The traditionalist Society of St.
Pius X "completely rejects the false claim that it teaches or practices
anti-Semitism, which is a racial hatred of the Jewish people whether on
account of their ethnicity, culture or religious beliefs," said the
society's U.S. district superior.
Father Arnaud Rostand, the district superior, issued a statement Nov. 11 in response to comments by Cardinal Kurt Koch, president of the
Pontifical Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews, who said
the Vatican's reconciliation talks with the SSPX did not signal the
Vatican's willingness to accept priests or members who hold anti-Semitic
positions.
"Cardinal Koch's false charge of anti-Semitism within our religious
congregation casts the SSPX in a negative light and at a very sensitive
time for the entire church," Father Rostand said. "Furthermore, our
legal counsel has suggested that His Eminence's accusation is tantamount
to defamation, since it insinuates that our society is a racist
organization."
Cardinal Koch, who was addressing members of the commission that
coordinates and promotes dialogue with Jewish groups, said many people
involved in the dialogue -- and not just Jewish participants -- were
worried that the Vatican's efforts to bring the SSPX back into full
communion with the Catholic Church signaled a possible downplaying of
the Second Vatican Council's declaration on relations with the Jews.
The cardinal said Pope Benedict XVI had directed him to make it clear
that the Catholic Church continues to hold to the document's teachings:
on the special spiritual bond between Judaism and Christianity; its
rejection of claims that all Jews of Jesus' time and Jews today bear
responsibility for Jesus' death; and its condemnation of any form of
anti-Judaism or anti-Semitism.
In late October, the SSPX announced it had ousted British Bishop Richard
Williamson, one of the four bishops ordained by SSPX founder Archbishop
Marcel Lefebvre without papal approval in 1988. Bishop Williamson, who
opposed the reconciliation talks with the Vatican, has publicly denied
the extent of the Nazi Holocaust of the Jews.
In 2009, shortly after an interview with Bishop Williamson aired on
television, the society's U.S. website (www.sspx.org) removed articles
arguing that the "Jewish race brought upon themselves the curse that
followed the crime of deicide," and that the "Jewish people, if it has
not converted to Christianity, will, even if it does not wish to, seek
to ruin Christianity."
In his statement to CNS, Father Rostand said hopes that the Jews would
convert "to the one true faith are motivated by supernatural charity,
not hatred."