Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Stop ‘incendiary’ remarks about Israel, Conference of Presidents tells pope

Pope Francis has said things that “distort Israel’s legitimate military campaign and fuel antisemitism and unjust targeting of the Jewish state,” the umbrella Jewish group stated.

St. Peter's Basilica
A dark cloud over St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City in 2018. Photo by Menachem Wecker.

The Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations appreciates and shares the pope’s “concern for the suffering of innocent civilians and desire to spread peace and compassion around the world.”

But Pope Francis has gone beyond that and said troubling things about the Jewish state, Harriet Schleifer and William Daroff, chair and CEO respectively of the umbrella Jewish group, wrote to the pontiff on New Year’s Eve.

“We write in the spirit of this holiday season to express our concern over recent comments your holiness has made regarding Israel’s defensive war against Hamas,” the duo wrote. “Statements you have made including, ‘Yesterday children were bombed. This is cruelty, this is not war,’ only serve to distort Israel’s legitimate military campaign and fuel antisemitism and unjust targeting of the Jewish state.”

The pope has failed to say that the Jewish state has a right to self-defense in the aftermath of Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack or that the terror group uses human shields and embeds its operations among Gazan civilians, “putting the entire population of Gaza at risk,” the leaders wrote.

“With global antisemitism at record highs, the American Jewish community calls on you to refrain from making incendiary comments and to build bridges between our two peoples,” they added.

The Conference of Presidents, which is more than 50 years old, represents 48 Jewish organizations. It has another four adjunct organization members.

“People shouldn’t think that, ‘Oh this is not going to happen to me,’” the 32-year-old Judaic studies teacher told JNS. “It can happen to anyone walking the streets, anyone with their groceries.”
The state must make changes “to clearly address content that is not permitted, while preserving the ability of candidates to present their qualifications to voters,” its secretary of state told JNS.
Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote that the New Jersey attorney general’s demand for donor information may deter donors from associating with First Choice, a Christian pregnancy resource center.
“It’s very important, not only for Israel, but also for the United States, that people will be more familiar with the real history,” Yigal Dilmoni, of American Friends of Judea and Samaria, told JNS.
“When influential voices spread conspiracy theories, promote terrorism or dehumanize Jewish people, it fuels real-world violence and intimidation,” Rep. Josh Gottheimer said.
The authority “continues to provide a system of compensation in support of terrorism through new mechanisms and under a different name,” the U.S. State Department informed Congress.