Anonymous ID: 07bbcb March 6, 2025, 4:04 p.m. No.22716297   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>6337 >>6369

>>22716259

Pope celebrates church document that turned Jews โ€˜from enemiesโ€™ into friends

Updated 2:13 PM EDT, Wed October 28, 2015

 

Rome CNN โ€”

 

Just a few days after ending a synod that flirted with the Catholic Church changing language and attitudes toward divorced people and gays and lesbians, Pope Francis celebrated 50 years of a document that significantly altered the language and attitudes of the church toward Jews.

 

Nostra Aetate (Latin for โ€œIn Our Timesโ€) was written during he Second Vatican Council, a landmark meeting of Catholic clergy that many theologians credit with updating church teachings. Issued on October 28, 1965, the historic document outlines the Catholic Churchโ€™s relationship with non-Christian religions, specifically Hinduism, Islam and Judaism.

 

โ€œA real transformation has taken place in these 50 years in the relationship between Christians and Jews,โ€ the Pope said in a speech in Rome on Wednesday. โ€œFrom enemies and strangers, we have become friends,โ€ he said.

 

Before 1965, the Catholic Church considered the Jewish people responsible for the death of Jesus.

 

https://www.cnn.com/2015/10/28/world/pope-jews/index.html

 

Did they really change their attitude towards Jews, or did they just try to cover up their previous attitude? Granted, SOME Jews are also as criminal as any other criminal organization, but not all.

 

What they say and what they do may be two different things. That's true for anyone.

Anonymous ID: 07bbcb March 6, 2025, 4:53 p.m. No.22716550   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>6561

>>22716519

Did some reading up on that region. Old Yugoslavia basically. Or old Dalmatia.

 

Dalmatia

Dalmatia (/dรฆlหˆmeษชสƒษ™, -tiษ™/; Croatian: Dalmacija [dวŽlmatsija]; Italian: Dalmazia [dalหˆmattsja]; see names in other languages) is one of the four historical regions of Croatia,[1][4] alongside Central Croatia, Slavonia, and Istria, located on the east shore of the Adriatic Sea in Croatia.

 

Dalmatia is a narrow belt stretching from the island of Rab in the north to the Bay of Kotor in the south. The Dalmatian Hinterland ranges in width from fifty kilometres in the north, to just a few kilometres in the south; it is mostly covered by the rugged Dinaric Alps. Seventy-nine islands (and about 500 islets) run parallel to the coast, the largest (in Dalmatia) being Braฤ, Pag, and Hvar. The largest city is Split, followed by Zadar, ล ibenik, and Dubrovnik.

 

The name of the region stems from an Illyrian tribe called the Dalmatae, who lived in the area in classical antiquity. Later it became a Roman province (with much larger territory than modern region), and as result a Romance culture emerged, along with the now-extinct Dalmatian language, later largely replaced with related Venetian and Italian, which were mainly spoken by the Dalmatian Italians. With the arrival of the Sclaveni (South Slavs) to the area in the late 6th and early 7th century, who eventually occupied most of the coast and hinterland, Slavic and Romance elements began to intermix in language and culture.

 

After the medieval Kingdom of Croatia, in which most of Dalmatia resided, entered a personal union with Hungary in 1102, its cities and lands were often conquered by, or switched allegiance to, the kingdoms of the region during the Middle Ages. At one time, most of Dalmatia came under rule of the Republic of Venice, which controlled most of Dalmatia between 1420 and 1797 as part of its State of the Sea, with the exception of the small but stable Republic of Ragusa (1358โ€“1808) in the south. Between 1815 and 1918, it was a province of the Austrian Empire known as the Kingdom of Dalmatia. After the Austro-Hungarian defeat in World War I, Dalmatia was split between the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, which controlled most of it, and the Kingdom of Italy, which held several smaller parts. After World War II, the People's Republic of Croatia as a part of Yugoslavia took complete control over the area. Following the dissolution of Yugoslavia, Dalmatia became part of the Republic of Croatia.

Definition

Province of Dalmatia during the Roman Empire

 

In antiquity, the Roman province of Dalmatia was much larger than the present-day Split-Dalmatia County, stretching from Istria in the north to modern-day Albania in the south.[5] Dalmatia signified not only a geographical unit, but was an entity based on common culture and settlement types, a common narrow eastern Adriatic coastal belt, Mediterranean climate, sclerophyllous vegetation of the Illyrian province and Adriatic carbonate platform

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalmatia