UN event on the Church’s
effort to save lives during the Holocaust
Auschwitz (AFP) |
On the International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the
Victims of the Holocaust, January 27, the United Nations is holding a symposium
on the Church's action to save lives during the Holocaust.
Vatican News
Monday, January 27, marks the 75th anniversary
of the liberation of Hitler’s notorious death camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau in
Nazi-occupied Poland. International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the
Victims of the Holocaust is being observed today across the world, to recall
the systematic killing of six million Jewish men, women and children and
millions of others by the Nazis and their collaborators during World War II.
Several events are being organized at the United Nations in
New York. Among them is an international symposium entitled: "Remembering the
Holocaust: The Documented Efforts of the Catholic Church to Save Lives".
The aim of the conference is to make known to the
international public about the recent results of historical research
documenting how the Catholic Church and Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli who later
became Pope Pius XII (from 1939 to 1958), helped save the lives of numerous
persecuted people, many of them Jews, during the Nazi persecution.
The symposium is being organized by the Permanent Observer
Mission of the Holy See to the UN, in collaboration with "Pave the Way
Foundation", a non-profit organization. The event will be streamed
live from 7.30 p.m. (UTC) onwards on http://webtv.un.org.
Among the international experts participating in the
symposium are Gary Krupp (USA), Edouard Husson (France), Michael Hesemann
(Germany), Ronald Rychlak (USA), Mark Riebling (USA), Limore Yagil (France),
Matteo Luigi Napolitano (Italy), Johan Ickx (Holy See).
Ickx, the head of the Archives of the Section for Relations
with States of the Vatican Secretariat of State, will address the gathering
citing from about 2000 pages of research by Dominiek Oversteyns on the efforts
of Pope Pius XII to save lives. The study is based on primary sources,
documents and testimonies of survivors, revealing what happened to the Roman
Jews, many of whom were hidden in the convents of the Eternal City.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét