenets is Catholicism's acknowledgement of individual free will.)
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To: Liz
Too bad Foxman didn't recall here that he was sheltered---and saved from certain death by Catholics-----and actually was a practicing Catholic. Foxman apparently now resents it.

Too bad?? Did you read the same article I did? Why use the occasion of Foxman welcoming the election of Ratzinger as the new pope as an excuse to bash the man?

43 posted on 04/20/2005 6:37:23 AM PDT by malakhi
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To: malakhi
Regardless of Foxman said last year,

You forgot an important rule: Only Jesse Jackson can have his past slams on conservatives forgiven. And that's because he did something they really really liked. Otherwise, it's like the kid that barfed in class in 2nd grade. No one forgets and must bring it up at every opportunity. It's called having no life.

44 posted on 04/20/2005 10:03:50 AM PDT by Bella_Bru (www.JewsforJudaism.org)
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To: Bella_Bru
You forgot an important rule: Only Jesse Jackson can have his past slams on conservatives forgiven.

How silly of me. If only Foxman had supported the Schindlers, then all would have been forgiven, and somebody would have posted a link to donate to the ADL.

BTW, if anyone is interested, the ADL website home page today prominently features a photo of the new pope, and the statement posted above, as well as a memoriam to John Paul II.

45 posted on 04/20/2005 10:14:02 AM PDT by malakhi
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To: malakhi

You don't need any excuse to bash the ignorant Foxman. The ADL should be a little more selective in what they label as antisemitism. Just because Foxman is welcoming Ratzinger doesn't make up for his ignorant actions in the past.


46 posted on 04/20/2005 6:46:44 PM PDT by ThermoNuclearWarrior (PRESSURE BUSH TO CLOSE THE BORDERS!!!)
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To: solitas
"(who was given sanctuary by that Staropolski czlowiek)"

What ?
47 posted on 04/21/2005 4:28:11 AM PDT by Grzegorz 246
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