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View Full Version : Pope Benedict believes the Harry Potter books subtly seduce


IrisHope
07-15-2005, 01:49 PM
BERLIN (Reuters) - Pope Benedict believes the Harry Potter books subtly seduce young readers and "distort Christianity in the soul" before it can develop properly, according to comments attributed to him by a German writer.

Gabriele Kuby, who has written a book called "Harry Potter - Good or Evil," which attacks J.K. Rowling's best selling series about the boy wizard, published extracts from two letters written to her by Benedict in 2003, when he was a cardinal.

Kuby, a devout Catholic, had sent him a copy of her Potter critique and he wrote to thank her, according to a passage from one of the letters published in German on her Web site.

"It is good that you enlighten people about Harry Potter, because these are subtle seductions which act unnoticed and by this deeply distort Christianity in the soul, before it can grow properly," Benedict wrote, according to the excerpt.

A Vatican official was not immediately able to comment on the remarks attributed to Benedict, who is currently on holiday in the Alps. Reuters was unable to reach Kuby by telephone.

The sixth book in the series, "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince," is due to be published on July 16, with millions of copies already shipped to stores around the world.

After Benedict was named Pope in April, his own writings shot to the top of the German book charts and dislodged the most recent book in the Potter series from number one.

The Vatican had previously appeared to approve of the books, saying they helped children to understand the difference between good and evil.

Kuby maintains the opposite, listing among 10 arguments against Harry Potter: "The ability of the reader to distinguish between good and evil is overridden by emotional manipulation and intellectual obfuscation."

In one of the letters, Benedict gives Kuby permission to publicize his opinion.

"Somehow your letter got buried in the large pile of name-day, birthday and Easter mail," he writes.

"Finally this pile is taken care of, so that I can gladly allow you to refer to my judgment about Harry Potter."

Vatican officials earlier this year condemned Dan Brown's Catholic conspiracy bestseller "The Da Vinci Code."

Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone in March blasted the book as an absurd distortion of history, saying it was full of cheap lies and Catholic bookstores should take it off their shelves.

sublime311
07-15-2005, 01:55 PM
BERLIN (Reuters) - Pope Benedict believes the Harry Potter books subtly seduce young readers and "distort Christianity in the soul" before it can develop properly, according to comments attributed to him by a German writer.

I would think the Church would have bigger concerns about what can "distort Christianity in the soul before it can develop properly" than Harry Potter.

Jiminy Christmas, man.

camberne
07-15-2005, 01:58 PM
Oh, whatever! :rolleyes:

The Wizard of Oz promotes it too. Burn books, burn books!

IrisHope
07-15-2005, 02:01 PM
I guess he has to start off with a bang?

wendalah
07-15-2005, 02:15 PM
Hmmm. This is moving into fundamentalist Christian waters, which as a Catholic is a little perturbing to me.

I am of the school of thought that anything that gets kids to read more is a good thing. Reading develops both imagination and critical thought simultaneously, which is actually very good for religious development.

hockeybrat
07-15-2005, 02:17 PM
Oh, whatever! :rolleyes:

The Wizard of Oz promotes it too. Burn books, burn books!

Burn books and burn witches! :rolleyes:

Rose
07-15-2005, 02:22 PM
With so many sex scandals I would think they would have more important things to worry about corrupting kids.

Zelda Von Yitz
07-15-2005, 02:45 PM
I saw that article. I pretty much dismissed it.

eli1126
07-15-2005, 02:48 PM
I would think the Church would have bigger concerns about what can "distort Christianity in the soul before it can develop properly" than Harry Potter.

Jiminy Christmas, man.


Amen Sister!! :D

Beth

Irish Elf
07-15-2005, 09:24 PM
yes, b/c doing the right think seduces youngsters. :rolleyes:

PG-rated
07-18-2005, 10:18 AM
Hmmm. This is moving into fundamentalist Christian waters, which as a Catholic is a little perturbing to me.


Me, too. Not to mention the long tradition of philisophical inquiry in the Catholic Church - this seems to run counter to that. I actually think there are many lessons from the Harry Potter series that are directly in line with Catholic teachings, so I feel bad that the pope has decided to dismiss these books.

Carrie K
07-22-2005, 03:09 PM
I think it's just preposterous that anyone thinks that a fantasy book has the power to shake a child's foundation of faith to its core. What kind of faith is that? If absolutely no outside influences can be allowed in because of the "damage" it would cause, I don't think there's a whole lot there to begin with.

I hate the thought police. If parents are worried about it, read the book with their kids and explain to them what their concerns are, although honestly, even that seems ridiculous to me.

Personally? I am heartened that HP outgrossed Charlie & the Chocolate Factory in its opening week. Yay readers!

tray622
07-24-2005, 07:58 PM
This defintely made me :rolleyes: . For what is it worth, I am glad that th e letters he wrote were before he was Pope... hopefully he wont take the time to make it something the Vatican as a whole is against.

BTW... I loved the Davinci Code :) I have a weird thought that people can decipher between enjoyable fiction and complete non-fiction!

Atlanta_eBride
07-24-2005, 08:54 PM
...published extracts from two letters written to her by Benedict in 2003, when he was a cardinal.

Like the media typically will do, this is something obviously from a while back and brought about because it was "newsworthy" today.

I personally see nothing wrong with the series of books and feel that if Christian parents explain to their children that this is FICTION and embrasses this as a lesson then it is promoting all of the good possible - including the love of reading. I'm Catholic and would definately take this opportunity to teach my children between right and wrong and allow them to grow their imaginations.

BrownEyedGirl
07-25-2005, 11:08 AM
For crying out loud...it's a dang book. It's fiction.

I've read HP, and I can't remember every reading anything that has anything to do with any religion at all. It does deal with good and evil in general. But I'm not exactly sure how that could affect a child's belief system.

All I can say is get over it and stop trying to make headlines.