Pope Francis has said he plans renewed cooperation to further
Catholic-Jewish relations and hopes to contribute to a world where all
people live in harmony with the “will of the Creator”.
In a message to Chief Rabbi Riccardo di Segni of Rome, the Pope said
he “profoundly hopes to be able to contribute to the progress that
Jewish-Catholic relations have seen starting from the Second Vatican
Council, in a spirit of renewed collaboration”.
He said he also hoped to be “at the service of a world that may grow in harmony with the will of the Creator”.
The Pope sent his “cordial greetings” to the head of Rome’s Jewish
community on the evening of his election.
The Vatican released a copy of
the message to journalists on Friday.
The Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, reported that Rabbi di Segni planned to attend the installation Mass.
The rabbi sent his best wishes to the new Pope, hoping his leadership
would be graced with “strength and wisdom in the formidable task that
has been entrusted” to him.
“In the past decades, Rome has been a privileged place where
historical steps have been taken in Christian-Jewish relations,” Rabbi
di Segni said.
Pope Francis’s election as Bishop of Rome “gives us the hope that the
journey of friendship, respect and fruitful collaboration will
continue”, he said.
Israeli President Shimon Peres congratulated Pope Francis, inviting
him “to pay a visit to the Holy Land at the earliest possibility”.
“He’ll be a welcome guest in the Holy Land, as a man of inspiration
that can add to the attempt to bring peace in a stormy area,” he said in
a written statement.
“The relations between the Vatican and the Jewish people are now at
their best in the last 2,000 years and I hope they will grow in content
and depths,” the president said, adding that the new Pope “represents
devotion, the love of God, the love of peace, a holy modesty and a new
continent which is now awakening”.
“We need, more than ever, a spiritual leadership and not just a
political one. Where political leaders may divide, spiritual leaders may
unite: unite around a vision, unite around values, unite around a faith
that we can make the world a better place to live. May the Lord bless
the new Pope,” Peres wrote.
Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League,
called Pope Francis’s election “a significant moment in the history of
the Church” that will foster positive relations in the wake of “the
transformational papacies of Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI –
pontiffs who launched historic reconciliation between the Catholic
Church and the Jewish people,” he said.
“There is much in his record that reassures us about the future,” Mr
Foxman said, including “the new Pope’s sensitivity to the Jews.”