John Paul II, a Hypocrite! Supported Death to Jews and was a Close Friend to a Jew, Jerzy Kluger
Friday, January 13, 2012
Jerzy Kluger, a Polish Jew childhood friend of John Paul II, died at age 92 at a hospital in Rome on December 31st and was buried in the Jewish cemetery in the capital. He suffered from Alzheimer's and was living in a nursing home in Rome. Kluger and Karol Wojtyla were classmates in the Polish city of Wadowice since the first grade through high school.The writer Gianfranco Svidercoschi, who led the newspaper of the Vatican during the pontificate of John Paul II and wrote a book about Pope's friendship with Kluger entitled "Letter to a friend," said Wojtyla learned much about Judaism with him. The Pope and his friend lost contact during World War II in the invasion of Poland in 1939 and didn't find each other again until 1965. Kluger was in Rome where he worked for a company importing and Archbishop Karol Wojtyla attended the Second Vatican Council. Both thought the other had died in the war.
When, in 1978, he was elected Pope their friendship intensified and Kluger organized many meetings between the Pope and their classmates in Wadowice in Rome and in Poland itself.
The media reported that Kluger was said to be in the synagogue of Rome when it was visited by John Paul II in 1986 and he called Jews "our beloved elder brothers."
Another falsity of that liar! The friendship continued until the death of the Pope in 2005. It highlights the fact, that having been a friend of a Jew, he later worked with the Nazis to murder them.
After a while he meets his friend and gives him the right hand of friendship. What kind of person is capable of doing such a thing? With the left helps to kill the people and with the right greets one of them. Only a hypocrite, a villain of those which in extending their hand takes away honor. A disloyal friend, a traitor to his people, a criminal sold for money to the enemy. A concealer of pedophiles.
A wicked and perverse man beatified by others like him who will soon run out of film. Jerzy Kluger, in Karol Wojtyla, you never had anything ... you never lost anything!





