FARMINGTON HILLS, Michigan (JTA) — The bishop solemnly walked through the photos and illustrations documenting Nazi-led antisemitic sentiment, aided in several cases by Catholics, that doomed the Jews of Europe. At one point, he proudly noted that he’d befriended the nephew of a prominent Dutch Catholic resistance figure. And when prompted to theorize why one Holocaust survivor might have taken such great effort, after the war, to sew his camp uniform back together, he gamely offered, “So people will remember.” So far, so good for a religious leader’s interfaith visit to a Holocaust museum. But when Detroit Archbishop Edward Weisenburger...