Posted on 09/23/2002 4:53:06 AM PDT by Preston Noell
Please join this protest in Chicago on Wednesday, September 25th, 11:30 to l:00 pm.
Chicago Catholics Protest "Blasphemous" Cartoon
Friday, September 20, 2002
By The Leader-Chicago Bureau - Chicago Reader's cartoonist Garret Gaston focus of protest
During lunch hour on September 25, the American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property (TFP) will publicly protest a recent cartoon published in The Chicago Reader. Catholics and other faiths plan to demonstrate across the street from the paper's downtown Chicago office at shortly before noon on Wednesday to voice their outrage with Garret Gaston's cartoon, "Papal Makeover," a piece the TFP calls "blasphemous."
link to cartoon: http://www.illinoisleader.com/content/img/f2062/Papal.jpg
On June 21st, The Chicago Reader, a 130,000-reader weekend newspaper, published a cartoon with the Pope dispensing "red hot birth control pills," saying, "we were just kidding about Original Sin" and suggesting immoral actions in the confessional, proposing a "new recipe for communion" using chocolate chips, among other images offensive to Catholics.
Each Thursday, The Chicago Reader is distributed freely at 1200 locations to upper middle class, single, college-attending professionals, 59% male and 41% female. Garret Gaston's cartoons are syndicated in less than ten papers nationally, including a news source in San Diego.
Before mobilizing a network of over 200,000 activists nationwide, American TFP President Raymond Drake sent a protest letter, asking The Chicago Reader for an unqualified apology and a written commitment that it will never again publish such blasphemies.
"This blatant, filthy mockery of the Papacy and the Church is a grave insult to God and to all Catholics" wrote Mr. Drake in a letter to the editor published by The Reader. "Facing these blasphemies we have no other option than to stand up and defend the honor of God and our Catholic Faith."
Gaston is known and has won awards for his "alternative" style in cartooning. And in a letter to the editor in reply to a reader condemning the cartoon, Gaston wrote, "I was actually calling through my comic strip for its readers to consider that the church has as little business promoting sexual behaviors as it does condemning them," and that if the reader "feels that as a Catholic [he] is being unfairly persecuted by a licentious cartoonist, I suggest he try being sexually persecuted by a powerful religion that professes to be the mouthpiece of God."
The Reader has not apologized or responded to the TFP's demands.
C. Preston Noell, head of the TFP's Chicago Bureau asks, "If this cartoon does not awaken our holy outrage, can we still consider ourselves Catholic?"
Noell is heading up the protest in Chicago. "We have been successful in the past in effecting the media," Noell said. "TFP is sending out 500,000 anti-blasphemy cards that will be returned to the Chicago Reader and we are planning next week's rally to held in front of The Chicago Reader's offices at Illinois & State Streets in downtown Chicago."
If the rally does not effect change in policy, other tactics may be used to influence the publication, Noell said.
"We may begin pressure on the paper's major advertisers," Noell said. "Perrier Water, Loyola University and United Parcel are all major advertisers in The Chicago Reader. We have asked for an apology and a promise to not print another cartoon of blasphemous nature. We will push until we protect our doctrine from these attacks."
Noell encouraged anyone to attend the rally and everyone to check the TFP's website to email the Chicago Reader a protest letter directly by visiting their website at http://www.tfp.org or by calling the TFP's Chicago area office at 847.692.2585.
"We hope that another 'Catholic backlash' will occur as it did in Disney's movie Dogma that bombed a year or so ago. We know that if there's enough outrage, we will turn this around."
Only on a "catch-and-release" basis.
In a different light, I would tend to agree. The essential principles of the life, death, and life of Christ were (and are) indeed compelling enough to build a global Church. It is my opinion that the Church of Rome diverged from those simple essences centuries ago, maybe around AD 300. Catholic doctrine and canon law have become convoluted and bureaucratic, certainly not in the spirit of entering the kingdom of God as a little child. The permissiveness that it allowed to infiltrate the Catholic academy has rendered many of its historic teachings somewhat empty.
I actually think things have improved under John Paul. He at least understands that an unambiguous moral stance may be the more compassionate policy and of more personal value, as if people realize that they do need direction and limits, just like a child.
Fancy that.
I'm wondering how this person was "sexually" persecuted.
This being America we all have the freedom to express our opinions, even idiots such as this. We also have the freedom to hit them where it hurts, in their wallets.
Thanks for posting this story. PINGing the catholic list.
Gaston, whose "La Petite Camera" runs in the Chicago Reader and the San Diego Reader, won first place among cartoonists whose work appears in fewer than five AAN papers.
I would think that homosexual pedophiles and the efforts of the church to cover it up by offering money to the victims is also an insult to God and all catholics.
It is unfortunate that this crude, adolescent cartoon is being given more exposure than the five "alternate newsweeklies" could have ever provided. Better to ignore it than to draw attention to it.
hey Preston - looks like youve got a buddy -ya both signed on today & win the new lexus
re: the article - looks suspiciously like vieled Catholic bashing / rebelrousing by the newbie
I perceive some internal contradiction in the cartoons. On one level, the cartoonist is having absurdist fun with the idea of a consumer-driven church -- this I suppose being the final stop on the hypocritical road the Church has supposedly taken. On another level, he seems to be suggesting that this degradation is just what's needed for an organisation that's done so much to frustrate and expose he "progressive" agenda that he'd like to see enacted.
Flannery O'Connor observed that "it's a Protestant habit to condemn the Church both for being authoritarian and foe being not authoritarian enough."
I might add that it's an adolescent habit to condemn adult hypocrisy while longing to get into the game oneself.
Works for me
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