Seelisberg Conference

The Seelisberg Conference (International Conference of Christians and Jews) was an international conference that took place in the small town of Seelisberg in Switzerland from 30 July to 5 August 1947 in order to study the causes of Christian antisemitism.

Among the 70 participants from 17 countries were:

At the time of this conference, the Christians undertook a re-examination of Christian teaching with regards to the Jews and Judaism. They measured the extent of Christian responsibility in the Nazi genocide and understood that Christian teaching had to be urgently corrected. They prepared ten points, largely inspired by the eighteen proposals of the historian Jules Isaac to eradicate prejudices against the Jews.

The 10 Points of Seelisberg

In 1947 the ICCJ published the document "An Address to the Churches".[1]

International Council of Christians and Jews
The 10 Points of Seelisburg, 1947
"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."[2]

References

  1. "International Conference of Christians and Jews. Seelisberg, Switzerland, 1947. An Address to the Churches". International Council of Christians and Jews. 1947. Retrieved 2009-03-14.
  2. "We have recently witnessed an outburst of antisemitism which has led to the persecution and extermination of millions of Jews. In spite of the catastrophe which has overtaken both the persecuted and the persecutors, and which has revealed the extent of the Jewish problem in all its alarming gravity and urgency, antisemitism has lost none of its force, but threatens to extend to other regions, to poison the minds of Christians and to involve humanity more and more in a grave guilt with disastrous consequences.
    The Christian Churches have indeed always affirmed the un-Christian character of antisemitism, as of all forms of racial hatred, but this has not sufficed to prevent the manifestation among Christians, in various forms, of an undiscriminating racial hatred of the Jews as a people.
    This would have been impossible if all Christians had been true to the teaching of Jesus Christ on the mercy of God and love of one"s neighbour. But this faithfulness should also involve clear-sighted willingness to avoid any presentation and conception of the Christian message which would support antisemitism under whatever form. We must recognise, unfortunately, that this vigilant willingness has often been lacking.
    We therefore address ourselves to the Churches to draw their attention to this alarming situation. We have the firm hope that they will be concerned to show their members how to prevent any animosity towards the Jews which might arise from false, inadequate or mistaken presentations or conceptions of the teaching and preaching of the Christian doctrine, and how on the other hand to promote brotherly love towards the sorely-tried people of the old covenant.
    Nothing would seem more calculated to contribute to this happy result than the following[10 Points of Seelisburg, 1947]"International Council of Christians and Jews, 31.12.1947. "AN ADDRESS TO THE CHURCHES". International Council of Christians and Jews The 10 Points of Seelisburg, 1947. http://www.jcrelations.net. Retrieved 4 October 2011.