A NOBEL PRIZE FOR ANTI-CATHOLICISM
On October 9, the Swedish Academy awarded the Nobel Prize in
Literature to Dario Fo, the Italian playwright who is most known for his
attacks on the Roman Catholic Church. His most famous work, "Mistero Buffo"
("Comic Mystery"), was branded by the Vatican in 1977 as the "most blasphemous
show in the history of television"; it is not surprising, then, that the
Vatican expressed astonishment when it learned that Fo had been given the
Nobel Prize.
William Donohue released the following statement on Fo’s
selection:
"I am well aware of the extent to which literature has
become thoroughly politicized and debased in the West. Giving the Nobel
Prize in Literature to an anti-Catholic bigot, and to a man who describes
his own scatological work as ‘grotesque,’ settles the issue: the deans of
literature enjoy celebrating what the common folk regard as trash.
"It is not accurate to maintain, as one Italian critic
did, that this prize means that ‘everything changes, even literature
changes.’ No, for that would suggest that the vector of change in the
humanities has been on a course other than decline. Even more unbelievable
is the comment by the Swedish Academy that Fo ‘has opened our eyes to abuses
and injustices.’ That this can be said about a man whose defense of
Stalinism is as well known as his hatred of Catholicism proves that the
ladies and gentlemen who chose Fo have been blinded from reality for
decades."
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