Demonstrators at a Sentinelle in Piedi protest (www.sentinelleinpiedi.it)
On Sunday, October 5, as the long-awaited
Synod on the Family was about to open, Italy witnessed a spate of physical
intimidation reminiscent of what had been seen in the decade after the student
riots of 1968. This time the violence was directed at the “Standing Sentinels”
(“Sentinelle in Piedi”), a pro-family
movement that had organized a demonstration so peaceful it was nearly
motionless.
These Standing Sentinels of Italy’s are an
offshoot of the French “Veilleurs Debout” (“Standing Vigil”), now renamed “Sentinelles” in uniformity with the groups
they have spawned, as if overnight, all over Europe. Standing in front of a town
hall or court of justice or other authority, silently absorbed in reading books,
the Sentinels’ refusal to speak is meant to be a warning of the encroaching
threats to freedom of speech and diversity of thinking.
On October 5, 100 different cities across
Italy saw organized Sentinelle in Piedi
protests. In many places, their attempts to raise awareness about the
intimidating nature of a proposed law that would punish activities coming under
the vague heading of “homophobia” were ambushed by organized groups of
screaming, shoving, and spitting hecklers, who succeeded in grabbing the
headlines and distorting the message. Today’s routinely compliant and
intimidated press did the rest, eliminating the moral distance between the
victims and their aggressors.
Whether north or south of the Alps, the
Sentinels draw inspiration from the words spoken by John Paul II at his Mass on
the Washington Mall, during his first visit to the United States, October 7,
1979:
And so, we will stand up
every time that human life is threatened.
When the sacredness of life before birth is attacked, we will stand up and
proclaim that no one ever has the authority to destroy unborn life.
When a child is described as a burden or looked upon only as means to satisfy
an emotional need, we will stand up and insist that every child is a unique and
unrepeatable gift of God, with the right to a loving and united family.
When the institution of marriage is abandoned to human selfishness or reduced
to a temporary, conditional arrangement that can be easily terminated, we will
stand up and affirm the indissolubility of the marriage bond.
When the value of the family is threatened because of social and economic
pressures, we will stand up and reaffirm that the family is “necessary not only
for the private good of every person, but also for the common good of every
society, nation and state.”
When freedom is used to dominate the weak, to squander natural resources and
energy, and to deny basic necessities to people, we will stand up and reaffirm
the demands of justice and social love.
When the sick, the aged, or the dying are abandoned in loneliness, we will
stand up and proclaim that they are worthy of love, care and respect.
The Sentinels movement began with the massive
demonstrations organized in Paris, at the beginning of 2013, to protest against
the law that would legalize gay marriage and adoption. For months, wave upon
wave of citizens of all stripes and ages marched down the Champs Elysées, or
along the secondary streets to which they were subsequently detoured. Under the
banner Manif Pour Tous (“demonstration
for all,” a play on the name given to the gay
marriage law, Mariage Pour Tous,
“marriage for all”) these rallies, according to the New York Times, “drew Roman Catholics
from France’s rural regions and received the backing of Christian, Jewish, and
Muslim religious leaders, as well as the conservative political
opposition.”
Despite the
impressive turnouts to these marches, French Prime Minister Hollande went ahead
with the legislation and the National Assembly’s lower house, where the left
holds a strong majority, approved the law by a vote of 331 to 225.
Undaunted, the demonstrations
continued, and the authorities clamped down on
them without being too picky about the legal basis for doing do, and leaving it
up to the gendarmes to find suitable detainees among the masses of ordinary
citizens. The poster child of this phase was Franck Talleu, fined in April 2013
at a family picnic for wearing a wordless sweatshirt bearing the stylized likeness
of a mother and father hand-in-hand with their children.
In June 2013, the Manif demobilized
into the Sentinels, developing the now-easily recognized model of imperturbable
standing readers who, in the allotted time and space of the protest, will only
manifest their dissent, if they really must, by waving a hand in the air.
Fifteen months later, on the Sunday when the
Italian Sentinels, defended by the police, were being heckled and spat upon,
the French once again took to the streets, not in motionless defiance but moving
under the original name Manif Pour Tous.
There were reportedly 100,000 of them in Paris alone, hoping to
pressure the Hollande administration into abrogating the Mariage Pour Tous law
or at least not extending to it the laws on artificial insemination and proxy
pregnancies. According to a recent survey by Ifop (Institut francais d’opinion publique), three out of five practicing
Catholics in France sympathize with the Manif, and are joined by Orthodox
Christians, Reformed Protestants, Jews, Muslims, dissident Socialists,
non-believers, and even some homosexuals, who disagree with the gay lobby’s
demand for marriage rights.
The renewed pro-traditional family
demonstration received open encouragement by the bishops of Bayonne, Nanteere,
and Sèez, while the archbishop of Paris, Cardinal Vingt-Trois, recently
admonished the politicians to put a stop to the progressive undoing of the
family. Cardinal Barbarin, archbishop of Lyons, went to great lengths to make
his approval explicit, even beyond the legislative goal: “These demonstrations
are useful,” he remarked, “because they pronounce their ideas loud and clear
enough for the government to hear.” Barbarin continued, “By changing the nature
of marriage, the rules for adoption will also have to change. The rules regulating
proxy pregnancies and artificial insemination will entail an authorization to
fabricate a human being. How can we permit laws like this? The consequences
would be inevitable.”
Favorable comments rang
out from beyond the boundaries of France, voiced, for example, by Cardinals
Angelo Scola of Milan and Christoph Schoenborn of Vienna, who were quoted in a
joint statement to Le Figaro: “The Manif
Pour Tous, which all of Europe knows well, had warned us that the
change in the nature of marriage would be followed by more demands, which would
distort the nature of adoptions and entail the manufacturing of human beings.”
Meanwhile, back in Italy,
where a proposed law recognizing live-in couples of whatever sex had already
been stopped in its tracks by a massive pro-family demonstration back in 2007,
the silent Sentinelle in Piedi were confronted everywhere by the quite noisy
and disruptive counter-demonstrations held by the LGBT lobby, along with other
leftist groups.
On October 5, things went
well in Verona, which had more than 400 unmolested Sentinels. Relatively
peaceful Milan and Monza saw only a few hecklers.
But in Pisa, 300
counter-protesters forced the authorities to suspend the event. In Siena, the
mayor chose to give his official seal of approval to the counter-demonstration
held by the Siena Pansexual Movement and by the gay-rights group Arcigay. In
Bologna, the radicalswho overwhelmed the Sentinels in numberthrew everything
they could find at the silent protesters, frightening parents who had brought
their kids along trusting that their right to freedom of speech would protect
them. In Rovereto, 20 or so hecklers destroyed the Sentinels’ banner and
hounded them into seeking shelter wherever they could. In Turin, hundreds of
radicals spewed insults against the Sentinels and physical assault was
prevented only by the intervention of the police. In Naples, it came to shoving
and throwing both insults and eggs, forcing the police to step in. Trieste,
Genoa, Bari, and Aosta each had smatterings of rowdy protesters. In Parma, they
demonstrated carrying a large banner declaring, “There is no granting public
squares to fascists, racists, and homophobes.”
If all this, and more,
can happen in the absence of a law that makes “homphobia” illegal, what might
tomorrow’s events bring about, should such legislation pass? Today there are Catholics
willing to brave the taunts and shoves of intolerance. How many would dare
utter a word in public in defense of the traditional family (protected, by the
way, under the Italian Constitution) if to do so could possibly land them in
jail?
Obviously the real fight
is in the culture, in the realm of words, in the mainstream and social media.
Which is why there is such an urgency to silence the pro-family voicesstill a
majority in Italyand halt the inter-country momentum, which can succeed in
bypassing the media bottleneck.
By defining the Sentinels as “ultra-conservative”
or “ultra-Catholic” the media has accepted the aggressors’ depiction of them as
something like pro-family hooligans, only a small cut above the ultimate
demonizing taunt, “fascists.” The counter-protesters, on the other hand, enjoy much
more sympathetic descriptions.
One
of the bishops consistently on the side of the pro-life and pro-family laity is
the bishop of Ferrara, Luigi Negri, whose words have filled the void left by
the silence of the Sentinels and the shallowness of media reports. “This is a
sad but long foreseen story,” Bishop Negri said. “For over 50 years now these
ruffians have been beating others up while accusing
of being the
fascists. I have always identified with the paragraph in
where St. John Paul II says that when the Church works for freedom it does not
do so just for itself but for all humanity, peoples and nations. These margins
of freedom are obviously being progressively reduced in our country, despite
the fact that they are protected under our Constitution. Many, starting from
within the institutions, should reflect on this decline.”