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Newsweek (USA), November 1, 2004
The New Crusade;
Fighting for God in a secular Europe, conservative
Christians, the Vatican and Islamic militan
Nov. 8 issue - Once upon a time, when the European
Union was a simple common market, matters of
faith were left to individual consciences and
confessionals. But in 1992 the president of
the European Commission, Jacques Delors, called
for "a soul for Europe," arguing
that if Brussels wasn't able to inject a spiritual
dimension into the EU, it would fail to command
the allegiance of its citizens.
How ironic, then, that last week a battle over
the soul of Europe tripped up the European
Commission. After Rocco Buttiglione, the conservative
Roman Catholic nominee for the Justice portfolio,
pronounced homosexuality to be a "sin"
and unwed mothers "bad," the outcry
from parliamentarians forced its incoming president,
José Manuel Durão Barroso, to
withdraw his entire slate of commissioners.
In truth, the Buttiglione affair has less to
do with religion than with the aspirations
of a European Parliament yearning to assert
itself (sidebar). But his supporters instantly
framed it as a religious witch hunt. Italian
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi thundered
that the attack "smells of fundamentalism,
if not obscurantism." Tellingly, Barroso
backed down just two days before EU leaders
gathered to sign the new European Constitution,
which despite strenuous lobbying from Christians
contains no mention of God or Christianity.
"It has been said that the European Constitution
could not speak of the Judeo-Christian roots
of Europe because it would offend Islam,"
says Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, head of the
Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith. "But that which offends Islam
is a lack of respect for God and the arrogance
of reason."
And so the battle lines are drawn. For Europe,
the clash of civilizations is less between
"Islam" and "the West"
than between muscular religiosity and militant
secularism. With the collapse of communism,
Europe's religious conservativesCatholic
or Muslimnow see secularism as their
chief enemy. To the naked eye, the secularists
appear to have won. Western European pews are
empty. Church membership is plummeting. Families
are shrinking, breaking up and evolving as
parliaments pass laws to pave the way for gay
marriages. Fantasies of a Christian Europe
have been dealt a blow by surging immigration
and the EU's nod to Turkish accession earlier
this month; the religious vigor of many of
Europe's 30 million-odd Muslims stands in marked
contrast to the apathy of the Christian flock.
Writes Catholic theologian George Weigel: "European
man has convinced himself that in order to
be modern and free, he must be radically secular."
But Europe's religionists are fighting back.
In the vanguard is the Catholic Church, emboldened
by conservatives from new member states like
Poland, Slovakia and Malta. It's even trying
to forge new alliances with Muslims and moderate
secularists, arguing that Europe, in moral
crisis, must embrace a new ethics founded in
"natural law"or, as one of
Cardinal Ratzinger's aides puts it, "find
common ethical norms to save democracy and
the weak from the whims of the powerful."
Where it once shunned grubby politicking in Brussels,
the church is now lobbying for more formal
rights with European institutions. Religious
conservatives lost the skirmish over God in
the Constitution, but they may have won a larger
victory. Embedded in the document is Article
51, allowing churches an "open, transparent
and regular dialogue" with the European
Union. Church members say that's merely democracy
in action. Moderate Catholics and secularists
fear the clause will give the church undue
influence over European legislation.
Major fights are shaping up. They begin with
abortion and reproductive rights. EU positions
on family planning have been traditionally
progressive: in 2002, when George W. Bush cut
aid for the United Nations Population Fund
on the ground that it supported coercive abortions
in China, the EU stepped in with 32 million
euros. But conservative M.E.P.s have since
stepped up campaigns to limit spending on sexual
and reproductive health overseas. Two years
ago, when the European Parliament was planning
its new strategy, a conservative voting bloc
managed to slash a proposed 20 million euros
budget for overseas family- planning aid by
nearly a third. Just last week, during debates
for the 2005 budget, conservative members tried
to block funding for groups overseas that perform
abortions. "It used to be that we could
ignore the ultraconservatives," says Belgian
Socialist M.E.P. Anne Van Lancker. "They're
not strong in numbers, but if they make alliances
[with the more traditional lawmakers] they
can become very powerful."
The most emotive issue is gay marriage. Dutch
and Belgian homosexuals already have the right
to marry, and many countries recognize civil
unions. Even such traditional church allies
as Spain are following suit. Earlier this month,
José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero's
Socialist government announced that it would
legalize same-sex marriages and adoption by
gay couples. Restrictions on divorce, abortion
and stem-cell research will also be eased,
along with rules making religious education
mandatory. The bishop of Avila, Jesús
Garcia Buríllo, called the reforms "a
violent cultural earthquake."
In the face of all this, Christian conservatives
are rallying their troops. The Vatican has
sent numerous delegations to Spain to try to
block the gay-rights move. Last week, releasing
its annual policy handbook, the Vatican reiterated
its belief that "no power can abolish
the natural right to marriage or modify its
traits and purpose." Earlier this year
the Commission of the Bishops' Conferences
of the European Community, an influential liaison
group in Brussels, vowed to promote "family
policies" that aim to make the EU "the
most family-oriented region in the world by
2010."
Traditionalists are looking to the new East European
countries such as Poland for help. The Vatican
lobbied hard for its admission to the EU. Now
Poland's Catholics are "hoping to push
Christian values forward on the European agenda,"
says Father Boguslaw Trzeciak of the Catholic
European Study and Information Center in Warsaw.
The League of Polish Families, an ultraconservative
Catholic party, came in second in Poland's
first European Parliament elections and was
lobbying vigorously to insert "God"
into the preamble of the European Constitution.
To protest the omission, new parliamentarian
Witold Tomczak brought a pair of crucifixes
to the European Parliament and demanded they
be hung on the wall. They weren't, but the
moment was emblematic. As Poland and other
new members Europeanize, the question is whether
they will also secularize. "What we will
see over the next two years is a battle for
the hearts and minds of the new delegates,"
notes Frances Kissling, president of Catholics
for a Free Choice, a liberal lobby group. "The
Vatican and other conservative groups will
be working very hard to influence them."
Other European newcomers have also emboldened
Europe's Christians. After the French government
banned Muslim girls from wearing headscarves
in school this spring, the Archbishop of Paris
backed their cause. The unapologetic stance
of Europe's Muslims, one French parish priest
told the newspaper Libération last week,
gave new hope to its Catholics: "When
young people hear someone say, 'I am proud
to be a Muslim,' they're less hesitant to say
'I am Christian'." In Britain, when Muslim
groups lobbied for a "religion" category
in the 2001 Census, a surprisingly high number
of Britons ticked "Christian." "Islam
has reactivated the public presence of the
Christian churches," notes Jean-Paul Willaime,
the Sorbonne-based author of "Europe and
Religions." "It's part of a new religious
configuration." For an increasingly multicultural
Europe, the challenge these days is not that
it lacks a soulbut that it has so many
different ones.
With Barbie Nadeau in Rome, Mike Elkin in Madrid,
Joanna Kowalska in Warsaw and Marie Valla in
London
<< Newsweek -- 11/8/04 >>
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