PARIS, November 7, 2011 (
LifeSiteNews.com) - Since
On the Concept of the Face of the Son of God
opened in Paris on October 20th, young French Catholics have peacefully
but relentlessly organized nightly prayer vigils in front of the two
theaters showing what they consider to be a grossly blasphemous play.
Several hundred people, mostly young adults, have participated every
night, with many arrested and taken into 48-hour or even 72-hour
custody.
Dozens of the protesters have been charged with “interfering with
freedom of artistic expression using violence,” the “violence” being
defined as “praying and singing religious chants,” according to their
lawyers. Three have lost their
jobs when their employers noted their presence at the demonstrations in photos or videos posted on the internet.
5000 protest against blasphemous, anti-Christian play in Paris
Romeo
Castellucci’s 55-minute “contemporary art” play features a blubbering
old man wracked with diarrhea, whose son regularly comes to change his
nappy and clean up his mess, until the incontinent father ends up
covering the scene with pints of brown feces. All the while a portrait
of the face of Christ by Italian Quattrocento painter Antonello da
Messina covers the back of the stage.
Versions of the play differ from one night to the other. It included
young children bombarding the portrait with plastic hand grenades when
it played at the Festival d’Avignon this summer. All versions climax
with the old man leaving the scene to climb a ladder behind the
portrait, which is being torn
open
to violent and strident sounds, and then pouring brown liquid out of
its eyes. At this point a strong smell of feces invades the theatre. The
words “You are my Shepherd” then appear to cover the portrait in
letters of light, with the word “not” flickering on and off to belie the
statement. At the end, the portrait of Christ reappears intact.
The play was produced in Paris in two heavily subsidized theaters and
will shortly be moving to the provincial towns of Rennes, Toulouse and
Villeneuve d’Ascq, where more demonstrations are being organized against
what is being criticized as sacrilege and a scandalous use of
tax-payers’ money.
Since the first night, when unrelated groups organized protests inside and outside the theatre, and were subject to
police brutality, access to the show has taken place under heavy police protection.
On one occasion, 150 people, mostly girls aged 18 to 25, were
apprehended by the police as they were coming out of the busy central
Metro station “Châtelet”, which is near the “Théâtre de la Ville”,
to join
the protest. They were then whisked away in police vans to stations in
the North of Paris and charged after a two-day wait. Most police
officers are reported to have indicated they were unhappy with the task
and told the young Catholics that their orders had come from very high
up.
Main actor who is at times fully naked on stage in front of the face of Christ
A few young people bought
tickets to
attend the play and were promptly moved out by police when they got up
and protested against the desecration of the Face of Christ.
The prayer vigils, as well as a demonstration organized on Saturday 29th October -
over 5,000 attended
at the call of “Civitas,” a lay movement associated with the
traditionalist Fraternity of Saint Pius X - were overwhelmingly peaceful
and prayerful. One isolated incident involved two
students throwing eggs and engine oil at theatergoers as they entered the building.
By that time the mainstream press had already been piling criticism
on the young Catholics, accusing them of violence and extremism. They
are being portrayed as Christian “fundamentalists” and lowbrow
reactionaries incapable of entering into an intellectual “dialogue” with
the modern world of art.
Christine Boutin, leader of the French Christian Democrat Party, was
quick to disassociate herself from the protesters, labeled “Catholic
integrists,” alleging they had been “manipulated” by political or
extreme religious movements into protesting against a play which is in
no way a “sacrilegious provocation” but “a message about compassion.”
Especially discouraging for the protesters has been the fact that
several bishops, including the archbishop of Paris, Cardinal André
Vingt-Trois, and the bishop of Rennes, Mgr Pierre d’Ornellas, were
publicly interpreted Castellucci’s dung-carting “work of art” as a
legitimate portrayal of human decadence and a thought-provoking show.
The cardinal, referencing a term coined by Lenin, named the
protesters “useful idiots” and called for the public demonstrations to
stop. Mgr d’Ornellas asked Catholics to “take time to understand” the
play: while the stage-play is “provoking”, he wrote, no
“christianophobia is involved” and should only help remind everyone
about “the most ordinary of trivial sufferings: man’s comedown in old
age” answered by the “profound manifestation of love” on the part of the
son. The old man “emptying himself of his dignity” should remind us of
Christ “emptying Himself ‘unto death, and the death of the Cross’”, he
added.
The defiled image after the children throw objects at the image
The
bishop’s text made no mention of the omnipresent feces: he asked all
Catholics to see Castellucci as someone who is on a quest for God.
“Dialogue between the Church and contemporary art is a necessary (if
difficult) approach to evangelization”, he wrote.
Many ordinary Catholics have found this intellectualism hard to
swallow. They have been asking the Church hierarchy not to brush over
the fact that an image of the Saviour is being deliberately covered with
what looks and smells like human feces in a heavily subsidized public
play.
The protesters also felt strongly betrayed when three Catholic
priests of the Paris region, a philosophy master, a TV producer, a
well-known blogger, as well as a Christian pop group, co-signed an op-ed
in the mainstream, strongly anti-Catholic
Le Monde newspaper last Friday.
While asking for “respect” for the “symbol of Christ”, the op-ed
assured that demonstrations against Castellucci’s play have given a
caricatural image of Catholics when they should have been choosing to
show a “desire for dialogue” instead of “withdrawal”. They added that
the bishops should “have the upper hand when it comes to discerning” at
what point Christian beliefs are “really being insulted”.
However, a dozen French bishops did give their written support for
the actions against “christianophobia.” Mgr Centène of Vannes wrote a
firm letter invoking the example of persecuted Christians in the Near and Middle East.
“I congratulate and encourage all those who, consistently with their
faith, do not hesitate to act publicly, and who, although never using
violence, either verbal or physical, are apprehended by the police force
and kept in custody, when they demonstrate, in all justice, their
disapproval of performances which are appalling beyond belief”, he wrote
on October 27th to “Civitas”, the group organizing the large
demonstrations in Paris, Rennes (next Thursday) and Toulouse in two
weeks’ time.
Catholic journalists are analyzing Romeo Castellucci’s other works
and his fascination with bizarre scenes and inverted beliefs.
On the Concept of the Face of the Son of God is said to have obvious Freudian associations with its obsessive portrayal of excrement. Previous plays include
Gènesi,
which shows God as an ineffectual Creator of an evil world of horror
where Lucifer symbolizes art, and a trilogy from Dante’s Divine Comedy,
where Heaven is a depersonalizing place in which all identity is lost to
the unending boredom of eternal worship and Hell, a place where horror
is rife but man is himself and finds “paradoxical sweetness”.
A former adaptation of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s
The Minister’s Black Veil
shocked the London public a few years ago with a scene showing the main
character pushing shards of glass into his anus while saying the name
of Our Lord. This play will shortly be showing again in Italy.
The
AGRIF, (Alliance against Racism
and for the respect of French and Christian identity) filed two
emergency lawsuits against public authorities for having funded and
displayed “On the Concept of the Face” in two Parisian theaters. Both
were lost, and in both cases it was decided that no attack against
Christian’s dignity and religious rights was involved.
Public disavowal of Catholic protesters by certain members of the
Catholic hierarchy are suspected of influencing the decisions. But the
AGRIF, which gets little or no publicity in the mainstream press, has
been receiving letters of encouragement and e-mails by the hundreds.
In spite of the odds, the AGRIF is preparing for a new legal battle against
Golgota Picnic,
which will open shortly in Toulouse before coming to Paris in December.
This show by Hispano-Argentian contemporary playwright Rodrigo Garcia
is considered even more blasphemous and obscene than the Romeo
Castellucci play.