Poland’s chief rabbi said the world’s inaction during the Holocaust should serve as a reminder to Jews to help Christians suffering persecution at the hands of jihadists, the Catholic publication Crux reported on Wednesday.

Rabbi Michael Schudrich — who said this in the wake of Pope Francis’s visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau last week — added, “There are many more attacks on Christians — just because they are Christians — than on Jews,” who have a 2,000-year history of persecution.

“What it means to me is that the pain that we Jews still feel because of the overwhelming silence of the world — not everyone but the majority were silent — during the Shoah [Holocaust], means that we have to be the first ones to step up to the place,” he said. “We have to be the first ones to yell and scream and say, ‘No.’”

On Wednesday, recounting his visit to Auschwitz, Pope Francis told pilgrims at the Vatican that while touring the Nazi death camp he reflected on today’s world, which he described as being “sick with cruelty, violence and suffering,” the UK’s Daily Mail reported.

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Beginning his tour of Auschwitz, as he slowly walked through the camp’s notorious gates bearing the words “Arbeit Macht Frei” — “work sets you free” — the Pope said, “In that great silence I prayed for all the victims of violence and war.”

Visiting the museum and memorial at Auschwitz helped him internalize “more than ever the value of memory,” he said, adding that history serves as a “warning and responsibility for today and tomorrow.”

Prior to the Pope’s visit, a prominent American rabbi called on the pontiff to remove a Catholic church from the site of the “largest cemetery in the world.”

As reported by The Algemeiner, Avi Weiss — founding rabbi of the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale and national president of the Coalition for Jewish Concerns-AMCHA — sent a letter to Pope Francis protesting the presence of the Parish Church of Brzezinka at the Auschwitz-Birkenau Nazi death camp in Poland.

Weiss has been an outspoken critic of the presence of two Catholic institutions set up at the site of Auschwitz-Birkenau. In 1984, Carmelite nuns formed a convent in the building at Auschwitz in which the Nazis stored the deadly Zyklon B poison that was used to gas Jews to death. Around the same time, the local Catholic community founded a church in Birkenau at the site of Nazi command headquarters. The convent was eventually shut down in 1993.

Pope Francis became the third pontiff to visit the Nazi death camp, which claimed the lives of over 1.1 million Jews.