Harvard academic Alan Dershowitz has accused a leading candidate to be the next pope of holding antisemitic views.
In the letter written to the Miami Herald, the law professor accused
Cardinal Oscar Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga of Honduras, one of the
possible replacements for Pope Benedict XVI, of propagating conspiracy
theories about Jews.
Mr Dershowitz said that Mr Maradiaga had compared the “Jewish
controlled media” to Hitler for its persecution of the church.
He also
wrote that the cardinal “blamed the Jews for the scandal surrounding the
sexual misconduct of priests toward young parishioners,” and that Mr
Maradiaga had said: “The Jews got even with the Catholic Church for its
anti-Israel positions by arranging for the media — which they, of
course, control, he said — to give disproportionate attention to the
Vatican sex scandal.”
On Mr Maradiaga’s reaction to the sex abuse scandal, Mr Dershowitz
was referring to an interview given by the cardinal in 2002 in Italian
Catholic publication 30Giorni.
At the time, Abraham Foxman, director of
the Anti Defamation League released a statement expressing “outrage” at
the cardinal’s implication of “alleged Jewish manipulation of the
American media”.
According to Haaretz, in a later conversation with Mr Foxman, Mr
Maradiaga apologised and said he never meant for his comments to be
taken that way and that he would not say it again.
Alan Dershowitz, who wrote the letter, is a respected criminal
appellate lawyer and acted as an adviser in the OJ Simpson trial. He is
also an author of book on law, politics and the Arab-Israeli conflict.