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Vatican's Women Initiative Gets Off To A Bad Start

A screenshot from a video produced by the Vatican with Italian actress Nancy Brilli.
YouTube
A screenshot from a video produced by the Vatican with Italian actress Nancy Brilli.

Even before it opens Wednesday, the Vatican's outreach initiative toward women got off to a bad start.

A promotional video produced ahead of a conference on women's issues has been widely ridiculed as a sexist stereotype of the modern Western woman.

The Vatican's Pontifical Council for Culture is sponsoring the conference on Women's Cultures: Equality and Difference.

In December, organizers released a promotional video that features Italian actress Nancy Brilli, tossing her hair, looking at the camera coquettishly and asking in a sultry voice for women to contribute 60-second clips of their lives to be broadcast at the conference.

"I am sure you have asked yourself many times," the sexy blonde says, "who you are, what you do, what you think about your being a woman, your strength, your difficulties, your body and your spiritual life."

The video drew intense criticism.

"What are they thinking at the Vatican?" asked Phyllis Zagano of Hofstra University, writing in the National Catholic Reporter.

Pope Francis leaves at the end of a mass at St Peter's Basilica to celebrate the World Day for Consecrated Life on Monday at the Vatican.
Alberto Pizzoli / AFP/Getty Images
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AFP/Getty Images
Pope Francis leaves at the end of a mass at St Peter's Basilica to celebrate the World Day for Consecrated Life on Monday at the Vatican.

"Sexy sell has long gone by the boards in developed nations, and is totally unacceptable in Muslim countries," she wrote.

Outrage was so strong the Vatican's culture minister, Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, removed the English version of the video from his department's website.

But at a press conference he stressed that criticism came primarily from the United States and Canada, where many thought the video hit all the wrong notes: a sugar-coated message, delivered by a privileged white woman, that failed to acknowledge the serious problems poor women face.

"These critics said, although I disagree, that when we speak of women, we must start with the abuse to which they are subjected, to focus on all that is negative," he said.

Ravasi stressed that in Europe, reactions were the opposite — extremely positive, and he acknowledged the disconnect.

"It allowed us to understand how we must represent not just the traditional sensibilities of Europe, but also that of other cultures and horizons," he said.

Those different sensibilities are likely to clash during the conference. In advance of it, a draft document states flatly: "there is no discussion here of women priests, which according to statistics is not something that women want."

One of the draft topics that has drawn the most attention concerns plastic surgery, which the document says "can amputate the expressive possibilities of the human face and can be aggressive toward the feminine identity."

One woman quoted in the report said, "plastic surgery is like a burqa made of flesh."

Copyright 2024 NPR

Sylvia Poggioli is senior European correspondent for NPR's International Desk covering political, economic, and cultural news in Italy, the Vatican, Western Europe, and the Balkans. Poggioli's on-air reporting and analysis have encompassed the fall of communism in Eastern Europe, the turbulent civil war in the former Yugoslavia, and how immigration has transformed European societies.
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