mail : englishspoken@clairval.com
September 1,
2003
Saint Giles
Dear Friend of Saint Joseph Abbey,
Israel,
a young Jew, got along well at
school with Stanislas, a young
Christian. Invited to his
friend's house, Israel saw a
crucifix hanging on the wall. He
had never seen one before. When
he went home, he asked his
family about this man hanging on
a cross. They replied, «This is
something that concerns
Christians, not us.» Much later,
he read in the prophet Isaiah
the songs of the servant of
the Lord, in which is
presented the purest and most
innocent man, beaten, humiliated,
and put to death for our sins.
This nagging question then
sprang to his mind: «Isn't the
crucified man I saw this servant
of Yahweh?»
This young Israel, of the Zoller
family, was born on September
17, 1881, in Brody, in Galicia,
now a region in southeast Poland,
but at that time part of the
Austro-Hungarian empire. He was
the youngest of five children.
Members of the Jewish religion,
the family was relatively
well-off, as the father was the
owner of a silk factory in Lodz,
then in Russian territory. In
1888, the Czar decided to
nationalize every business owned
by foreigners. Mr. Zoller's
factory in Lodz was confiscated
without financial compensation.
The family's way of life was
simplified considerably, and the
eldest sons were forced to move
away to look for work.
At the age of seven, Israel
attended the Jewish primary
school where the children
learned passages from the Bible
by rote. But his taste for
religious learning came
primarily from his father. For
her part, his mother taught him
to help the needy. Moved by her
neighbor's poverty, she
redoubled her good works,
appealing when necessary to the
other ladies in her neighborhood,
Jewish or Catholic. In the Brody
area, there was no scorn or
mistrust between Jews and
Christians. A bond, in fact, «spiritually
ties the people of the New
Covenant to Abraham's stock.
Thus the Church of Christ
acknowledges that, according to
God's saving design, the
beginnings of her faith and her
election are found already among
the Patriarchs, Moses and the
prophets. She professes that all
who believe in Christ—Abraham's
sons according to faith—are
included in the same Patriarch's
call, and likewise that the
salvation of the Church is
mysteriously foreshadowed by the
chosen people's exodus from the
land of bondage. The Church,
therefore, cannot forget that
she received the revelation of
the Old Testament through the
people with whom God in His
inexpressible mercy concluded
the Ancient Covenant» (Vatican
II, Nostra ætate, 4).
In 1904, Israel left his family
whom he would never see again.
His mother, who had always
wished to see him become a
rabbi, had just died. While
giving lessons to provide for
his family's needs, he studied
philosophy at the University of
Vienna, then at the University
of Florence where he completed
his doctorate. At the same time
he pursued rabbinical studies.
Named vice-rabbi of Trieste in
1913, which at that time was an
Austrian port, he married Adele
Litwak, a Galician Jew, from
which union a daughter, Dora,
was born. During the First World
War, Israel was hounded by the
Austrian police as an Italian
partisan, because he had studied
in this country. At the end of
the conflict, Trieste was united
with Italy, and Israel Zoller
was named Chief Rabbi of the
city.
Wasn't
Jesus a son of my people?
In 1917, he suffered the
profound pain of losing his wife.
At this time he had a mystical
experience: one afternoon, «all
of a sudden and without knowing
why, as if I were in an ecstasy,
I called upon the name of Jesus...
I saw Him as in a large painting...
I gazed at Him for a long time,
without restlessness, feeling,
rather, perfect serenity of mind...
I said to myself, 'Wasn't Jesus
a son of my people?' » Nothing
premeditated, nothing prepared.
It was a first quiet call from
Christ.
Zoller married again in 1920, to
Emma Majonica, who would give
him a second daughter, Miriam.
From 1918 to 1938, living all
the while in Trieste, he taught
Hebrew and ancient Semitic
languages at the University of
Padua. Surprisingly, he
frequented the New Testament as
well as the Old. In this way did
he become familiar with the
person of Jesus Christ and His
teaching. He could not keep
himself from comparing the Old
Testament to the New: «In the
Old Testament, justice is
carried out by one man towards
another... We do good for good
received; we do harm for harm we
have suffered at the hands of
another. Not to do injury for
injury is, in a certain fashion,
to fall short of justice.» What
a contrast with the Gospel: Love
your enemies... pray for
them, or even Jesus' last
words on the cross: Father,
forgive them, for they know not
what they do! «All this
stupefied me,» Zoller wrote. «The
New Testament is, in fact, an
altogether new Testament.» And
he clarified, «Here a new earth,
a new heaven begin... The rich
who are attached to the earth
are poor, and the poor who have
been able to detach themselves
from the earth are truly rich,
because they possess a kingdom
that belongs to the afflicted,
to the silent, and to the
persecuted, who have themselves
never persecuted, but have only
loved.» Little by little,
Zoller discovered the bond that
links the two Testaments. Indeed,
«God, the inspirer and author
of both Testaments, wisely
arranged that the New Testament
be hidden in the Old and the Old
be made manifest in the New...
The books of the Old
Testament... acquire and show
forth their full meaning in the
New Testament» (Vatican II, Dei
Verbum, 16).
The
Nazarene
In addition, Zoller noted
with sadness that, among his co-religionists,
«love of the Law is often more
important than the law of Love.»
The petty details of rabbinical
casuistry eclipsed the great
commandment of the law revealed
by God to Moses: You shall
love the Lord, your God, with
all your heart, and with all
your soul... (Dt. 6:5). As a
specialist in ancient languages,
he discovered that the name «Nazareth»
was first applied to the little
town where Jesus lived during
His first thirty years. But this
name likewise meant that Jesus
of Nazareth was the Nazir (the
Consecrated One) announced by
the prophet Isaiah: A shoot
shall sprout from the stump of
Jesse, and from his roots a bud (in
Hebrew: nazer) shall blossom.
The spirit of the Lord shall
rest upon Him (Is. 11:1-2a).
He expounded on this discovery
in his most significant work of
the twenty years he spent in
Trieste, The Nazarene
(1938).
The striking agreement between
the story of Christ's Passion in
the Gospel and the Suffering
Servant described by the
prophet Isaiah eight centuries
before His coming left Zoller
doubtless that this prophecy was
fulfilled in Jesus: He was
spurned and avoided by men, a
man of suffering, accustomed to
infirmity... we held Him in no
esteem. Yet it was our
infirmities that He bore, our
sufferings that He endured... He
was pierced for our offenses,
crushed for our sins...; by His
stripes we were healed (Isaiah
53, 3-5). In addition, examining
Jesus' declarations on His
divinity led him to write, «Christ
is the Messiah; the Messiah is
God; therefore Christ is God.»
Zoller was intellectually
convinced, but he did not yet
have faith. Faith was a grace
that he would receive seven
years later.
The rapprochement between
Mussolini and Hitler's Germany
at the end of the 1930's brought
with it anti-Semitic campaigns
in Italy, particularly in areas
close to borders with the Third
Reich. In Trieste, where there
were many Jews, a Catholic
historian organized a series of
anti-Semitic conferences. A
large audience was expected.
Zoller decided to intercede with
a Jesuit, a friend of the
speaker's. The religious
arranged a meeting between the
rabbi and the orator. With
gentleness and kindness, Zoller
exhorted his listener, in the
name of Christian principles and
especially in the name of the
forgiveness that Jesus Christ
granted on the Cross, to cancel
his conferences. The professor
raised the difficulty of his
situation as an objection—everything
had already been organized. The
rabbi shrugged his shoulders and
advised him only to read the
Gospel, as he often did himself.
He predicted, «The time is near
when we will become good friends.»
The following Sunday, in front
of a packed auditorium, the
lecturer announced that a
high-ranking Jew had enlightened
his conscience. He no longer
wanted to continue on the path
he had strayed down until then,
and canceled the scheduled
conferences.
But already discriminatory laws
had been enacted against the
Jews. Israel Zoller italianized
his name to «Zolli.»
Nevertheless, he was soon
stripped of his Italian
nationality, but he was not
particularly worried. In 1940,
the Jewish community in Rome
offered him the vacant post of
Chief Rabbi of this capital. He
accepted the position offered
him, with the goal of protecting
his brothers in the persecution
that was anticipated, and of
making peace among the divisions
within the Jewish community,
whose members he exhorted to set
politics aside and turn their
attention to prayer, teaching,
and mutual aid. But this appeal
met with almost no response.
A
solidarity that saves
In September 1943, after
the fall of Mussolini and the
armistice signed by the king of
Italy, Victor Emmanuel III, with
the Americans, Hitler sent
thirty German divisions to
occupy northern and central
Italy. Himmler, commander of the
SS, determined that the time had
come to apply the policy of
extermination of the Jewish race
in Italy. He ordered the head of
the SS in Rome, Lieutenant
Colonel Kappler, to gather all
the Jews together, men and women,
children and the elderly, to
deport them to Germany.
Lieutenant Colonel Kappler took
advantage of the deportation
order that he had received to
blackmail. He convened the two
men presiding over the Jewish
community in Rome, and summoned
them to deliver 50 kilos of gold
to him in twenty-four hours, or
else all the men in the city's
Jewish population would be
deported immediately. In fact,
it was a matter of a list of
three hundred hostages, at the
top of which Zolli appeared. The
next day, the Jewish community
had been able to collect only 35
kilos of gold. They asked the
Chief Rabbi to go to the Vatican
to try to borrow what was
missing. He succeeded in
entering the Vatican, all the
exits of which were monitored by
the Gestapo, by a hidden door in
the back of the City, and
explained his request for a loan
of 15 kilos of gold to Pius
XII's Secretary of State,
Cardinal Maglione. He gave his
own person as a security. The
prelate consulted with the Holy
Father, then asked Zolli to
return before one o'clock in the
afternoon. But shortly
thereafter, Zolli learned that
the quantity of gold required
had already been collected,
thanks to contributions from
priests and numerous Catholic
organizations.
However, this was only a respite.
The Chief Rabbi made every
effort to convince the Jews of
Rome to scatter to avoid
deportation. Soon the German
ambassador to the Holy See, von
Weizsäcker, who was secretly
hostile to Nazi policy, warned
the Pope that Himmler had
ordered the deportation of all
Jews in Italy. Pius XII
immediately ordered the Roman
clergy to open their sanctuaries
so as to receive the Jews who
would come to hide there. Zolli,
who had a price on his head,
lived in hiding for the next
nine months and, lastly, with
Christian friends of his
daughter, Dora. He thus
succeeded in escaping from the
Gestapo. But despite the
precautions taken, in the night
of October 15-16, a thousand
Roman Jews (out of about 8,000)
were arrested and deported. Most
would not return.
«From
now on you will follow Me»
On June 4, 1944, the city
of Rome was liberated by the
American forces. By government
decree of September 21, 1944,
Israel Zolli, who had been
relieved of his duties seven
months earlier by leaders of the
Jewish community, became Chief
Rabbi of Rome again. During the
feast of Yom Kippur (Expiation)
in October 1944, he presided
over the prayers of Great Pardon
in the synagogue in Rome. «Suddenly,»
he wrote, «I saw, with the eyes
of the mind, a large prairie,
and standing in the middle of
the green grass was Jesus,
dressed in a white robe... At
the sight of this, I felt a
great interior peace, and, from
the depths of my heart, I heard
these words: 'You are here for
the last time. From now on, you
will follow Me.' I received them
in the greatest serenity, and my
heart immediately responded, 'So
let it be, so must it be.'... An
hour later, after supper, in my
room, my wife declared to me, 'Today,
while you were standing before
the Ark of the Torah, it seemed
to me that the white figure of
Jesus was laying His hands on
you, as if He were blessing you.'
I was stupefied... At that very
moment, our younger daughter,
Miriam, who had gone to her room
and hadn't heard anything,
called for me to tell me, 'You
are in the middle of talking
about Jesus Christ. You know,
Papa, this evening I saw a big
Jesus, all white, in a dream.' I
wished them both a good night
and, without feeling at all ill
at ease, I continued to think
about the extraordinary
agreement of events.»
A few days later, the Chief
Rabbi relinquished his duties,
and went to find a priest in
order to complete his
instruction in the truths of the
faith. On February 13, 1945,
Archbishop Traglia conferred the
sacrament of Baptism on Israel
Zolli, who chose «Eugenio» as
his Christian name, in a tribute
of gratitude to Pope Pius XII
for his decisive action on
behalf of the Jews during the
war. Zolli's wife, Emma,
received Baptism with her
husband, and added the name «Maria»
to her first name. Their
daughter Miriam would follow her
parents after a year of personal
reflection. Eugenio Zolli's
Baptism was the result of a long
spiritual evolution: «This
event, in my soul, was like the
arrival of a beloved guest. I
began only to hear the voice of
Christ expressed more clearly
and more strongly in the
Gospels. In my soul, God did not
reveal Himself at all by means
of tempest or fire, but through
a gentle murmur... I became
aware of a God Whom I loved, a
God Who wants to be loved, and
Who Himself loves... The convert,
like the man miraculously cured,
is the object (the one who
receives) and not the subject (the
worker) of the miracle. It is
false to speak of someone who
has converted as if he has acted
from personal initiative. No one
says of the miraculously cured
that he has cured himself, but
that he has been cured. We must
say the same of the convert.»
All
men and women are her children
Zolli was often asked if
he had converted out of
gratitude towards Pope Pius XII.
He always answered in the
negative, adding, however: «You
could say of the reign of Pius
XII that it was inspired by the
words of the prophet Isaiah: 'Peace
is harmony, peace is salvation
for those who are near as for
those who are far, I wish to
heal all' (cf. Is. 57:19). The
Catholic Church loves all souls.
She suffers with all and for
all. She waits with love for all
her children on Peter's holy
threshold, and her children are
all mankind... There is no place
of suffering that Pius XII's
spirit of love did not reach...
In the course of history, no
hero commanded such an army. No
military force was more fighting,
none was more fought against,
none was more heroic than that
led by Pius XII in the name of
Christian charity.» According
to the Jewish historian Pinchas
Lapide, the Catholic Church,
through its charitable action,
was able to save from certain
death approximately 850,000 Jews
living in territories occupied
by the Third Reich (Cf. Pius
XII and the Second World War,
by Father Pierre Blet S.J.,
Paulist Press, 1999).
The night of his Baptism, Zolli
did not even have something to
eat for dinner. Archbishop
Traglia gave him 50 lira. At the
age of sixty-five, Zolli found
himself suddenly confronted with
grave financial problems,
starting with that of supporting
his family. Up until that time,
he had always lived from his
fees as a Rabbi and a professor.
He accepted this new situation
with the greatest detachment: «I
am asking for the water of
Baptism and nothing else. I am
poor and I will live poor. I
have trust in Providence.» The
news of the Chief Rabbi of Rome
being baptized launched a chorus
of slanders. He was accused,
among other grievances, of
having apostatized out of
self-interest. It was easy for
him to answer: «The Jews who
convert today, as in Saint
Paul's time, have everything to
lose in terms of material life,
and have everything to gain in
the life of grace.» He
responded to the reproach of
treason with indignation: «The
God of Jesus Christ, of Paul, is
He not the same as the God of
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob?»
In our time, certain Catholics
think it is pointless for a Jew
to convert to become Christian.
This opinion is contradicted by
the teaching of the Second
Vatican Council: «The Church, a
pilgrim now on earth, is
necessary for salvation: the one
Christ is the mediator and the
way of salvation; He is present
to us in His Body which is the
Church. He himself explicitly
asserted the necessity of faith
and Baptism, and thereby
affirmed at the same time the
necessity of the Church which
men enter through Baptism as
through a door. Hence they could
not be saved who, knowing that
the Catholic Church was founded
as necessary by God through
Christ, would refuse either to
enter it or to remain in it»
(Vatican II, Lumen Gentium,
14).
At
three o'clock in the afternoon,
just like Jesus
Through the Holy Father's
intervention, Eugenio Zolli was
named a professor at the
Pontifical Biblical Institute.
In October 1946, he entered the
Third Order of Saint Francis,
the distinguishing feature of
which is evangelical poverty
practiced by lay people in the
world. Zolli, a faithful
parishioner at Stella Matutina,
discreetly attended talks on the
Gospel given by his parish
priest. At Christmas 1955, he
himself gave a conference on the
announcement of the Redeemer in
the Old Testament. But in
January 1956, he came down with
bronchopneumonia. His wife Emma
was also sick and elderly. Their
younger daughter, Miriam, who
was married and had given birth
to a little girl, Maura Brigida,
stayed at her father's bedside
in this final illness. A week
before his death, Eugenio
confided to a nun who was caring
for him, «I will die the first
Friday of the month, at three
o'clock in the afternoon, just
like Our Lord.» On Friday,
March 2, in the morning, he
received Holy Communion. Having
fallen into a coma at noon, at
three o'clock in the afternoon
Eugenio Zolli committed his soul
to God. He had written at the
end of his memoirs: «We can
trust in nothing save the mercy
of God, save the compassion of
Christ, Whom humanity put to
death because it did not know
how to live in Him. We can rely
on nothing but the intercession
of her whose Heart was pierced
through by the lance that
pierced her Son's side.»
Through his spiritual journey,
Eugenio Zolli shows the
continuity between the Old
Covenant and the New: Do not
think that I have come to
abolish the law and the prophets.
I have come, not to abolish them,
but to fulfill them, Jesus
had said (Mt. 5:17). «God has
visited His people. He has
fulfilled the promise he made to
Abraham and His descendents. He
acted far beyond all
expectation—He has sent His
own beloved Son... In many
and various ways God spoke of
old to our fathers by the
prophets, but in these last days
He has spoken to us by a Son
(Heb. 1:1-2). Christ, the Son of
God made man, is the Father's
one, perfect, and unsurpassable
Word. In Him He has said
everything; there will be no
other word than this one... 'In
giving us His Son, His only
Word,' wrote Saint John of the
Cross, 'He has no more to say...
Any person questioning God or
desiring some vision or
revelation would be guilty not
only of foolish behavior but
also of offending Him, by not
fixing his eyes entirely upon
Christ and by living with the
desire for some other novelty'
» (Catechism of the Catholic
Church, nos. 422 and 65).
For Zolli, the demands that this
truth brought with it were not
easy to implement. At the end of
his life, he said, «Those of
you who are born into the
Catholic faith do not realize
the opportunity you have, to
have received the grace of
Christ since your childhood. But
those who, like me, have come to
the threshold of faith after
long work continued over the
course of many years, appreciate
the grandeur of the gift of
Faith and feel all the joy there
is to be Christian.»
Let us thank God for the gift of
Faith that He has granted us
undeservedly. Let us preserve
this treasure through a holy
life, and let us pray that all
men might know the Messiah,
believe in Him, and obtain
eternal Life.
Bibliography: Judith Cabaud:
Eugenio Zolli, Prophet of a New
World(de Guibert, Paris, 2000).
Dom Antoine Marie osb
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