Low Graphics Site
White bar
.: Latest News :. .: News in Pictures :.
Daily SectionMarker

Misc SectionMarker

Horoscope Recipes Weekly SectionMarker

Weekly SectionMarker



Pakistan's Internet Magazine
Herald
Dawn GroupMarker

Archive, Search, Feedback & HelpMarker

Weather

Dawn Classified



FrontPage National International Local Business KSE Forex Sports Editorial Opinion Letters Features Today's Cartoon TV Guide Cowasjee Ayaz Irfan Hussain Review Dawn Magazine Young World Images Dawn Group Subscription To Advertise

DINA
Previous Story DAWN - the Internet Edition Next Story

March 3, 2006 Friday Safar 2, 1427


Church, state vie for power in Spain



By John Ward Anderson


MADRID: Shortly after his election in 2004, Socialist Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero ended a quarter-century of cosy church-state relations by blocking mandatory religious classes in public schools. He then took wider aim, saying his government would relax abortion laws, ease restrictions on divorce, legalize gay marriage and permit gay couples to adopt children.

In response, the archbishop of Madrid called the Spanish capital ‘a hotbed of sin’. Pope John Paul II accused Zapatero of ‘promoting disdain towards religion’ and said the Catholic Church in Spain would never yield ‘to the temptation to silence it’.

Things got particularly nasty when the media joined the fray. A radio station sent reporters into confessionals with hidden microphones and broadcast unsuspecting priests warning against the evils of birth control, homosexuality and surfing the internet.

Two months ago, a disc jockey from an anti-government, church-owned radio station in Madrid posed as Zapatero and called Bolivia’s socialist president-elect, Evo Morales, to congratulate him for joining the Cuban-Venezuelan leftist ‘axis’. Morales fell for the gag, leading to red faces all around.

With exchanges like these, the battle between the church and Zapatero’s government has spread from parliament to streets, pulpit and confessional, creating some of deepest political and social schisms in Spain since it returned to democracy 28 years ago.

“This is a government that is deeply secular and reform-oriented,” said government spokesman Fernando Moraleda, arguing that Spain needed to adapt to its position as a modern member of the European Union. “We can’t allow Catholic doctrine to be superior to the government and the government’s legitimacy.”

Church supporters say Zapatero’s government is simply anti-clerical — as socialists traditionally are in Spain — and out of touch with Spanish society, which is more than 80 per cent Catholic. They accuse the government of toying with a carefully crafted constitutional balance between church and state that has helped keep Spain peaceful and democratic since the death of the longtime dictator, Gen. Francisco Franco, in 1975. Clashes between the Spanish left and the church helped propel Franco to power during the 1936-39 civil war.

“The situation today comes from this government breaking with the consensus of the past. The peaceful, democratic transition” that followed Franco “has started to fracture,” said Carlos Corral Salvador, a political and sociology professor at Madrid’s Complutense University.

Government backers say the opposite — that the church is out of step with Spanish society, as evidenced by surveys in which four out of five Spaniards call themselves Catholic but half of those say they are non-practicing. Conservative church leaders are refusing to modernize, government supporters say, and are struggling to retain their influence not only with the government but with moderate, younger priests and a flock that is demanding liberalization.

“It is an internal battle of the church, between bishops who were appointed by the Polish pope who are against modernization and who are very conservative, and other priests who are more modern and have less voice,” said Alberto Moncada, president of Sociologists Without Borders, referring to John Paul, pontiff from 1978 until 2005.

Zapatero “is doing what the people want, what he was elected to do,” Moncada said. “The church is watching its influence shrink in the minds of young Spanish people, and it wants to preserve its old privileges. This is about survival and power.” —Dawn/LAT-WP News Service






Previous Story Top of Page Next Story

Seprater
Contributions
Privacy Policy
© DAWN Group of Newspapers, 2006