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WSWS : News
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: Spain
The Pope and the Catholic Church mobilise against the Spanish
government
By Vicky Short
1 August 2006
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The Fifth World Meeting of Families took place in the seaside
town of Valencia, Spain in the first week of July. The event provided
Pope Benedict XVI with the perfect platform from which to attack
the Socialist Party (PSOE) governments social reforms, which
include the legalization of same-sex marriage. The government
has also made it easier for Spaniards to divorce, eased the ability
to conduct stem-cell research, and halted a plan by the previous
right-wing Popular Party (PP) government to make religion classes
mandatory in public schools.
The Pope had been invited in September 2005 by the King and
Queen of Spain and the prime minister, Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero,
to visit Spain. However, the choice of time and place was not
theirs to make.
It is a gift for the Pope, declared Austen Ivereigh,
a top aide to Cormac Cardinal Murphy OConnor, Archbishop
of Westminster, England, commenting on the gathering. He
can say, Look at Zapatero, this is what really underlines
European secularism. In Spain he will look like he is articulating
what he sees as being close to the heart of the mass of Europeans.
The event in Valencia was expected to gather one and a half
million people from all over the world. But witnesses and news
reports put the numbers attending at half that figure. The Pope
stayed just over 24 hours, but the briefness of his visit did
nothing to diminish the pomp and ceremony surrounding it. More
than 8,000 policemen looked after his security and two army jets
accompanied Benedict XVIs private airplane.
A NATO AWAC plane overflew the venue during the whole visit
and 200 members of the army, snipers on roofs and 10,000 volunteers
also took part in the security operation. When he spoke from the
platform the Pope was surrounded by 50 cardinals, 450 bishops
and 3,000 priests. Hundreds of thousands of candles, rosaries
and other paraphernalia were distributed. Fifty police vehicles
guarded the Pope during his tour, isolated inside his bubble Papamobil.
There are certain things that Christian life says No
to, the Pope told reporters on his plane from Rome to Spain,
adding, We want to make people understand that according
to human nature, it is a man and a woman who are made for each
other and made to give humanity a future.
He paid tribute to historical Spain, once ruled by the Catholic
kings, and urged bishops to hold firm at a time of rapid
secularization. Acting as if [God] did not exist or
relegating faith to the purely private sphere undermines the truth
about man and compromises the future of culture and society,
he declared.
This meeting provides a new impetus for proclaiming the
gospel of the family, the Pope told the gathering.
The Pope and the Catholic Church have in fact begun a political
campaign in an alliance with right-wing forces in Europe under
the banner of a battle against the dictatorship of relativism.
Since coming to office, he has made repeated denunciations
of abortion, stem-cell research and IVF treatment, often directly
coordinated with the conservative parties.
The Pope indicated his support for the bid by Italys
health minister under Silvio Berlusconis Forza Italia, Francesco
Storace, to allow an anti-abortion group access to centres that
counsel women seeking abortions. The issue was a prominent feature
of Forza Italias general election campaign in April, though
Storace was forced to resign as the result of a scandal before
it took place.
On the day before the elections took place, the Pope denounced
same-sex marriage in a speech to representatives of the European
Peoples Party, a coalition of more than three dozen right-wing
parties in Europe that includes Forza Italia and Spains
Peoples Party. The Pope said that the Church would oppose any
efforts to make other types of relationships juridically
equivalent to marriage.
In June, Cardinal Alfonso López Trujillo, who heads
the group that proposes family-related policy for the church,
threatened that scientists who engage in stem-cell research using
human embryos should be subject to ex-communication.
Spain occupies a special place in this campaign because the
PSOE government was elected in 2004 as a result of the eruption
of a mass movement against the militarist and economic policies
of its predecessor, the PP.
Whether directly or by innuendo, every aspect of the Popes
visit and the meeting in Valencia was an attack on the PSOE government
and its reforms.
Economically the PSOE government has been right-wing from the
start. This was a dangerous course given that its predecessor
was driven from office by a militant and politically aroused working
classangered at the PPs support for the Iraq war and
galvanized into action by the lies blaming the March 11, 2004,
Madrid terror bombings on the Basque separatist group ETA.
The PSOE has sought to maintain a popular base of support by
combining its economically conservative agenda with the implementation
of certain liberal reforms as regards divorce and sexuality.
Contraception, divorce, abortion and homosexuality were all
outlawed under General Francisco Franco. Today Spain is among
the most permissive countries in Europe. Indeed, the depiction
of Spain as a fiercely religious country is a myth of the right
wing. Historically it has always been deeply anti-clerical and
today surveys show that only 18 percent of the population attends
mass every Sunday.
But the PSOEs reforms have enraged the Church and have
been made into a political battleground by the PP. The meeting
in Valencia and the attacks by Pope Benedict XVI have seen the
PP attempting to whip up its own base of support. An op-ed in
El Pais July 10 commented, The papal journey has
been surrounded by an exaggerated politicisation on the part of
civil and religious groups who seem more interested in emphasising
the confrontation than the respect between the state and the Catholic
Church in Spain.
The functions organising committee was composed in the
main by PP militants, who also dominate the Valencia autonomous
regional government, and members of Opus Dei. For months preparations
for the meeting had been dominated by political controversy and
vitriol. Both the Generalitat (regional government) and the Valencia
Archbishopric had been working to isolate the PSOE from any participation
in the organization of the event, to the point of closing down
meetings in which some PSOE members had managed to take part and
evicting them from the PP-dominated local government buildings.
The Popes arrival was preceded by virulent anti-government
statements by high-ranking Church authorities. One Spanish bishop
gave an interview referring to the gay empire controlling
the Spanish governments agenda. Ricardo Blázquez,
the head of Spains Episcopal Conference, also said
in an interview with the Italian newspaper Famiglia Cristiana,
Spanish society is spent; its in its death throes
and doesnt feel responsible for its own future.
Speaking at the World Meeting of Families before the Popes
arrival, Cardinal Antonio Cañizares, vice-president of
the Episcopal Conference, attacked Zapatero for endangering the
future of the family. He remarked that the governments reforms
had resulted in a serious degradation of the family in Spain.
He added that the presence of the Pope will encourage families
and show them that theyre not alone, that the Pope is with
them.
Although Zapatero was part of the welcoming party that received
the Pope at the airport, he did not attend the closing high mass.
He and the vice-president, María Teresa Fernández
de la Vega, had a brief 15-minute meeting with the Pope during
which they were reported to have discussed African immigration,
European integration, family policy and education. Zapatero was
booed by onlookers as he went in.
The media was full of praise for the fact that the Pope did
not openly castigate Zapatero from the pulpit. His comments, however,
were littered with scarcely veiled criticisms. The task of openly
attacking the prime minister by name was assigned to the Vatican
spokesman, the Spaniard Joaquin Navarro-Valls, who compared Zapatero
unfavourably to dictators like Fidel Castro of Cuba,
Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua and General Jaruzelski of Poland, who
had attended masses by the late Pope John Paul II when he had
visited their countries. El Pais commented that many citizens
were grateful for Zapateros gesture with which he
wanted to reaffirm the laicism of the State.
The Catholic Church has once more decided to directly intervene
in the politics of Spain in alliance with the PP. It has called
for, and its bishops have taken part in, demonstrations opposing
the governments law on same-sex marriage and the end of
teaching of the catechism in schools. It has called on its followers
to disobey the laws of the country by extra parliamentary means.
The Catholic Church was a close collaborator of the fascist
military uprising against the Republican government in 1936, one
of whose limited reforms had been to end the link between church
and statealthough it continued subsidizing it. During General
Francos 36 years of dictatorship, the Catholic Church was
in charge of ideology, vetting and censoring everything and blessing
every act of savagery committed by the regime.
Today, its promotion of cultural issues follows the pattern
set by the alliance between fundamentalist Christian groups and
the Republican Party in the United States, with the aim of whipping
up reactionary sentiment as the basis of a right-wing political
movement.
See Also:
Spanish train line reopens
before investigation into fatal accident begins
[31 July 2006]
Spain: Life savings at risk
over stamp fraud
[27 July 2006]
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