After gaining the degree of license in the Religious Studies (1988) and Theology (1991) Pollefeyt obtained his doctoral degree in Theology (promotor: prof. Roger Burggraeve) with a dissertation on ethics after Auschwitz (1995). Thereafter he became instructor (2000), associate instructor (2002), associate professor (2005) and full professor (2008) at the Faculty of Theology, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. Since 1986 his research focuses on the holocaust as a challenge for ethics, interreligious dialogue and education.
The research activities of Didier Pollefeyt are situated around 5 areas.
The ethical and theological analysis of the Holocaust and the development of the foundations of ethics and theology after Auschwitz.[1]
An analysis of the questions of evil, guilt, remembrance, forgiveness and reconciliation.[2]
The pedagogy of hermeneutical-communicative and interreligious education.[4]
The religious identity of institutions, especially of catholic schools.[5]
Besides, Pollefeyt coordinates the Center for Teacher Education of the Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven.
Since 2001 he is at the head of Thomas, a website for religious education.[6]
Pollefeyt is vice rector for education policy[7] at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven and chairman of the Center for Peace Ethics.[8]
The Triune One, the Incarnate Logos, and Israels Covenental Life (with P A. CUNNINGHAM), in P.A. CUNNINGHAM, J. SIEVERS, M.C. BOYS, H.H. HENRIX & J. SVARTVIK, met voorwoord van W. Cardinal KASPER, Christ Jesus and the Jewish People Today. New Explorations of Theological Interrelationships, Grand Rapids, Eerdmans, 2011, p. 183-201.
The Church and the Jews: Unsolvable Paradox or Unfinished Story?, in N. LAMDAN & A. MELLONI (ed.), Nostra Aetate: Origins, Promulgation, Impact on Jewish-Christian Relations (Christianity and History. Series of the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna, 5), Berlin, LIT verlag, 2007, p. 131-144.
Developing Criteria for Religious and Ethical Teaching of the Holocaust, in M. GOLDENBERG & R.L. MILLEN (ed.), Testimony, Tensions, and Tikkun. Teaching the Holocaust in Colleges and Universities (The Pastora Goldner Series in Post-Holocaust Studies), Washington & London, University of Washington Press, 2007, p. 172-188.
The Judgement of the Nazis, in M. BERENBAUM (ed.), Murder Most Mericiful. Essays on the Ethical Conundrum Occasioned by Sigi Ziering’s ‘The Judgement of Herbert Bierhoff ’(Studies in the Shoah, XXVIII), Lanham Boulder, University Press of America, 2005, p. 153-163.
Horror Vacui. God and Evil in/after Auschwitz, in J. ROTH (ed.), Fire in the Ashes: God, Evil and the Holocaust, Washington, Washington University Press, 2005, chapter 9, p. 219-230.
Forgiveness after the Holocaust, in D. PATTERSON & J. ROTH (ed.) After-Words. Post-Holocaust Struggles with Forgiveness, Reconciliation, Justice, Seattle, University of Washington Press, 2004, p. 55-72.
Victims of Evil or Evil of Victims?, in H.J. CARGAS (ed.), Problems Unique to the Holocaust, Lexington, The University Press of Kentucky, 1999, p. 67-82.
^www.godsdienstonderwijs.be ThomasArchived 2022-06-20 at the Wayback Machine (in Dutch). Also see P. Vande Vyvere, Katholiek godsdienstonderricht in het offensief. Theoloog Didier Pollefeyt over Thomas, in Tertio nr. 140 van 16 oktober 2002, p. 1 en 3. (in dutch).