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Weekly Worker 571 Thursday April 7 2005
An autocratic reactionary
We are all catholics now. Or so you would think when confronted by the
sheer scale and intensity of the officially orchestrated grief for the
recently departed pontiff. Rather than being remembered as a reactionary
autocrat who has left a baleful legacy for humanity, he is transformed
into one of the greatest people who has ever lived.
The virulently anti-communist, anti-gay, abortion-banning, ultra-male
chauvinist, theological obscurantist, Karol Wojtyla, is now presented
as a man of peace and a shining example of how love
can change the world.
Accordingly, in a high-profile display of ecumenical and ruling class
solidarity, Wojtylas funeral on April 8 was to be attended by leading
representatives from virtually every state and religious faith in the
world, including a certain protestant fundamentalist, George Dubya Bush
- becoming the first US president to ever attend a papal funeral. Whatever
exact theological difference he may have with the pope, in a sort of branding
or trademark dispute within christianity, Bush obviously recognises
a fellow authoritarian soul-mate when he sees one. After all, both the
presidential pontiff and the papal pontiff were united in their shared
hatred of communism and secularism.
In particular, John Paul II came to papal ascension on a political-theological
programme that consciously rejected the liberalising agenda
of the Second Vatican Council - thus, for example, as soon as he was ensconced
in the papal chair, he summoned various liberation theology
priests and promptly gave them their marching orders. Then contraception
became an intrinsic evil, abortion was more and more compared
to the holocaust, IVF and stem-cell research was now part
of the culture of death, and all the rest of the christian
dogma we have been subjected to. No wonder Bush was such a big fan of
John Paul II.
Naturally, and a bit depressingly, the mass media has enveloped us with
its usual mixture of reverential and utterly inane second-by-second coverage
of every inconsequential detail of the lying in state and funeral - before
moving on speedily to the hastily rescheduled royal wedding of Charles
Windsor and Camilla Parker Bowles the next day. We are still waiting to
hear if the abortion-hating, euthanasia-loathing George Galloway of Respect
will be attending the funeral of his fellow pro-lifer on Friday.
There was a certain strain of official communism, or Sovietised
Marxism, which routinely informed us as a matter of high doctrine
that all religious and superstitious thought would inevitable wither under
the relentless march of science and technology. Obviously, this was always
an idealist and self-serving fallacy. Indeed, as the funeral graphically,
and grimly, symbolises, religion is very much alive and well. All manner
of supernaturalistic, metaphysical and irrational twaddle is now becoming
common parlance - whether it be astrology, imbuing a foetus with rights
or the creeping but steady introduction of intelligent design
theory (ie, creationism) into the curriculum of US schools.
Hence, we have to wade our way through seemingly endless acres of mushy
- and often downright daft - paeans of praise to Wojtyla. For instance,
in the supposedly secular and progressive pages of The Guardian, Timothy
Garton Ash gushed: The world lived this death. It was a global Calvary.
People from every corner of the earth gathered in St Peters Square,
peering up at those two windows of the papal apartment, illuminated against
the night sky. Across five continents, christians, jews and muslims joined
them through television. Marcello, from Rio de Janeiro, emailed CNN: We
are watching the agony of the greatest man of our time - and
so revoltingly on (April 4).
Predictably, Bush lauded John Paul II as a champion of human freedom.
The always devout, and ever vacuous, Tony Blair treated us to one of his
little homilies: Even if youre not a catholic, even if youre
not a christian, even if you have no religious faith at all, what people
could see in pope John Paul was a man of true and profound spiritual faith,
a shining example of what that faith should mean.
Even Fidel Castro expressed his condolences and declared three days of
official mourning, allowing catholics to publicly grieve. As for the morally
and intellectually challenged Bono, he declared that John Paul II was
the first funky pope - though it does have to be said that
it seems very unlikely that the funky Karol Wojtyla was a
U2 fan (and in that, if nothing else, who could blame him?).
There is now talk of a pre-emptive canonisation of Wojtyla
- that is, immediately turning him into a saint and hence securing his
conservative theological doctrines in one swift legal-theological stroke.
This speculation was ignited by the fact that cardinal Angelo Sodano,
the Vaticans secretary of state or prime minister, described
the late pope as John Paul the Great in the text of his homily
delivered at a requiem mass in St Peters Square - even if he did
not actually utter these pregnant words himself at the time. The phrasing
is significant because only three of John Pauls 263 predecessors
have been awarded this honorific, all of them from the Dark Ages and all
of them canonised. If Wojtyla had sainthood conferred upon him, this would
clearly be a case of back to the future.
Then again, by all accounts, Wojtyla always had a very high estimation
of his own intellectual and theological powers - so much so that the permanently
lapsed Graham Greene once acerbically imagined waking up one day to see
the newspaper headline, John Paul canonises Jesus Christ.
For us communists, it almost goes without saying that it would be quite
obscene to posit any sort of line of continuity between the apocalyptic
communism of the revolutionary Jewish Galilean, Jesus, and the maudlin
anti-communism of the Polish tsar of the Vatican. In fact, christianity
itself stands in direct antithesis to everything Jesus and his early followers
struggled and fought for - which was to turn the world upside down and
make the common people the masters. Naturally, for the papacy, socialism,
communism and Marxism were anathema - quite literally.
At times, the hypocrisy surrounding the unlamented pope borders on the
monstrous. Rote-style, we have been repeatedly told by the brain-washing
media that the pope loved the poor. Of course, this is total
nonsense. Like his good friend, the truly loathsome Mother Theresa of
Calcutta, John Paul II loved the poor only insofar as they
remained passive, viewing them merely as a collection, or depository,
of souls wanting to be saved by the catholic church and hence
earn loads of brownie points with the Big One sitting up there in heaven.
Clearly, for the likes of Theresa and Wojtyla, in no way was it part of
the divine plan for the poor, or working class, to actually
organise and fight for human dignity in the here and now - quite the opposite
in fact. Seeing how dignity was strictly reserved for the after-life,
time spent on this sin-infested mortal coil was reserved for penitence
and suffering - hence the hostility to voluntary euthanasia, contraception,
abortion rights, gay sexuality, IVF, stem-cell research, and so on. Life
is not meant for the living - so therefore it is no great deal that millions
are needlessly dying of HIV thanks to the continued papal ban on condoms.
Now, there is the real culture of death ...
Gallingly, Angelo Sodano - who, it should not be forgotten, worked hard
to forge close links between the Vatican and fascist ex-dictator of Chile,
Augusto Pinochet - was overcome by the popes beautiful death,
claiming: I saw him. He died with the serenity of the saints.
In other words, surrounded by medical experts and having instant access
to all the latest medical-scientific technology, John Paul II exercised
an extremely high level of conscious choice over the manner of his dying,
a choice he would deny to others who do not subscribe to his version of
christian obscurantism. Karol Wojtyla is allowed to exercise his right
to die as he pleases, but the Terri Schavios of this world are not.
There is one law for the rich, spiritual or otherwise, and another for
the rest of us.
Communists fight for human freedom, which includes freedom from religion,
especially the bigoted stew served up by John Paul II and his co-thinkers.
Eddie Ford
see
also Gods cold war warrior
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