Source:
https://www.podbean.com/eau/pb-3vnem-1890a1c
For nearly two thousand years Jews lived in the shadow of the Catholic Church. As heads of the church, popes throughout the ages formulated an official papal policy regarding the Jews as a religion, as a local community in Rome, as subjects of the pope in the Papal States, and broadly regarding the Jews across Europe. This relationship was complex and lopsided. On one hand, although often forced to convert or be killed, the official general papal policy was not to forcibly convert the Jewish People as a whole. On the other hand, the Jews were to be subjugated, humiliated and discriminated against, as the official church policy down to modern times. The Vatican and the Catholic Church more broadly played a decisive role in the rise of modern antisemitism in the 19th century as well. In 1858 the kidnapping of the Jewish boy Edgardo Mortara was a modern example of church persecution with direct papal approval. The 20th century brought two contrasts in papal relationship with the Jews. Pope Pius XII became infamous for his complicity during the Holocaust, while Pope John Paul II, who grew up with Jews in prewar Poland, changed course and had a much more positive relationship with the Jewish People and State of Israel.
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About this video
“The Popes & the Jews” is a video from Jewish History Soundbites, published on April 26, 2025 and available to watch on VideoVinkel. The total runtime is 41:55. It has been viewed 213 times so far. Press play above to stream the full video right here, or open the original on YouTube.
“The Popes & the Jews” was uploaded by Jewish History Soundbites on April 26, 2025. You can browse more uploads from Jewish History Soundbites on VideoVinkel.
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