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Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Massachusetts Zionists Humiliate Catholic Church

On November 20th Cardinal O'Malley set himself and the Catholic Church up for humiliation when he took part in Zionist Holocaust religious ritual purporting to honor Pope John Paul II. (See article below.)

Until Israeli and American Jews start to show some significant remorse for the atrocities that the IDF committed during the Gaza Rampage and that were recently publicized in the Goldstone Report, O'Malley has no business accepting any honors from racist Jewish American Zionists.

Isn't O'Mally aware that during last winter's IDF rampage Gaza's 300 member strong Roman Catholic community suffered from Jewish Zionist depredations along with all other Gazan Muslims and Christians?

Yet according to the account below:
The evening also included a musical performance by an interfaith choir made up of SASSDS students and St. Catherine of Siena School in Norwood, remarks by Arbeiter, Consul General of Israel to New England Nadav Tamir, and Rick Mann, president of the Friends of New England Holocaust Memorial. Rabbi David Paskin of SASSDS [South Area Solomon Schechter Day School], gave the invocation and benediction. The evening also included a candle lighting ceremony and a singing of “The Star Spangled Banner” and “Hatikva” the Israeli national anthem, by Lisa Yves Winner, a parent of an SASSDS student.
It was bad enough that O'Malley was even present, but for him to remain during the playing of the Hatikvah boggles the mind.

Instead of leaving O'Malley told the gathering:
We must not be reticent in working to establish a civilization of love and solidarity. We must always remember the Holocaust, always remember the Kristallnacht, and the values and examples of so many heroic people who died in resisting. We must all pledge ourselves over and over and over again that it will never happen again.
For Palestinians under Zionist oppression every day is Kristallnacht.

O'Malley distorts the Holocaust when he purports to remember it without recalling that by the 1930s, Jews were up to their eyeballs in targeted assassinations, murderous revolutionary violence, terrorism, mass murder, ethnic cleansing, conspiracy to commit genocide, and genocide both in Eastern Europe and also in the ME.

Is Zionist genocide any less heinous than German Nazi genocide because the Zionists are taking so long to complete the plan that they first began to formulate in 1880s?

If anything, methodically torturing and murdering Arab Palestine during a period spanning three centuries shows a level of cruelty that is probably unmatched in human history.

When the Church stands with the Jewish people, which is a false construct of Zionism or - to be more precise - of Jewish Nazism, the Church abandons Christ for Satan.

For Catholicism in America to be true to its mission, modern American Catholics need leaders as willing to condemn Jewish Zionist atrocities today as Fr. Coughlin was during the 30s to denounce the greed of Jewish bankers and the barbarism of Jewish communists.

Late pope honored by local Jewish organizations



Israel Arbeiter, a Holocaust survivor, shows Cardinal Seán P. O’Malley the Israel Arbeiter Gallery of Understanding during a Nov. 12 reception at the South Area Solomon Schechter Day School. The gallery depicts photos of Arbeiter during the time of the Holocaust and his personal story of survival, as well as information on Jewish persecution in Europe during the Holocaust. Pilot photo/ Jim Lockwood
NORWOOD -- In recognition of his work promoting Jewish-Catholic relations, the late Pope John Paul II was posthumously awarded the first annual Righteous Among the Nations Award at a reception Nov. 12 at South Area Solomon Schechter Day School.

The award was given by the SASSDS and the Israel Arbeiter Gallery of Understanding.

Accepting the award on the late pontiff’s behalf was Cardinal Seán P. O’Malley. Cardinal O’Malley also served as the keynote speaker for the evening.

The evening festivities included a reception in the gallery, which features a wall display of the life and times of Israel Arbeiter, a Holocaust survivor who is president of the American Association of Jewish Holocaust Survivors of Greater Boston. During the reception, Arbeiter showed the cardinal the gallery.

The evening also included a musical performance by an interfaith choir made up of SASSDS students and St. Catherine of Siena School in Norwood, remarks by Arbeiter, Consul General of Israel to New England Nadav Tamir, and Rick Mann, president of the Friends of New England Holocaust Memorial. Rabbi David Paskin of SASSDS, gave the invocation and benediction. The evening also included a candle lighting ceremony and a singing of “The Star Spangled Banner” and “Hatikva” the Israeli national anthem, by Lisa Yves Winner, a parent of an SASSDS student.

Speakers during the evening recalled the legacy of the Holocaust, and praised Pope John Paul II for his work in attempting to establish peace in the Middle East and greater ecumenical cooperation between Christians and Jews.

“The Holy Father has stated that Catholics are called to stand with the Jewish people in preserving the memory of the Holocaust,” said Cardinal O’Malley. “Speaking with Jewish leaders in Warsaw, Pope John Paul II said, ‘Today the people of Israel, perhaps more than ever before, find themselves at the center of the attention of the nations of the world, above all because of this terrible experience through which you have become a warning voice for all humanity, for all nations, for all the powers of the world, all systems, and every person.’”

The late pontiff witnessed firsthand the Holocaust because, according to Cardinal O’Malley, the pope’s native Poland was among the hardest hit. Cardinal O’Malley said that 85-percent of Poland’s 3.3 million Jews died in the death camps, which was the largest Jewish population in Europe at the time.

Tamir concurred.

“Having grown up in Poland and having witnessed the beginning of the Holocaust, the Pope knew of what he spoke,” Tamir said.

He said that in 1986, the late pope was the first pontiff to visit a synagogue. He also recalled the pope’s 2000 visit to Israel, where he told the Israelis that he had witnessed the atrocities of the Holocaust.

“He delivered one of the most important speeches ever given on Israel’s soil,” Tamir said. “No one can forget or ignore what happened.”

Tamir credited the late pope for initiating relations between the Vatican and Israel, saying that that diplomatic tie is one of Israel’s most significant today.

“I feel that it’s important to note this evening that the work of uniting our faiths for the benefit of the common good does not end with the pope’s passing,” Tamir concluded.

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