Międzynarodowa Rada Chrześcijan i Żydów ICCJ

Pamięć - znicze

Na stronie od 2019-06-06

We Remember: A Reflection on the Shoah

This century has witnessed an unspeakable tragedy, which can never be forgotten: the attempt by the Nazi regime to exterminate the Jewish people, with the consequent killing of millions of Jews. Women and men, old and young, children and infants, for the sole reason of their Jewish origin, were persecuted and deported. Some were killed immediately, while others were degraded, ill-treated, tortured and utterly robbed of their human dignity, and then murdered. Very few of those who entered the Camps survived, and those who did remained scarred for life. This was the Shoah. It is a major fact of the history of this century, a fact which still concerns us today.

ICCJ offices Martin Bubeer House heppenheim

Na stronie od 2009-07-31

Dwanaście Punktów z Berlina (ICCJ 2009)

Niniejszy apel składa się z 12 punktów - przedstawionych jako cele - skierowanych do chrześcijan, do Żydów oraz wspólnie do społeczności chrześcijańskich i żydowskich. Po przedstawieniu tych punktów i związanych z każdym z nich zadań niniejszy dokument prezentuje przegląd historii relacji chrześcijan z Żydami; z tej historii wyłaniają się ramy pojęciowe i pobudki dla naszej inicjatywy.
ICCJ offices Martin Buber  Hpuse Heppenkeim

Na stronie od 1999-01-01

Seelisburg 1947
( 10 ICCJ Points )

The following statement, produced by the Christian participants at the Second conference of the newly formed International Council of Christians and Jews, was one of the first statements following World War II in which Christians, with the advice and counsel of Jews, began to come to terms with the implications of the Shoa.
TEN POINTS

j-ch-r

Na stronie od 1998-04-10

Response to Vatican Document "We Remember: A Reflection on the Shoah"

We would like first to express our appreciation of Pope John Paul II's letter to Cardinal Cassidy expressing the hope for all men of good will to work together, in which we sincerely join. We are keenly aware of the many initiatives of the Pope to improve Catholic-Jewish relations during the twenty years of his Papacy and of his personal sensitivity to the horrors of the Shoah.