Mormons restrict 'proxy baptisms' of Jewish Holocaust victims

SALT LAKE CITY - Sixteen years after a Jewish genealogist alerted his peers that Mormons were performing so-called "proxy baptisms" for Jewish Holocaust victims, both sides have reached a breakthrough settlement.

The LDS Church and Jewish leaders in New York have resolved a dispute over posthumous proxy baptisms, after the Mormons agreed to build a new restrictive computer system. The names of Holocaust victims or celebrities could not be submitted to the computer system unless they are direct ancestors of the submitters. Those descended from a Holocaust victim have to go through a special process to do proxy baptisms for a Jewish relative.

But not everyone is convinced the problem is settled.

The Utah-based church reiterated its willingness to eliminate names of Holocaust victims from its massive genealogical database. The Jewish delegation, headed by Robert Abrams, New York's former attorney general, acknowledged the church's good intentions.

"It is gratifying that the good-faith efforts undertaken over the years to deal with an important issue of sensitivity to the Jewish Holocaust survivor community have eliminated a source of tension," the two groups said in a joint statement this week, "enhancing our ability to cooperate, including in important programs of humanitarian aid across the world."

This is the latest development in a series of talks that began in 1994, when Jewish genealogist Gary Mokotoff alerted his peers to the LDS practice known as "baptism for the dead" in which living people stand in for the deceased to offer that person a chance to join The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the hereafter. Mormons believe it is their moral obligation to do the temple rituals, while those on the other side can choose whether to accept the action or not.

Mokotoff doubts any computer system can keep Holocaust names from reappearing in the church database.

"The only way this is going to be stopped is by the church reprimanding individuals doing it -- first with a warning, then something stronger -- maybe excommunication," he said. "It's the 55-mph rule of the Mormon Church. It's on the books, but no one enforces it."

The proxy baptism practice was deeply offensive to many Jews, who had suffered so greatly for their faith. So Mokotoff and a delegation met with LDS leaders, who agreed to remove Holocaust victims from their master list.

The task proved more difficult than they thought. Many of those names continued to appear in the database.

The two sides met again in 2005 and 2008. One of the participants, Ernest "Ernie" Michel, declared that he no longer would meet with the Mormons.

But last year, Elder James Hamula of the LDS Church's First Quorum of the Seventy asked Abrams if he would put together a delegation of 10 Jews willing to visit Utah during the open house for the Oquirrh LDS Temple in South Jordan. Abrams assembled 10 people from a cross section of Jewish leaders, and the group spent two days touring Salt Lake City sites, including the LDS Humanitarian Center, Temple Square and the Oquirrh Temple.

The delegation stopped at the temple's baptismal font and asked about the Holocaust victims and proxy baptisms.

"That began a series of conversations I engaged in with Elder (Quentin) Cook (an LDS apostle) for 14 months," Abrams said. "As a result, there is the kind of understanding that was announced today."

The "breakthrough," as the groups described it, is built on a new computer system that requires Mormons to agree not to submit names of Holocaust victims or celebrities for proxy baptism unless those names are direct ancestors of the submitters.

(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)

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