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Sorry, but the Church’s apology is not enough

We live in an age of performative contrition, but it counts for nothing without proper action

June 22, 2022 11:24
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Church
2 min read

Have you noticed how the word apology has become a virtual mantra of society lately? Saying sorry — or being urged to do so — is turning into an epidemic. It seems there’s a mea culpa on everybody’s lips these days. It’s royals mumbling half apologies for the atrocity of colonial slavery. It’s people turning to social media to express heartfelt regret for some unconscious bias in their past. There’s definitely a surging sense of guilt in the zeitgeist.
And then there’s the non-apology apology. Boris Johnson, with all his wavering regrets over partygate, not quite apologising for endangering Nazanin Zaghari Ratcliffe by telling the Commons she was in Iran teaching journalism (equivalent in Iranian political psychology to espionage).

I have been reflecting on the latest apology: this one from the Church of England for prohibitive anti-Jewish laws passed some 800 years ago which, in 1290, led to their expulsion by Edward I. These antisemitic laws forbade mixing of Jews and Christians, forced them to wear identifying badges, imposed church tithes on them, banned them from some professions and forbade them from building new synagogues or from passing on their inheritance to their children.

Some 3,000 Jews were expelled. It was only 360 years later, in 1656, that Oliver Cromwell re-admitted us. Less, perhaps, from philo-semitism than the demands of the fiscal purse, although, at a time of greater religious tolerance, he did allow Jews to practise their religion, largely influenced by Rabbi Menasseh ben Israel of Amsterdam.

Last month, the Church of England met Jews to say sorry at a special service in Oxford’s Christ Church Cathedral to mark the 800th anniversary of the Synod of Oxford. The event was attended by Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis (albeit outside the cathedral) and a host of ecclesiastical luminaries. Christians were urged to “reject contemporary forms of anti-Judaism and antisemitism”.