The Unnecessary Problem of Edith Stein
Edith Stein's murder at Auschwitz is a topic of intense controversy among members of the Jewish and Catholic faiths. Some observers, both Jews and Christians, insist that Stein was sent to the gas chambers because of her Jewish heritage and faith, and that it would be inappropriate to declare her a saint in the Christian religious tradition. Yet, others of both faiths find in Stein a healing symbol for our time of the atrocities committed against Jews in Christian nations during World War II. In this volume, members of the Jewish and Christian religious traditions speak to this deeply divided debate.
Contributions by: Judith Hershropf Banki, Suzanne Batzdorff, Rachel Feldhay Brenner, Eugene Fisher, Zev Garber, Freda Mary Oben, Daniel Polish, Emanuel Tanay, Nechama Tec
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