Obituaries
Blessed John Paul's childhood Jewish friend dies in Rome at 90
Catholic News Service
Rome
Jerzy Kluger, known as Blessed John Paul II's lifelong Jewish friend and one
who had a deep impact on the pope's commitment to improved Catholic‑Jewish
relations, died in Rome Dec. 31 at the age of 90.
Kluger and the pope were raised in Wadowice, Poland, and attended elementary
school there together. Most of Kluger's family died during the Holocaust, but
he managed to survive, eventually settling in Rome.
LESLIE KOSSOFF/CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICEDuring the Second Vatican Council, when the future pope came to Rome as
an auxiliary bishop of Krakow, Poland, he and Kluger were reunited. They
maintained their friendship through the years, and Kluger was a frequent
guest at the Vatican after the pope was elected in 1978.
In his 1994 book, "Crossing the Threshold of Hope," the pope
wrote about his friendship with Kluger in the context of explaining why
he had made improving Catholic‑Jewish relations a priority in his
pontificate.
The pope said the Second Vatican Council's teaching on the shared traditions
of Christians and Jews reflects the personal experience of many people,
including his own "from the very first years of my life in my hometown.
I remember, above all, the Wadowice elementary school, where at least a
fourth of the pupils in my class were Jewish."
"I should mention my friendship at school with one of them, Jerzy Kluger ‑‑ a
friendship that has lasted from my school days to the present," he wrote.
Kluger, who was born April 4, 1921, was 11 months younger than the pope.
At the time of his death, he was living in a nursing home after being diagnosed
with Alzheimer's disease.