One could feel the disdain that Emma Jane Kirby felt toward Catholicism in a recent travel piece by BBC News. Her disgust and utter dismissal of the Catholic holy site at Lourdes, France was so thick it verged on hatred. Knocking the sentiment behind Lourdes, slamming the "fusty" feel to the place, mocking its religious sincerity and, finally, ending in condescension, Kirby was so disturbed by her visit that she exclaimed "Good God!" and did so "not in any laudatory way," as she points out. Her piece was a pure hit job on Lourdes in particular and Catholicism in general and provides another great example of European's hatred for religion and the BBC's campaign against traditional culture.
In "The challenge of finding peace in Lourdes," Kirby first negatively describes the holy city as a musty attic.
Lourdes is a massive Roman Catholic pilgrimage site with more hotels than any other French city, except Paris... It reminded me of my father's attic - small, overcrowded, fusty, and so stuffed full of junk that the minute I entered I used to panic, desperate to get out again.
It's easy to see that Kirby's attic comparison serves more as a metaphor for her feelings of being trapped in her religion as opposed to any feeling that Lourdes gave her. After all, what self-respecting European wants to be known as a person of religious conviction? It's just unseemly, uncivilized... archaic, even. I am sure that Kirby feels her religion is as "small" as she imagined Lourdes to be and that she is as "desperate to get out" of her religion as she was to leave the holy site she was tasked with writing about.
Kirby attacks the tourist trap-like aspects of the place. With souvenir shops and "very tired-looking" hotels abound, Kirby looks down her oh, so sophisticated nose at the place.
So, when I arrived at my very tired-looking hotel, which appeared to be perfumed by the socks of last season's pilgrims and saw its lobby, packed full of gaudy Virgin Mary memorabilia, you will forgive me when the words "Good God!" escaped my lips, and not in any laudatory way.
Kirby then claims she "recovered from my temporary crisis of faith" and then set off to find the shrine itself. Again, the tenor of this piece belies any "temporary" state of the writer's crisis of faith, for sure.
After belittling the souvenir shops, hotels and appearance of the area, Kirby hones in on the apparent sham of the religious claims behind the shrine. She also seems to reveal that even the Catholic workers and priests there are non-believers.
I was quite taken aback by the usage of a novelist's trick of the omnipotent descriptions by an all-knowing narrator explaining the feelings and motivations of the characters in a novel. Kirby used this convention to ascribe feelings to the folks she interviewed for this travel piece, but she does not follow up with any hint that those interviewed really told her that this is what they felt.
For instance, she quotes doctor Patrick Thellier as to his capacity to "verify so-called miracle cures." But, before she quote him, she prefaces his words with this line:
He rubbed his temples vigorously in the manner of a man who is relentlessly tortured by his own brain activity.
What could he be tortured by but his deep-seated knowledge that the truth of Lourdes is all a scam? Yet, his actual quote does not quite show "torture" of conscious, but perhaps more wonder at the unexplained.
"It is a constant balancing act between faith and science for me," he said.
"I know that I see patients to whom something inexplicable and remarkable has happened, but how can I prove scientifically to other doctors that a miracle has been performed?
"You cannot prove a miracle and, in this day and age, everyone needs proof to believe."
About the only "torture" I see in the good doctor's words is his sadness that people today have lost their ability to believe. Yet, Kirby wants to present his words as if he himself is having a crisis of faith, or even that he is a scam artist who knows that Lourdes is all a lie.
Kirby then recounts how she witnessed several sick and needy people wandering about the church praying for a miracle. It obviously made her quite disturbed to witness these people. Apparently the sick should be neither seen nor heard in Kirby's world.
I told one of the visiting British priests, Father Bob - who had come with Peggy, one of his elderly and terminally ill parishioners - how uncomfortable I felt witnessing such scenes of despair.
Father Bob had the right thing to say and it appears to have been something that perhaps shamed Miss Kirby if just a little. "This is their home," Father Bob said, "Lourdes is a place where the sick don't just count. They come first."
Unfortunately, Kirby ends her piece on a note of condescension.
So, that night, I sat quietly for a while before the shrine and thought about miracles.
Before I left I lit a candle for the sick Austrian woman.
You just never know.
Apparently, she bows to mere superstition as opposed to conviction at the end of her visit to Lourdes. Instead of a sincere prayer to God that he help the sick Austrian Woman, Kirby simply lights a candle as a blindly, dogmatic paean to superstition and goes about her way, trusting to the luck that the act of lighting a candle in and of itself is enough to satisfy the sentiment of "what if there really is a God." A candle lit just in case is no expression of faith and is a fitting end to the offhanded, dismissive treatment she gives the holy site in her travel piece.
Now, I am no Catholic. I have no expectation that "miracles" occur now, or ever have occurred in Lourdes nor do I believe the Catholic Church has any capacity to declare them as such. However, what Kirby has written, presented as travelogue, is far from mere description but reads more like an indictment on the veracity of the Holy site and, perhaps, the entire religion.
Such a piece as Kirby’s seems more at home in a publication of essays and social commentary than it does as a product of a “news” organization like the BBC. But, then again, the BBC has been confusing commentary for “news” for quite sometime. And the Beeb’s penchant for attacking traditional western mores and culture runs apace with their tendency to present opinion as news.















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Quote: "I know that I see
February 14, 2008 - 23:02 ET by tracheostomyQuote: "I know that I see patients to whom something inexplicable and remarkable has happened, but how can I prove scientifically to other doctors that a miracle has been performed?"
Too bad. In the US, you can request to have your Electronic Medical Record (a valid legal document) sent to you at any time and you could show your history to the faithful and skeptic alike.
-PJ
"Trake: Your lofty convictions are another blemish on the rump of congregational sectarianism." -Tumbler 5/15/07
-
February 14, 2008 - 23:08 ET by planetrepublicanEmma Jane Kirby, going to hell.
"Do not come any closer,"
February 15, 2008 - 15:19 ET by lotr"Do not come any closer," God said. "Take off your sandals, for the place where you are standing is holy ground." Exodus 3:5
"Do not give dogs what is sacred; do not throw your pearls to pigs. If you do, they may trample them under their feet, and then turn and tear you to pieces." Matt. 7:6
Yay for "father" Bob!
February 14, 2008 - 23:43 ET by sentforth5Kirby is going to Heaven, all right, but the question is does she get to stay?
It is actually quite normal for the ignorant to belittle those things that they have no understanding of. We'll pray for her in my home as she is much sicker than the ill folk she encountered at Lourdes.
Yeah, it seems like it's all the rage to ridicule Christianity...more power to 'em if that's the way they want it..no problem, I mean, they KILLED Jesus. We just have to put up with a little noise pollution.
Right, sentforth5...there's
February 15, 2008 - 00:01 ET by motherbeltRight, sentforth5...there's nothing politically incorrect about ridiculing Christians in general, and Catholics in particular.
Can you imagine her going to Mecca during the Hajj, and writing similar tripe?
Hey motherbelt!
February 15, 2008 - 00:21 ET by sentforth5I think it would take about an hour, and she would have no use for a hat ever again.
Hell yeah
February 15, 2008 - 12:01 ET by Tito the NormanExcellent commentary sentforth5.
"After all, they KILLED Jesus."
"The Truth is absolute.", Pope Benedict XVI
Next
February 14, 2008 - 23:59 ET by FranksamWe can at least look forward to her next travelogue, "The Challenge of Finding Peace in Mecca.
Franksam
GMTA, franksam. We were
February 15, 2008 - 00:00 ET by motherbeltGMTA, franksam. We were typing at the same time!
*insert Keith religious
February 15, 2008 - 00:06 ET by wiwf*insert Keith religious rant here*
The Rocky Mountain Collegian: Illustrating Idiocy
well, all right....
February 15, 2008 - 00:23 ET by sentforth5I finally understand a post like that.
Thanks, Keith!
ROFL!!! That, sir, means
February 15, 2008 - 07:15 ET by motherbeltROFL!!!
That, sir, means you have arrived!!
Hurray for me!
February 15, 2008 - 07:50 ET by sentforth5I'M HERE!
Wonder how they felt
February 15, 2008 - 02:04 ET by Zap"I told one of the visiting British priests, Father Bob - who had come
with Peggy, one of his elderly and terminally ill parishioners - how
uncomfortable I felt witnessing such scenes of despair."
Gee, I wonder how uncomfortable those people you are complaining about are. You know, with them having TERMINAL ILLNESSES and all that. No, wait, you're like the typical reporter, you think that you are the only person in the world that matters. How dare those dreadful dying people make you "uncomfortable" with their "despair".
I am surprised though that she is so degrading of Lourdes. After all, don't socialist moonbats like her have their own little, special place of medical miracles where everyone is welcome?
You know, Cuba?
That line got me too,
February 15, 2008 - 07:21 ET by motherbeltThat line got me too, zap.
She didn't feel pity or compassion; it made her "uncomfortable."
She didn't even realize that what she was witnessing was not despair, but faith, and hope, of the highest order. The faith that miracles do occur, and the hope that they might be blessed with one.
I suppose she thought all the crutches, etc. that had been left there were just props....
I wonder if she's shown this
February 15, 2008 - 04:24 ET by rbosqueI wonder if she's shown this much disdain over Islam and their penchant for murdering infidels? Didn't think so. Not very brave of you Emma.
Creating the void
February 15, 2008 - 08:28 ET by on-the-rocksThe BBC seems to be one of the entities creating the void which Islam is filling in the UK. It may not be intentional, as often when Libs tear down traditions, they don't concern themselves with "what comes after?". As long as they get "change".
But the effect is the same, whether intentional or not.
Try that stunt in Mecca
February 15, 2008 - 15:23 ET by greenfairieI've seen the cheesy souvenirs near various European cathedrals and the Vatican (I personally find the switchblades and lighters embossed with the Pope's pic the funniest), but they have nothing to do with the shrines themselves. Sheesh.
Only on the Beeb can you beat up on Christianity all you want but Allah forbid if you dare offend the Muslims in any way, shape, or form. You won't see Emma rolling her eyes at the Mecca pilgrims chucking stones at "Satan" or holding her nose at the stinky masses, even if she didn't fear losing her noggin. If it's not fear, it's pathetic political correctness.
It's both, cowardice being
February 15, 2008 - 15:58 ET by lotrIt's both, cowardice being the greater vice.
So I guess no one can be
February 15, 2008 - 19:22 ET by balboaSo I guess no one can be critical of Lourdes. How...nice.
Another pointless generalization
February 15, 2008 - 19:30 ET by RJhow...nice
No-no, as soon as anyone
February 15, 2008 - 19:34 ET by balboaNo-no, as soon as anyone writes anything critical about a religious monument/shrine, it's immediately written off as God-hating.
And that is not ANOTHER generalization
February 15, 2008 - 19:41 ET by RJ....because....
"He was a would-be sharp operator who lacked for the satisfaction of his ambition only the quality of sharpness..." -Michael Chabon, "Gentlemen of the Road"
Except that...
February 15, 2008 - 21:02 ET by Warner Todd Huston... the MSM only attacks Christian religious monuments/shrines. I wouldn't have such a problem if the MSM was at least even handed in its hatred of religion. Unfortunately for your ... um... comment... it is singularly interested in attacking Christianity alone.
------
On missing the obvious:
"I just think you could point to a million different stories... But to point at one and blame the liberal bias seems pointless."
--Comment by Balboa, Feb 3, 2008 - 11:21 ET, on Newsbusters, a site where "exposing and combating liberal media bias" is the WHOLE point the site exists!
the MSM only attacks
February 16, 2008 - 00:13 ET by balboathe MSM only attacks Christian religious monuments/shrines.
Is that really true? Have you done a hard-target search of every travel article on a religion-related destination done in the past, say, 5 years? I mean, it might very well be, but you saying it shouldn't be the only proof.
Huh...
February 16, 2008 - 00:25 ET by Warner Todd HustonWell, then. You must have all sorts of proof to the contrary?
Love to see it.
-------
On missing the obvious:
"I just think you could point to a million different stories... But to point at one and blame the liberal bias seems pointless."
--Comment by Balboa, Feb 3, 2008 - 11:21 ET, on Newsbusters, a site where "exposing and combating liberal media bias" is the WHOLE point the site exists!
A little bit less than you
February 16, 2008 - 02:52 ET by balboaA little bit less than you do. You have one story about one shrine. I have zero. So, if I can come up with even one, your "theory" goes out the window.
Good luck finding a
February 16, 2008 - 10:08 ET by lotrGood luck finding a well-publicized, BBC editorial advancing such a cynical opinion of the Muslim holy site of Mecca. I'm not holding my breath.
If you still think it isn't Christ whom liberals hate, remember: They hate [Jerry] Falwell even more than they hate me. -- Ann Coulter