Brussels cathedral installs plaques apologizing for medieval antisemitic persecution depicted in stained glass
More than 650 years after Jews in Brussels were executed and expelled following false antisemitic accusations, church officials at the Cathedral of St. Michael and St. Gudula have installed a plaque apologizing for the persecution commemorated in its stained glass windows.
At a ceremony on April 27, Archbishop Luc Terlinden of Mechelen-Brussels and Rabbi Albert Guigui, the chief rabbi of Brussels, unveiled four plaques, written in Dutch, French, English and Hebrew, providing historical context for the windows and an apology for the antisemitic persecution tied to the events they depict.
The plaques, which Terlinden signed, state that baseless accusations of the desecration of the Eucharistic host were made against Jewish communities in medieval Europe and that the accusations led to persecution, massacres, and unjustifiable expulsions. The windows show Jews being executed at the stake in response to their alleged attacks on the Eucharist, bread that Catholic doctrine considers a literal representation of Jesus body.
Theological and social anti-Judaism is in direct contradiction with the Gospel of Christ, which calls for truth, justice, and brotherhood, the plaques say. We ask forgiveness from the Jewish people for the suffering these accusations have caused.
https://www.jta.org/2026/05/06/global/brussels-cathedral-installs-plaques-apologizing-for-medieval-antisemitic-persecution-depicted-in-stained-glass