Virgin Mary Cartoon Stirs Debate Over Freedom to Offend
From Cybercast News Service:
(CNSNews.com) - While the Mohammed cartoon controversy rages around the world, a television channel in New Zealand was under fire Wednesday for a decision to show an episode of the South Park comedy series featuring a menstruating statue of the Virgin Mary.(emphasis added)
The episode, entitled "Bloody Mary," originally was scheduled to air in May, but after a religious row erupted, the network decided to move it up to Wednesday.
Earlier, Catholic bishops wrote to TV Works, a New Zealand subsidiary of the Canadian media company CanWest, and urged it to reconsider. The letter also was signed by Protestant, Jewish and Muslim leaders.
TV Works rejected the complaint, prompting the bishops to call on the country's half-million Catholics to boycott the channel (and others owned by it) as well as the network's advertisers.
In a pastoral letter read to congregations across New Zealand, the bishops said the episode was offensive, not just to Catholics but to adherents of other denominations and faiths, and demeaning to all women.
Catholic bishops conference president Bishop Denis Browne and fellow bishops said a boycott "might give them pause to consider that press freedom is not a license to incite intolerance or to promote hatred or derision based on religion, race or gender."
TV Works responded by announcing Tuesday that because of the controversy, it would now screen the episode on Wednesday night, to give viewers the opportunity to make up their own minds.
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The Catholic Church called the decision to bring forward the episode "arrogant" and "cynical."
The New Zealand branch of Family Life International, a Catholic pro-life group, has launched a protest website identifying advertisers supporting TV Works and urging a boycott of their products.
Catholics comprise 12 percent of the population of the small South Pacific nation.
In neighboring Australia, the "Bloody Mary" episode was due to run on March 6, but The Australian daily reported that after complaints by Melbourne's Catholic Archbishop Denis Hart, the SBS network agreed to "defer" it, citing "the current worldwide controversy over cartoons of religious figures."
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The new controversy has erupted as New Zealand and other countries continue to debate the publication of cartoons satirizing Mohammed, which first appeared in a Danish newspaper last September.
The publication of cartoons has triggered Muslim protests, boycotts, rioting, killings of non-Muslims, and calls by Islamic leaders for the U.N. to outlaw blasphemy.
Two New Zealand newspapers and the country's two main news networks reproduced the cartoons.
Other newspapers, which chose not to publish the Mohammed caricatures, took flak because readers recalled they had not demurred in the past from carrying images offensive to Christians - most notoriously when the national museum in 1998 exhibited a three-inch statuette of Mary sheathed in a condom.
One regional paper's editorial writer Wednesday compared the bishops' response - calls for a boycott - to "the mullahs, who whip the faithful into a violent frenzy."
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Catholic Church communications director Lyndsay Freer said the Mohammed cartoon issue had opened up a debate over freedom of expression versus the media's responsibility to uphold "good taste and decency," adding that the South Park episode was "gratuitously offensive."
That assessment echoed the reasoning given early this month by the country's largest daily, the New Zealand Herald, in deciding not to publish the Mohammed cartoons.
On the South Park issue, the Herald in an editorial Wednesday said, "it is one thing to be offended by an image put in a newspaper or on a television channel with a mass audience, but less clear-cut when the item is intended for a niche publication or channel."
Anyone offended by the South Park episode should just "change the channel," it said.
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My Comments:
Hypocricy, thy name is MSM.
And don't you love how one editorial writer compared a call for boycotts by Catholics to acts of murder and mayhem by Muslims? What freakin' planet are these people living on? Oh, that's right, they live on the planet Dhimmi.
2 Comments:
I am an agnostic; I do not pretend to know what many ignorant men are sure of.'
Clarence Darrow
Blessed are we, Jay, that bear these insults for Jesus, and the trivialization of His Mother, Theotokos, the Blessed Virgin Mary. Our reality is too large for the small-minded to embrace, which is why it is mocked.
But, isn't the cartoon in question about a 'bleeding statue' phenomenon? The religious fetishization of grilled cheese sandwiches and warped windows must seem odd to people who aren't actively seeking the divine. So too is it odd about weeping statues and icons that weep myrrh, people look for the miraculous all over the place, forgetting the everyday miracles that happen at Mass (like Jeff Miller recently blogged).
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