With

L'Osservatore Romano

The double face of Harry Potter



The violent manipulation of things and people comes thanks to knowledge of the occult. The ends justify the means because the knowledgeable, the chosen ones, the intellectuals know how to control the dark powers and turn them into good.



This a grave and deep lie, because it is the old Gnostic temptation of confusing salvation and truth with a secret knowledge.



The characterisation of common men who do not know magic as 'muggles’ who know nothing other than bad and wicked things is a truly diabolical attitude.



Harry Potter, who endures his own Via Dolorosa, becomes an explicitly redemptive figure, and the substance of a long speech in which the ghost of Dumbledore speaks to him is a paraphrase of John Chapter 15: No greater love has any man than this, that he should lay down his life for his friends.



Any discussion of the content of Harry Potter cannot ignore the criticism from religious circles, which saw a potential vehicle for dissemination of magic and occultism: an author in Germany, who put forward these objections, even received a letter of encouragement from Cardinal Ratzinger.



subtle seductions that are barely noticeable and precisely because of that deeply affect children and corrupt the Christian faith in souls even before it could properly grow,



At the time of Galileo the Church remained much more faithful to reason than Galileo himself



held and believed the doctrine which is false as being contrary to the divine Scriptures, that the sun is the centre of the world and does not move from west to east and that the earth moves and is not at the centre.



condemned centuries of scientific and cultural growth by affirming anachronistic dogmas such as Creationism while attacking scientific free thought and promoting mandatory heterosexuality.

his sunken eyes, sallow complexion and soft, slightly lisping Bavarian accent, Pope Ratzinger makes a convincing avatar of Dr Evil. He has a name which Ian Fleming would have been proud to have invented, a mysterious if much-exaggerated Nazi past, and runs his own private country. Rumour has it he even likes cats It is however as an arch-conservative, almost a throwback to the middle ages, that he is likely to be best remembered: a man suspected of wanting to restart the crusades, or even, according to a claim by the Vatican's exorcist, recruit a new army of demon-hunters. Over the past couple of weeks, two new stories have appeared to consolidate the myth of Ratzinger the obscurantist. He was forced by protests to abandon plans to deliver a lecture at one of Rome's oldest universities, and reports suggested that he had a new target on his pontifical radar: Harry Potter.According to Wednesday's Telegraph, the official Vatican newspaperhad been responsible for a "damning indictment" on J.K. Rowling's young wizard. The report highlighted an article by professor Edoardo Rialti of Florence University entitled, which criticised the books' alleged promotion of witchcraft as a "positive ideal":Moreover,In fact, Rialti's piece was not an official Vatican statement, and was actually published as part of a debate on the books: a contrasting pro-Potter article, written by the literary historian Paulo Gulisano, appeared alongside it. And there have been other Catholic defences of the young wizard. Massimo Introvigne, who heads the Centre for the Study of New Religious Movements, has written about the obvious Christian allegory contained in the final Potter book, Deathly Hallows, which he compares to that found in the works of Tolkein and, especially, C.S. Lewis.He adds, though, that,Introvigne is referring to a letter sent by Ratzinger, in his capacity as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (a.k.a. Grand Inquisitor) to the Gabriele Kuby, who had written asking for his views on her Harry Potter exposé. His reply spoke ofa vague answer which suggested to some sceptics that Ratzinger had read neither the Potter books nor Ms Kuby's attack on them. Nevertheless, when Ratzinger became Pope the story resurfaced, and here it is again. Not only Dr Evil, but also Voldemort.The other, more serious, incident concerned Ratzinger's planned visit to Rome's La Sapienza university, which had to be called off after students threatened to drown out his lecture with loud rock music. (Ratzinger is known to prefer Mozart, though whether he actually described rock as the devil's music, as is claimed, is more doubtful. Perhaps he just said it sounded diabolical). Earlier, 67 scientists had signed an open letter protesting about the pontiff's perceived anti-science position. They quoted a 1990 statement by Ratzinger in which he claimed that the trial of the astronomer Galileo as a heretic had been "just and reasonable":A curious contention, especially when one considers the reasoning set out by the Inquisition in their condemnation of the astronomer in 1633, for havingA student website, meanwhile, condemned the pope for havingGiven all this, Ratzinger's attacks on Islamic fundamentalists look a little strange. They would seem to have a lot in common.Meanwhile the Pope's famously devoted personal secretary Mgr Georg Ganswein has been talking to Catholic World News about his priestly vocation. "I cannot marry, but I know love." he explained. Whatever can he mean?