Nostra Aetate

Hans Rustad

Anti­se­mit­tisme i Ves­ten sprang ut av noen skrift­ste­der i evan­ge­liene, bla. Mat­teus 27, v 25. Den katolske kirke tok et opp­gjør med disse for­tolk­nin­gene i Nostra Aetate som ble ved­tatt i 1965. Her slås det fast at kir­ken ikke støt­ter en for­tolk­ning av teks­ten som har brodd mot jødene.

Er det mulig å tenke seg noe lig­nende for islams del, spør Douglas Murray.

Det er ube­ha­ge­lig, men sant at anti­se­mit­tis­men i islam går til­bake på reli­gio­nen, og ikke er noe som til­fel­dig er erver­vet i tidens løp.

Men bare det å inn­rømme dette er for mange av dagens men­nes­ker utålelig.

Før eller siden må islam ta det samme opp­gjø­ret som den katolske kirke, skri­ver Murray.

I descri­bed anti-Semitism as ‘both a con­stant and a con­stantly morp­hing phe­n­ome­non.’ Allow me an example. For much of the last two thou­sand years there have been varie­ties of Chris­tian anti-Semitism. There are many con­tri­bu­ting strands, but per­haps the most impor­tant is derived from the claim that the Jews, rat­her than the Romans or indeed God, are respon­s­ible for kil­ling Jesus. The verse in St Matthew’s gos­pel (chap­ter 27, verse 25) ‘His blood be on us, and on our child­ren’ has been at the root of many Chris­tian atrocities over the years.

How­e­ver, many Chris­ti­ans and others were aware of this, and paral­lel strains of thought exi­sted and arose. In recent cen­tu­ries secu­la­rist thin­kers and other out­si­ders from the reli­gion have hel­ped to push the churches on the mat­ter. Of course the Cat­h­o­lic Church does not speak for all Chris­ti­ans, but it was a hugely sig­ni­fi­cant leap when in 1965 Pope Paul VI issued Nostra Aetate. This procla­ma­tion, voted upon by the Second Vati­can Coun­cil, cla­ri­fied the issue of the Cat­h­o­lic Church’s atti­tude towards the Jews. It inclu­ded this impor­tant passage :

True, the Jewish aut­hori­ties and those who followed their lead pressed for the death of Christ; still, what hap­pe­ned in His pas­sion can­not be char­ged against all the Jews, wit­hout dis­tinc­tion, then alive, nor against the Jews of today. Alt­hough the Church is the new people of God, the Jews should not be pre­sented as rejected or accur­sed by God, as if this followed from the Holy Scrip­tu­res. All should see to it, then, that in cateche­ti­cal work or in the preaching of the word of God they do not teach any­thing that does not con­form to the truth of the Gos­pel and the spi­rit of Christ.

Furt­her­more, in her rejec­tion of every perse­cution against any man, the Church, mind­ful of the patri­mony she sha­res with the Jews and moved not by poli­ti­cal rea­sons but by the Gospel’s spi­ri­tual love, decries hatred, perse­cutions, dis­plays of anti-Semitism, directed against Jews at any time and by anyone.’

Of course this has not cle­ared up all ver­sions of Cat­h­o­lic, or Chris­tian anti-Semitism and its vari­ants. Rank examp­les of these can still occur. But Nostra Aetate had a pal­pable result. Not the least of them was this: if you are a Cat­h­o­lic you might still feel, and even espouse, anti-Semitic views, but you should know that you are acting against the stated positions of your faith whose lea­ders have refuted the Bibli­cal inter­pre­ta­tion to which you cling.

Which brings me to my point — indeed the punch I pul­led in my ear­lier blog: the ques­tion of ideo­logy. The Isla­mists who espouse — in words and action — a form of anti-Semitism do not do so from an abso­lute void. They have not deci­ded that Jews are a tar­get because of somet­hing wholly irra­tio­nal that has gone off simul­tane­ously in all of their heads — or at least not solely because of that. They think and act in the way that they do because they believe they have a reli­gious man­date for doing so. In par­ti­cu­lar they point to cer­tain actions of their religion’s foun­der, as well as cer­tain portions of both the Quran and the Hadith. To give just one example: the foun­ding char­ter of Hamas cites one of the most dis­tur­bing say­ings of Mohammed.

Of course, for bet­ter and worse, Islam is not the Cat­h­o­lic Church. It does not have a Pope at its head nor a Vati­can coun­cil who can vote, decree and make things so. But then the Cat­h­o­lic Church is not Chris­tia­nity. All large reli­gions are com­plex — plu­ra­li­s­tic if one is being kind, schis­ma­tic if one is not. Yet I make the compa­ri­son for a par­ti­cu­lar rea­son. The Cat­h­o­lic Church’s atti­tu­des towards Jews was not always as happy as it is today, but half a cen­tury ago it was able, not before time, to address the pro­blems ari­sing from one verse in St Matt­hew because it ack­now­led­ged it, dealt with it and refuted a popu­lar inter­pre­ta­tion of it. It was assis­ted in this process (though the church did not neces­sa­rily see it this way) by numerous non-Catholic voi­ces, out­side the church, decry­ing — and decry­ing with a spec­ial weight after the Shoah — the church’s sligh­test incli­na­tions in that old direction.

So back to Islam. One way of reac­ting to the pro­blem of Isla­mist vio­lence and Isla­mic anti-Semitism in par­ti­cu­lar is to pre­tend it is not there. This has been the atti­tude of many com­for­table people in recent years. Anot­her, equally com­mon, position is to ack­now­ledge it is there but attri­bute it solely to cau­ses other than those which the per­pe­tra­tors cite (poverty, for­eign policy etc). Anot­her is to ack­now­ledge the reli­gious claims which the ter­ro­rists cite but claim that they are com­pletely wrong in this claim, that their ideas come from now­here and could not have any­thing to do with Islam which is cha­rac­teri­sed wholly by its (unde­ni­ably also exis­tent) peace­ful ele­ments. It is an under­stan­dable atti­tude, and, I must say, a popu­lar one. It is bol­ste­red by phy­si­cal fear and a con­cern — which I now rec­og­nise is more under­stan­dable than I always have in the past — that discus­sions of his­to­ri­cal actors, how­e­ver truth­ful, may appear to be per­ce­i­ved as an attack on ordi­nary people just get­ting on with their lives.

Nevert­he­less the point has to be made. The actions of Al-Qaeda, Hez­bol­lah, Isla­mic Jihad, Hamas, the Revo­lu­tio­nary govern­ment in Iran are obviously not a good inter­pre­ta­tion of Islam. They are also demon­strably not an inter­pre­ta­tion followed by most Mus­lims today. But they do not come from now­here. Just as a very strong part of Christianity’s pro­blem with Jews came from Chris­tian scrip­ture and the use of those scrip­tu­res by Chris­tian lea­ders, so a very strong part of the pro­blem some Mus­lims have with Jews comes from Isla­mic scrip­ture and the use of that scrip­ture by Isla­mic lea­ders. The teachings of Yusuf al-Qaradawi are just one case in point. Ack­now­led­ging this does not mean that the prac­ti­sed Isla­mic faith will always have pro­blems with Jews. But it can­not seriously be clai­med that such a pro­blem is not there, in the life of Islam’s foun­der, in the Quran and Hadith as well as in vary­ing forms throug­hout Isla­mic history.

If Islam were Chris­tia­nity this would have been dealt with. Not because of any­thing inn­ate in the reli­gion, but because people would not have feared to make this case. If this were Chris­tia­nity, the pres­su­res of cri­ti­cism and cri­ti­cal inquiry — from wit­hin but also, essenti­ally, from wit­hout — would press in such a way that many people would pro­bably rejoice in taking up the cause. But very few people are keen to do this when it invol­ves Islam. Most people from wit­hin the reli­gion are eit­her una­ware of these aspects, or ignore them, or believe they should not air what they rec­og­nise is dirty linen in pub­lic. Simul­tane­ously, most people out­side are unwil­ling to point such things out because they fear eve­rything from accu­sa­tions of bad man­ners to a per­cep­tion that they are not in fact cri­tics of an ideo­logy, or aspects of a reli­gion, but racists or other varie­ties of bigot.

Not to under­state it at all: this is a tragedy. It is a tragedy for Mus­lims first, for the Jews next and for all the rest of us after that. The best way to ensure that no equi­va­lent of Nostra Aetate ever emer­ges from the Isla­mic faith is help to deny — rat­her than face up to — very uncom­for­table facts and instead join in the popu­lar pret­ence. My per­so­nal hunch, and hope, is that the Isla­mic faith will one day go through a simi­lar trans­for­ma­tive process to that of the Cat­h­o­lic Church. It will not be easy and it will not be pain­less. But whether honest inquiry or plea­sant lies pre­vail will mark the dif­fe­rence over whether this process takes years or centuries.

Anti-Semitism, Isla­mism and Islam
Douglas Mur­ray - 26 July 2012 15:03


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