Franklin Littell
{{Short description|Theologian, Holocaust scholar}}
{{Infobox clergy
| name = Dr. Franklin Hamlin Littell
| image = Franklin H Littell 1962.jpg
| image_size = 180 px
| caption = Professor of Church Education, Southern Methodist University, in 1962
| birth_date = June 20, 1917
| birth_place = Syracuse, New York
| death_date = {{death date and age|2009|5|23|1917|6|20}}
| death_place = Merion Station, Pennsylvania
| education = Cornell College
| church = Methodist
| writings = The crucifixion of the Jews
| congregations =
| offices_held =
| title =
}}
Franklin Hamlin Littell (June 20, 1917 – May 23, 2009) was an American Protestant scholar. He is known for his writings rejecting supersessionism and, in light of the Holocaust, advocated educational programs to improve relations between Christians and Jews.{{cite book
|title=The Holocaust and Its Religious Impact: A Critical Assessment and Annotated Bibliography
|first=Jack R.
|last=Fischel
|author2=Susan M. Ortmann
|pages=290
|year=2004
|publisher=Praeger/Greenwood
|isbn=0-313-30950-7}}
After spending nearly ten years in post-war Germany as Chief Protestant Religious Adviser in the High Command assigned especially to the task of deNazification during the occupation, he was deeply affected by the atrocities that had been committed during World War II, and thus dedicated his life to researching the Holocaust and bringing its tragic lessons in human rights to widespread public attention. In public meetings, on campuses and in churches, he raised one of the first voices of conscience in the post-war period, talking about the lessons of the Holocaust.{{Cite web |last=Writer |first=By Joelle Farrell, Inquirer Staff |date=2009-05-25 |title=Rev. Franklin H. Littell, scholar of the Holocaust |url=https://www.inquirer.com/philly/obituaries/20090525_Rev__Franklin_H__Littell__scholar_of_the_Holocaust.html |access-date=2024-05-16 |website= |language=en}} Littell is regarded by some as a founder of the field of Holocaust studies, having established at several institutions masters and doctoral programs devoted to the study of the Holocaust (the latter at Temple University in 1976).{{Cite news |last=Martin |first=Douglas |date=2009-05-30 |title=Franklin Littell, Scholar of Holocaust, Dies at 91 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/30/us/30littell.html |access-date=2024-05-16 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}
In his book Historical Atlas of Christianity, first published in 1976, he maintained that many Christian churches failed to deal honestly with their complicity in the murder of European Jews.{{cite book
|last=Fischel
|title=Op. cit.
|pages=23}} In 1939 as a young Methodist minister he attended a Nazi rally in Nuremberg,{{cite book
|last=Fischel
|title=Op. cit.
|pages=149}} and he would later formulate, in a paper entitled Holocaust and the Christians, that the lure of Nazism was caused by failures in Christian spirituality originating from the First Council of Nicea in 325 CE. He also wrote in theological support of Zionism.{{cite web
|url = http://mcc.org/respub/occasional/28.html
|title = Constantinianism, Zionism, Diaspora: Toward a Political Theology of Exile and Return
|first = Alain Epp
|last = Weaver
|publisher = Mennonite Central Committee
|url-status = dead
|archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070515210441/http://www.mcc.org/respub/occasional/28.html
|archivedate = 2007-05-15
}}
Writings
- The Anabaptist View of the Church (1957)
- The Free Church (1957)
- The Crucifixion of the Jews (1975)
- Historical Atlas of Christianity (1976)
See also
References
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Littell, Franklin}}
Category:American historians of the Holocaust
Category:20th-century American Protestant theologians
Category:Commanders Crosses of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
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