(Wed.13 Dec.2006):- As the Iranian government hosted a conference questioning the
truth of the Holocaust, the Vatican said the Nazis' Jewish victims must be remembered
and the world must make a commitment to ensuring that such a tragedy could never happen
again. The Dec. 11-12 Iranian conference, "Review of the Holocaust: Global Vision,"
was called by the country's president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has said the Holocaust
was a myth. The Vatican issued a statement Dec. 12 saying, "The past century witnessed
the attempt to exterminate the Jewish people with the consequent killing of millions
of Jews of all ages and social categories, simply for the fact that they belonged
to that people. "The Shoah (the Holocaust) was an enormous tragedy, before which,
one cannot remain indifferent," the Vatican statement said. The Catholic Church's
attitude toward the Jewish community and its experience during the Second World War
is one of "profound respect and great compassion," the statement said. "The memory
of those terrible facts must remain a warning for consciences with the aim of eliminating
conflicts, respecting the legitimate rights of all peoples and calling for peace in
truth and justice," the statement said. The Vatican also noted that Pope John Paul
II solemnly gave witness to the Catholic Church's position during his March 2000 visit
to the Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem, and Pope Benedict XVI did so during his May
visit to the German's Auschwitz death camp in Poland.