A top Catholic cardinal has blasted The Da Vinci Code as a
"gross and absurd" distortion of history and said Catholic
bookstores should take the bestseller off their shelves because it
is full of "cheap lies."
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, in an interview with the Milan newspaper
Il Giornale, became the highest ranking Italian Churchman to speak
out against the book, an international blockbuster that has sold
millions of copies.
"(It) aims to discredit the Church and its history through gross
and absurd manipulations," Bertone, the archbishop of the northern
Italian city of Genoa and a close friend of Pope John Paul told the
paper.
"This seems like a throwback to the old anti-clerical pamphlets of
the 1800s," he said.
The central claim of the book, written by US author Dan Brown, is
that Jesus married Mary Magdalene and had children. The Bible says
Jesus never married, was crucified and rose from the dead.
Bertone's comments were significant because until the Pope named
him archbishop of Genoa in 2003 he was for years the number two man
at the Vatican's most powerful department - the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith.
"You can find that book everywhere and the risk is that many people
who read it believe that those fairy tales are real," he said. "I
think I have the responsibility to clear things up to unmask the
cheap lies contained in books like that."
Holy grail
A central storyline of the book is that the Holy Grail is not the
cup which Christ is said to have used at the Last Supper but really
the bloodline descended from Jesus and Mary Magdalene. Bertone
calls this idea "a perversion".
Bertone is so incensed about the novel that he will be the key
speaker at a roundtable in Genoa attempting to dismantle the book,
which also accuses the Church of covering up the female role in
Christianity.
"I will try to clear things up and help form consciences," the
cardinal said.
"I think that when faced with affirmations that are so shameful and
unfounded, readers who have even a minimum of basic (Christian)
formation should react," he said.
He said it was "sad" that even Catholic bookstores were selling The
Da Vinci Code "for purely economic reasons".
One bookstore selling The Da Vinci Code is the one in the Gemelli
Hospital, a Catholic institution where the Pope spent a total of 28
days in two stints in February and March.
In the interview, Bertone firmly rejected the book's claim that the
feminine role in Christianity had been suppressed.
"This is one of the most vulgar of inventions. The feminine element
is present in all the Gospels," Bertone said.
Bertone also strongly defended Opus Dei, the conservative Church
organisation which the book depicts as a ruthless, Machiavellian
group which resorts even to murder in its attempt to keep the
Church's secrets hidden.
The novel is going to reach an even wider audience next year with
the release of a film based on the book staring Tom Hanks.
Top cardinal blasts Da Vinci Code
Published: 10:09AM Wednesday March 16, 2005 Source: Reuters
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