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Meet the Catholic priest with the kippah

How Yaacov Weksler-Waszkinel reconciled his Polish upbringing with his Jewish roots

March 22, 2012 16:00
22032012 Torn 9

By

Stephen Applebaum,

Stephen Applebaum

2 min read

What makes a Jew? This is the question at the heart of Israeli filmmaker Ronit Kerstner's documentary Torn. The film, which was screened last week as part of the 10th Kinoteka Polish Film Festival in partnership with UK Jewish Film, tells the story of Romuald-Jakub Weksler-Waszkinel (now known as Yaacov Weksler-Waszkinel), a Polish Catholic priest who discovered, 12 years after his ordination, that he was in fact the son of Jews killed in the Holocaust. To ensure his safety, his mother had given him up to be looked after by a Polish couple days after his birth.

The film follows Yaacov's attempt to settle in Israel under the Law of Return. The statute does not recognise Jews practising other religions, and the Ministry of Internal Affairs rejects his application for citizenship. Instead, he is granted temporary residency on a religious worker's visa. He tries to join a kibbutz but asks to leave on Sundays to observe Mass at a nearby monastery. A compromise is found allowing him to worship alone in his room. But one kibbutznik still wants to know: "Who are you, Yaacov? Are you a Jew? Are you a Christian?"

Although the question has haunted him for most of his life, it seems clear that the gentle 69-year-old, who was in London for the screening, is a man at peace with himself, having reconciled his Christian and Jewish identities through the love of his adoptive and murdered parents. "The only reason I cannot say no to my Polish parents is their love for me," he says. "The only reason that, for the rest of my days, I am going to shout that I am Jewish, is my love for my Jewish parents. The rest is the Holocaust. My only fault is to be born at the wrong time, and to survive."

Circumstance has made him a Jew who cannot deny Jesus, but he does not feel torn. It is the world that wants to tear him apart, he insists, "because people like to have clear and strong divisions… I simply want to be both. Without my Jewish parents I would have no life. Without my Polish parents my life would have perished."