|
Remembrance and reconciliation:
resistance to evil, triumph of love
On Sunday afternoon, 28 May [2006], the Holy
Father visited the concentration camp of Auschwitz. The following is
an English translation of the Pope's Address from the site.
To speak in this place of horror, in this place
where unprecedented mass crimes were committed against God and man,
is almost impossible
—
and it is particularly difficult and troubling for a Christian, for
a Pope from Germany. 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?
Bowing our heads in silence
In silence, then,
we bow our heads before the endless line of those who suffered and
were put to death here; yet our silence becomes in turn a plea for
forgiveness and reconciliation, a plea to the living God never to
let this happen again.
Twenty-seven years ago, on 7 June 1979, Pope John
Paul II stood in this place. He said: “I come here today as a
pilgrim. As you know, I have been here many times. So many times!
And many times I have gone down to Maximilian Kolbe’s death cell,
paused before the wall of death, and walked amid the ruins of the
Birkenau ovens. It was impossible for me not to come here as
Pope.”
Pope John Paul came here as a son of that people which,
along with the Jewish people, suffered most in this place and, in
general, throughout the war. “Six million Poles lost their lives
during the Second World War: a fifth of the nation”, he reminded
us. Here too he solemnly called for respect for human rights and
the rights of nations, as his predecessors John XXIII and Paul VI
had done before him, and added: “The one who speaks these words is
... the son of a nation which in its history has suffered greatly
from others. He says this, not to accuse, but to remember. He
speaks in the name of all those nations whose rights are being
violated and disregarded ...”.
Pope John Paul II came here as a son of the Polish
people. I come here today as a son of the German people. For this
very reason, I can and must echo his words: I could not fail to come
here. I had to come. It is a duty before the truth and the just
due of all who suffered here, a duty before God, for me to come here
as the successor of Pope John Paul II and as a son of the German
people
— a son of that people over which a ring of criminals rose to
power by false promises of future greatness and the recovery of the
nation’s honour, prominence and prosperity, but also through terror
and intimidation, with the result that our people was used and
abused as an instrument of their thirst for destruction and power.
Yes, I could not fail to come here. On 7 June 1979 I came as the
Archbishop of Munich-Freising, along with many other Bishops who
accompanied the Pope, listened to his words and joined in his
prayer. In 1980 I came back to this dreadful place with a
delegation of German Bishops, appalled by its evil, yet grateful for
the fact that above its dark clouds the star of reconciliation had
emerged.
This is the same reason why I have come here today: to
implore the grace of reconciliation
—
first of all from God, who alone can open and purify our hearts,
from the men and women who suffered here, and finally the grace of
reconciliation for all those who, at this hour of our history, are
suffering in new ways from the power of hatred and the violence
which hatred spawns.
'Where was God in those days?'
How many questions arise in this place! Constantly
the question comes up: Where was God in those days? Why was he
silent? How could he permit this endless slaughter, this triumph of
evil?
The words of Psalm 44 come to mind, Israel’s lament for its
woes: “You have broken us in the haunt of jackals, and covered us
with deep darkness ... because of you we are being killed all day
long, and accounted as sheep for the slaughter. Rouse yourself!
Why do you sleep, O Lord? Awake, do not cast us off forever! Why
do you hide your face? Why do you forget our affliction and
oppression? For we sink down to the dust; our bodies cling to the
ground. Rise up, come to our help! Redeem us for the sake of your
steadfast love!” (Ps 44:19, 22-26).
This cry of anguish,
which Israel raised to God in its suffering, at moments of deep
distress, is also the cry for help raised by all those who in every
age —
yesterday, today and tomorrow
—
suffer for the love of God, for the love of truth and goodness. How
many they are, even in our own day!
We cannot peer into God’s mysterious plan
—
we see only piecemeal, and we would be wrong to set ourselves up as
judges of God and history. Then we would not be defending man, but
only contributing to his downfall.
No,
when all is said and done, we must continue to cry out humbly yet
insistently to God: Rouse yourself! Do not forget mankind, your
creature! And our cry to God must also be a cry that pierces our
very heart, a cry that awakens within us God’s hidden presence,
so that his power, the power he has planted in our hearts, will not
be buried or choked within us by the mire of selfishness,
pusillanimity, indifference or opportunism.
Let us cry out to God,
with all our hearts, at the present hour, when new misfortunes
befall us, when all the forces of darkness seem to issue anew from
human hearts: whether it is the abuse of God’s name as a means of
justifying senseless violence against innocent persons, or the
cynicism which refuses to acknowledge God and ridicules faith in
him. Let us cry out to God, that he may draw men and women to
conversion and help them to see that violence does not bring peace,
but only generates more violence
—
a morass of devastation in which everyone is ultimately the loser.
The God in whom we believe is a God of reason
—
a reason, to be sure, which is not a kind of cold mathematics of the
universe, but is one with love and with goodness. We make our
prayer to God and we appeal to humanity, that this reason, the logic
of love and the recognition of the power of reconciliation and
peace, may prevail over the threats arising from irrationalism or
from a spurious and godless reason.
Inscriptions speak of human grief
The place where we are standing is a place of
memory, it is the place of the Shoah. 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. Like John Paul II, I
have walked alongside the inscriptions in various languages erected
in memory of those who died here: inscriptions in Belarusian, Czech,
German, French, Greek, Hebrew, Croatian, Italian, Yiddish,
Hungarian, Dutch, Norwegian, Polish, Russian, Romani, Romanian,
Slovak, Serbian, Ukrainian, Judaeo-Spanish and English.
All these
inscriptions speak of human grief, they give us a glimpse of the
cynicism of that regime which treated men and women as material
objects, and failed to see them as persons embodying the image of
God. Some inscriptions are pointed reminders. There is one in
Hebrew. The rulers of the Third Reich wanted to crush the entire
Jewish people, to cancel it from the register of the peoples of the
earth. Thus the words of the Psalm: “We are being killed, accounted
as sheep for the slaughter” were fulfilled in a terrifying way.
Deep down, those vicious criminals, by wiping out this people,
wanted to kill the God who called Abraham, who spoke on Sinai and
laid down principles to serve as a guide for mankind, principles
that are eternally valid. If this people, by its very existence,
was a witness to the God who spoke to humanity and took us to
himself, then that God finally had to die and power had to belong to
man alone
—
to those men, who thought that by force they had made themselves
masters of the world.
By destroying Israel, by the Shoah,
they ultimately wanted to tear up the taproot of the Christian faith
and to replace it with a faith of their own invention: faith in the
rule of man, the rule of the powerful.
Then there is the inscription in Polish. First and
foremost they wanted to eliminate the cultural elite, thus erasing
the Polish people as an autonomous historical subject and reducing
it, to the extent that it continued to exist, to slavery. Another
inscription offering a pointed reminder is the one written in the
language of the Sinti and Roma people.
Here too, the plan was to
wipe out a whole people which lives by migrating among other
peoples. They were seen as part of the refuse of world history, in
an ideology which valued only the empirically useful; everything
else, according to this view, was to be written off as
lebensunwertes Leben
—
life unworthy of being lived.
There is also the inscription in
Russian, which commemorates the tremendous loss of life endured by
the Russian soldiers who combated the Nazi reign of terror; but this
inscription also reminds us that their mission had a tragic twofold
effect: they set the peoples free from one dictatorship, but the
same peoples were thereby subjected to a new one, that of Stalin and
the Communist system.
The other inscriptions, written in Europe’s many
languages, also speak to us of the sufferings of men and women from
the whole continent. They would stir our hearts profoundly if we
remembered the victims not merely in general, but rather saw the
faces of the individual persons who ended up here in this abyss of
terror.
I felt a deep urge to pause in a particular way before the
inscription in German. It evokes the face of Edith Stein, Theresia
Benedicta a Cruce: a woman, Jewish and German, who disappeared along
with her sister into the black night of the Nazi-German
concentration camp; as a Christian and a Jew, she accepted death
with her people and for them. The Germans who had been brought to
Auschwitz-Birkenau and met their death here were considered as
Abschaum der Nation
—
the refuse of the nation. Today we gratefully hail them as
witnesses to the truth and goodness which even among our people were
not eclipsed.
Joining in love, not in hate
We are grateful to them, because they did not submit
to the power of evil, and now they stand before us like lights
shining in a dark night.
With profound respect and gratitude, then,
let us bow our heads before all those who, like the three young men
in Babylon facing death in the fiery furnace, could respond: “Only
our God can deliver us. But even if he does not, be it known to
you, O King, that we will not serve your gods and we will not
worship the golden statue that you have set up” (cf. Dan
3:17ff.).
Yes, behind these inscriptions is hidden the fate of
countless human beings. They jar our memory, they touch our
hearts. They have no desire to instil hatred in us: instead, they
show us the terrifying effect of hatred. Their desire is to help
our reason to see evil as evil and to reject it; their desire is to
enkindle in us the courage to do good and to resist evil. They want
to make us feel the sentiments expressed in the words that Sophocles
placed on the lips of Antigone, as she contemplated the horror all
around her: my nature is not to join in hate but to join in love.
By God’s grace, together with the purification of
memory demanded by this place of horror, a number of initiatives
have sprung up with the aim of imposing a limit upon evil and
confirming goodness. Just now I was able to bless the Centre for
Dialogue and Prayer. In the immediate neighbourhood the Carmelite
nuns carry on their life of hiddenness, knowing that they are united
in a special way to the mystery of Christ’s Cross and reminding us
of the faith of Christians, which declares that God himself
descended into the hell of suffering and suffers with us.
In Oświęcim is the Centre of Saint Maximilian Kolbe, and the
International Centre for Education about Auschwitz and the
Holocaust. There is also the International House for Meetings of
Young people. Near one of the old Prayer Houses is the Jewish
Centre.
Finally the Academy for Human Rights is presently being
established. So there is hope that this place of horror will
gradually become a place for constructive thinking, and that
remembrance will foster resistance to evil and the triumph of love.
At Auschwitz-Birkenau humanity walked through a
“valley of darkness”. And so, here in this place, I would like to
end with a prayer of trust
—
with one of the Psalms of Israel which is also a prayer of
Christians: “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want. He makes me
lie down in green pastures; he leads me beside still waters; he
restores my soul. He leads me in right paths for his name’s sake.
Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear
no evil; for you are with me; your rod and your staff
—
they comfort me ... I shall dwell in the house of the Lord my whole
life long” (Ps 23:1-4, 6).
|