When Karol Wojtyla Refused to Baptize an Orphan

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Links are not loading, so I am posting the entire article…From Zenit.

ROME, JAN. 18, 2005 (Zenit.org).- As a priest, Karol Wojtyla refused to baptize a Jewish child who had been entrusted to a Catholic family in Nazi-occupied Poland, out of respect for the youngster’s religious identity.

Shachne Berger was 2 years old in the fall of 1942, when his parents Moses and Helen Hiller, of Krakow, entrusted him to a Catholic couple with no children, who lived in the German section of the city of Dombrowa.

“They were called Yachowitch and were close friends of my parents,” Berger told the Italian newspaper Il Corriere della Sera today.

When the Nazis invaded the Krakow ghetto on Oct. 28, the Hillers decided to act.

“On November 15, my mother succeeded in getting me out of the ghetto and handing me over to her Christian friends together with two large bags,” Berger said. “One contained all her valuable objects and the other, three letters.”

The first letter was addressed to the Yachowitches, to whom the child was being entrusted, asking them to educate him as a Jew and to return him to his people should his parents die, according to the newspaper.

The second letter was addressed to Shachne himself. It explained that it was profound love that made his father and mother place him with strangers to save him, and they revealed his origins, hoping that he would grow up proud of being Jewish.

The third contained the testament of Reizel Wurtzel, Helen’s mother, addressed to her sister-in-law, Jenny Berger, in Washington, D.C.

“Our grandson Shachne Hiller, born on the 18th of the month of Ab [the 11th month of the Jewish calendar], the 22nd of August of 1940, has been entrusted to courageous persons,” the third letter reads. “If none of us returns, I beg you to keep him with you, and that you educate him correctly. This is my last will.”

Before taking leave of the Yachowitches, Helen gave them the names and addresses of relatives – the Aarons and Bergers – who lived in Montreal and Washington.

“If we don’t return when this madness is over,” she requested her friend, “send them these letters.”

Shachne’s mother’s precautions became a reality: In March 1943, the Krakow ghetto was liquidated and the child’s parents were deported to Auschwitz, from where they never returned.

The boy, however, was not out of danger.

“From 1942 to 1945 we were always fleeing, from one house to another, and from one city to a new place,” Berger recalled. “Many hostile and anti-Semitic Poles were suspicious of my looks and thought I was a Jew, and if they had reported us, my adoptive parents would have risked death.”

By the time the war ended, the Yachowitches had grown fond of Shachne, and his “adoptive mother,” forgetting her promise to Helen Hiller, wanted to adopt the child officially. Wishing to baptize him, she approached a young priest of her parish and told him the story of the boy, his identity, and what happened to his parents.

The priest asked Mrs. Yachowitch what had been the wish of the child’s parents when they entrusted him to her. When she revealed the content of the will, the priest, Karol Wojtyla, the future John Paul II, refused to baptize Shachne.

Shachne then left for North America, where his maternal relatives received him. Legal issues made his living with the Bergers difficult. On Dec. 19, 1950, after Jenny Berger’s efforts, U.S. President Harry Truman signed a special decree that entrusted Shachne Hiller to the Bergers.

Jenny Berger recalled: “More than eight years had passed since my grandmother wrote the will in the Krakow ghetto. At last, her wish was realized.”

In October 1978 Mrs. Yachowitch, with whom Shachne – now a practicing Jew, married, and father of twins – had kept in touch by letter, told him the last details of his story.

“For the first time,” he said, “she revealed that she had tried to baptize me and educate me as a Catholic, but that she had been stopped by a young priest, future cardinal of Krakow, Karol Wojtyla, recently elected Pope.”
 
I will have to agree with the Future Pope…

…really stuck my neck out, huh?

Peace:thumbsup:
 
Yet another example of the love, respect, consideration and care of our Holy Father.
 
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catsrus:
Yet another example of the love, respect, consideration and care of our Holy Father.
:amen:

reading that story made me cry.

what a wonderful man we have as Pope. When the false reports came out that Pius XII had acted contrary to this example, I was disappointed that some rushed to defend the alleged action and attack Archbishop Rocalli (John XXIII) for taking the position we have just read of Fr. Wojtyla taking.

The exposure of the forgery regarding Pius XII and the actions of the future popes John XXIII and John Paul II should make it clear where the church stands in these situtions and the deep respect we must have for the Jewish people.

A blessing upon the House of David forever!
 
He did the right thing. I did find the thread title a little misleading and thought it was going to be a post against Our Holy Father, then I saw it was from Marie and knew better. 👍
 
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Lance:
He did the right thing. I did find the thread title a little misleading and thought it was going to be a post against Our Holy Father, then I saw it was from Marie and knew better. 👍
The title is actually the title given on zenit…LOL! It startled me too at the time…but I knew it was and attention getter. 😃

JPII WE LOVE YOU! 😉

I had posted the story about it on the Pius thread way back when. I had remembered the story from way back when. Anyway, I was pleased to see it on Zenit this morning. Made me smile! 🙂
 
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Lance:
He did the right thing. I did find the thread title a little misleading and thought it was going to be a post against Our Holy Father, then I saw it was from Marie and knew better. 👍
The title is actually the title given on zenit…LOL! It startled me too at the time…but I knew it was and attention getter. 😃

JPII WE LOVE YOU! 😉

I had posted the story ( my version) about it on the Pius thread way back when. I had remembered the story from way back when. Anyway, I was pleased to see it on Zenit this morning. Made me smile! 🙂
 
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katherine2:
The exposure of the forgery regarding Pius XII and the actions of the future popes John XXIII and John Paul II should make it clear where the church stands in these situtions and the deep respect we must have for the Jewish people.

A blessing upon the House of David forever!
I agree. These actions SHOULD make it clear where the church stands in these situations, but unfortunately it hasn’t.

Fiat
 
I hate to be a wet blanket, because it is a lovely story and I have no doubt it truly relects John Paul’s feelings on the subject, but I have some problems with the timing.

All the article says is “at the end of the war” the family wanted to adopt and baptize the child, but Karol Wojtyla wan’t ordained until November 1946 and then went almost immediately to study in Rome.

–arthur
 
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aisb23:
I hate to be a wet blanket, because it is a lovely story and I have no doubt it truly relects John Paul’s feelings on the subject, but I have some problems with the timing.

All the article says is “at the end of the war” the family wanted to adopt and baptize the child, but Karol Wojtyla wan’t ordained until November 1946 and then went almost immediately to study in Rome.

–arthur
LOL! Obviously you think end of the war, means the day the Nazi’s gave up! Sheese! It took years to sort out that mess. It was still being sorted in the 50’s. :rolleyes:

JPII was ordained in 1946. Yes, he went to Rome. He was assigned as a priest back to Poland in 1948. The story happened in 1950.

As to timing…big deal. I told that story months ago, it is a well known fact. It just so happened, I found the story again on Zenit. So, you have a problem with JPII and Catholic’s doing the right thing? 🙂

Get over it, learn some history. It’s good for what ail’s ya! 😃
 
I don’t have either a problem with JP2 or the Catholic Church (I attended both a Catholic high school and a Catholic university despite being Jewish) and I do know history (I’m a historian by training), that’s why I say the timing is important.

As for this happening in 1950, the only part of the story that specifically is stated as happening in in 1950 is Pres. Truman’s decree allowing the boy to stay in the US.

And as a Jew I am absolutely thrilled by any and all examples Righteous Gentiles during and after WW2. And you will note that I think that the story represents the Pope’s true thinking on the issue. But until someone gives me an exact date that Karol Wojtyla was approached by this family that conforms with a time he was in Poland, as a priest, and assigned to a parish (most of his early ministry was as a university chaplain), repectfully, I am not going to believe this actually happened.

–arthur
 
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aisb23:
I don’t have either a problem with JP2 or the Catholic Church (I attended both a Catholic high school and a Catholic university despite being Jewish) and I do know history (I’m a historian by training), that’s why I say the timing is important.

As for this happening in 1950, the only part of the story that specifically is stated as happening in in 1950 is Pres. Truman’s decree allowing the boy to stay in the US.

And as a Jew I am absolutely thrilled by any and all examples Righteous Gentiles during and after WW2. And you will note that I think that the story represents the Pope’s true thinking on the issue. But until someone gives me an exact date that Karol Wojtyla was approached by this family that conforms with a time he was in Poland, as a priest, and assigned to a parish (most of his early ministry was as a university chaplain), repectfully, I am not going to believe this actually happened.

–arthur
I should hope so…after all, the numbers of Jews killed in consentration camps is large and horrifying to everyone. But it does seem strange, when almost as many gentiles met the same fate, and history treats them like so much dirt. 5.5 Million or so Gentile sould don’t seem to count much to them. 6.5 million Jews and 5.5 million gentiles, add up to a much bigger picture. Many of those gentiles died because they defied the Nazi killing of Jews.

As to verifying…buy the book, “Chicken Soup for the Jewish Soul.” I think it is still in print. That is where I first read the story. I am sure there are other historical sources as well.
 
This story shows JPII’s adherence to legal issues more than any sentiment towards the Jews, which of course I don’t question as being good and holy. This child’s destiny was legally in the hands of his parents as ong as their will for him was known regardless of circumstance. It was a wonderfull gesture on the part of the woman wanting to adopt him but emotionally unbalanced in that she was crossing a parental boundary that she apparently felt was hers to cross. I would imagine the ordeal of keeping the boy safe would make anyone feel they had earned parental rights. The Pope shows himself here as a firmly rooted balancing force in the emotional winds of war here and I’m very proud of him.
 
Karol Wojtyla was a member of the Polish Resistance and was one of a group that broke into a concentration camp and rescured some of the inmates. One of them, a young girl, was unable to walk far, and he carried her.

She was interviewed on television a few years back, and was asked, “What did you think about him?”

She replied, “I thought God Himself had come to save me.”
 
Catholic Heroes of the Holocaust
Eleven million precious lives were lost during the Holocaust of World War II. Six million of these were Polish citizens. Half of these Polish citizens were non-Jews. On August 22, 1939, a few days before the official start of World War II, Hitler authorized his commanders, with these infamous words, to kill “without pity or mercy, all men, women, and children of Polish descent or language. Only in this way can we obtain the living space [lebensraum] we need”.
The Polish people were classified by the Nazis according to their racial characteristics. The ones who appeared Aryan were deported to Lodz for further racial examination. Most of the others were sent to the Reich to work in labor camps for the benefit of the Germans. The rest were sent to Auschwitz to die. Polish Christians were actually the first victims of the notorious German death camp. For the first 21 months after it began in 1940, Auschwitz was inhabited almost exclusively by Polish non-Jews. The first ethnic Pole died in June 1940 and the first Jew died in October 1942.
Holocaust Forgotten Memorial
 
vern humphrey:
Karol Wojtyla was a member of the Polish Resistance and was one of a group that broke into a concentration camp and rescured some of the inmates. One of them, a young girl, was unable to walk far, and he carried her.

She was interviewed on television a few years back, and was asked, “What did you think about him?”

She replied, “I thought God Himself had come to save me.”
There are many more testimonies on JPII that I have seen on TV and read about. He was and is a Hero. Just as Pius XII was in his own way. 🙂 There are more than a few stories and testamonies by Jewish survivors as to Pius’s heroism. Strange how history get’s re-written these days to suit the mood of the media.
 
“Since infant children have no other means of salvation except Baptism, we may easily understand how grievously those persons sin who permit them to remain without the grace of the Sacrament longer than necessity may require” (Catechism of the Council of Trent)
 
John TE said:
“Since infant children have no other means of salvation except Baptism, we may easily understand how grievously those persons sin who permit them to remain without the grace of the Sacrament longer than necessity may require” (Catechism of the Council of Trent)

:rolleyes:

Faith and Baptism -Catechism of the Catholic Church.

1253 Baptism is the sacrament of faith.54 But faith needs the community of believers. It is only within the faith of the Church that each of the faithful can believe. The faith required for Baptism is not a perfect and mature faith, but a beginning that is called to develop. The catechumen or the godparent is asked: “What do you ask of God’s Church?” The response is: “Faith!”

1254 For all the baptized, children or adults, faith must grow after Baptism. For this reason the Church celebrates each year at the Easter Vigil the renewal of baptismal promises. Preparation for Baptism leads only to the threshold of new life. Baptism is the source of that new life in Christ from which the entire Christian life springs forth.

1255 For the grace of Baptism to unfold, the parents’ help is important. So too is the role of the godfather and godmother, who must be firm believers, able and ready to help the newly baptized - child or adult on the road of Christian life.55 Their task is a truly ecclesial function (officium).56 The whole ecclesial community bears some responsibility for the development and safeguarding of the grace given at Baptism.

VI. THE NECESSITY OF BAPTISM

1257 The Lord himself affirms that Baptism is necessary for salvation.60 He also commands his disciples to proclaim the Gospel to all nations and to baptize them.61 Baptism is necessary for salvation for those to whom the Gospel has been proclaimed and who have had the possibility of asking for this sacrament.62 The Church does not know of any means other than Baptism that assures entry into eternal beatitude; this is why she takes care not to neglect the mission she has received from **the Lord to see that all who can be baptized ** are “reborn of water and the Spirit.” **God has bound salvation to the sacrament of Baptism, but he himself is not bound by his sacraments. **

So pray tell, what does your Council of Trent diatrib have to do with a Jewish child, WITH family who are Jewish and going to raise it Jewish, have to do with the subject? :rolleyes:
 
John TE sounds suspiciously like St. James a rabid anti-Semite. The best thing to do, Marie, is place him under the ignore feature in this forum.
The only thing that will come out of JohnTE’s posts, much like St. Jame’s is anti-Semitism.
 
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