I wonder if EWTN will broadcast it, it would certainly be wonderful to see and to be able to honor his life, since few of us are likely to be attending.
According to the Washington Post article, his parents were nonpracticing Jews but were unhappy with his conversion (as any parent of a young teenager would be.)
"In what was said to be one of the few times he dealt publicly at length with his religious conversion, he told editors of an Israeli newspaper that his parents were upset. He said he told them, 'I am not leaving you. I am not passing into the enemy camp. I'm becoming what I am. I am not stopping being a Jew -- just the opposite. I'm discovering a way of living it.' "
<snip>
Two days after being named
, in an interview with a reporter for a Jewish news service, quoted in Current Biography, Cardinal Lustiger said: "I've always considered myself a Jew, even if that's not the opinion of some rabbis."
This did not mean any weakening in his ecclesiastical commitment.
"The West is born of Christianity," he told the New York Times, "and the crisis of the West is that it isn't Christian anymore."