Saturday, December 21, 2024

At 88, Pope Francis dances the tango with the global Catholic Church amid its culture wars


(The Conversation) — Francis’ vision for a ‘synodal’ church is one built on trust and relationships − a dance where partners work together.


Pope Francis drinks maté, the national beverage of Argentina, in St. Peter’s Square on his birthday on Dec. 17, 2014. 
Alberto Pizzoli/AFP via Getty Images


David M. Lantigua
December 19, 2024

(The Conversation) — Jorge Mario Bergoglio was 17 years old when he first received his vocation to become a priest. It happened on Sept. 21, 1953 – the beginning of spring in Buenos Aires – during a spontaneous visit to the confessional, or what Catholics call the sacrament of reconciliation.

This spiritual turning point for the future Pope Francis has been widely reported. Less known is that his divine calling happened en route to a student gathering that would have involved food, music and dancing the Argentine tango.

Although he wound up skipping the festival, the tango still runs deep within Pope Francis. In 2014, thousands of Catholics gathered in St. Peter’s Square to honor the pope’s Dec. 17 birthday with his homeland’s famous dance. Now, a decade later, he is turning 88 and looking back. His autobiography – the first published by a sitting pope – will be published in January 2025.

Earlier this year, while doing research in Buenos Aires, I found myself drinking maté tea with several members of the Federation of Catholic Workers’ Circles. These locals, or “porteños,” told me Francis is a “theologian of the tango.”

As a scholar of Latin American Catholicism, I can see why Argentina’s most famous dance provides a cultural window to understanding the first pope from the continent.
A worldwide dance of the people

This iconic style of dance and music extolling personal intimacy emerged out of the Río de la Plata region of Argentina and Uruguay during the 19th century. Tango was born in poor, immigrant neighborhoods, with hybrid rhythms inspired by Afro-Uruguayan “candombe,” Cuban “habanera,” and the “milonga” music of ranchers.

Argentine tango involves syncopated movement, steps that are neither mechanically rehearsed nor sheer freestyle. Partners embrace one another and move with spontaneity and self-control. There is tremendous passion and musicality, tinged with sadness. Timing is everything in partners’ quest for unity.

A ‘milonga’ at the FI Tango Festival Porto 2023 in Porto, Portugal.

Similarly, Francis has shared his vision for a “synodal” church: one based on relationships of trust and solidarity. Rather than being led completely top-down, a synodal church is one where clergy and lay people walk together through difficulties, living out their faith in deeper communion with Jesus Christ.

In October 2024, the Synod on Synodality at the Vatican brought together bishops and other delegates from around the world, concluding a historic three-year process. The synod was a journey of listening, dialogue and consultation with lay Catholics. Local churches must listen to Christians “in the trenches … people who are struggling,” said Bishop Daniel Flores of Texas, one of the U.S. delegates at the assembly, who serves migrants on the border.

As the Catholic Church charts its third millennium, the synod symbolizes its attempts to discern the path ahead. Francis seeks balance between tradition and innovation, the local and the universal. Like a tango, the church’s dance cannot be too rigid, tightly gripping the past, nor too loose, conformed toward the world of today.


The opening session at the Synod of Bishops at The Vatican, the final assembly of the Synod on Synodality, on Oct. 2, 2024.
AP Photo/Andrew Medichini

Francis has challenged conservative critics opposed to reform, saying they are “closed up inside a dogmatic box” and cannot see beyond traditionalism – a deadening attitude where faith has lost its flavor.

Yet he has also warned against an “anything goes, everything’s the same” attitude toward change: “dale que va, que todo es igual,” in the words of tango singer Enrique Santos Discépolo. Those lyrics, well known to Francis from his youthful dancing days, come from “Cambalache,” Discépolo’s popular song of protest against fascism and moral relativism in 1934.


Catholic culture wars


Francis’ tango with nearly one-fifth of the world’s population has been a difficult one to lead, especially amid Catholic culture wars within the United States and Europe. Ever since the momentous Second Vatican Council of the 1960s, which introduced major reforms, progressive and traditional Catholics have been battling out the meaning of their church’s identity, debating the weight of tradition or innovation.

On one side are conservatives – many of them young – who critique secular liberal values that they believe attack the age-old institutions of religion and family. On the other are liberals – many of them aging – on a mission to adapt or dispense with traditions they consider outdated.

Both sides of the Catholic culture war seem to buy into the caricature of Francis as a liberal, revolutionizing Roman Catholic tradition. Even so, some progressive fans consider his reform efforts ineffectual and half-hearted – especially their thwarted hopes that the pontiff would ordain female deacons or permit married clergy.

His detractors believe Francis’ papacy is a disaster better forgotten – or pray it will prove a liberal “last gasp” before the arrival of a more conservative pope.

Francis himself, however, has not shown partiality to either side, criticizing particularly vocal critics on the right yet without empowering progressive factions on the left. The pope moves to a rhythm quite different from the culture wars in the West.

Worshippers gather at the Martyr Stadium in Kinshasa, Congo, on Feb. 2, 2023, during Pope Francis’ six-day visit to South Sudan and Congo.
AP Photo/Moses Sawasawa
Building a new bridge

Francis’ legacy will turn on the faith and popular piety of Catholics in the third millennium, most of whom are from South America, Africa and Asia. By 2050, the Catholic Church outside Western Europe is projected to make up three-quarters of the global Catholic population. Francis is not so concerned with building a bridge between warring sides of progressives versus traditionalists, or liberals versus conservatives, but between different cultures of the global North and South.

Furthermore, the church’s worldwide pastor is less interested in ivory tower theology than the faith of people on the streets, where the tango and the earthier “milonga” – his personal favorite – were born. Poor neighborhoods in the greater Buenos Aires area, where he joined other “slum priests” in prayer and fellowship as an archbishop, orient his popular theology. In his teachings, the piety of common people, whether public processions for the Virgin Mary or celebrating holy days, offer a transcendent antidote to hyperindividualism and materialism.

Pope Francis, then known as Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, kisses the foot of Cristian Marcelo Reynoso during a Catholic Mass in Buenos Aires with young people trying to overcome drug addictions in 2008.
AP Photo

Francis has emphasized that the church is of and for the poor, a theme with roots at the Second Vatican Council – and most famously developed by Latin American bishops and theologians, such as Gustavo Gutiérrez, the Peruvian priest who died in October 2024. Whether instituting a World Day of the Poor for the global church, organizing world meetings of worker-led popular movements or cutting the salaries of the Roman Curia, Francis, I believe, sees it as the mission of the synodal church to center the poor in reforms.

Like the tango of a “porteño,” Francis’ passionate leadership has been both disciplined and effusive, building a bridge of solidarity, not a wall of division, between the church and the world beyond the West. It is a legacy and task that will long outlive his papacy.

(David M. Lantigua, Associate Professor of Theology, Co-Director of the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism, University of Notre Dame. The views expressed in this commentary do not necessarily reflect those of Religion News Service.)

Trump nominates CatholicVote president and culture warrior as Holy See ambassador

(RNS) — CatholicVote has slowly emerged as a player in conservative politics, often as a sharp-elbowed crusader in the culture wars.


President-elect Donald Trump announced CatholicVote President Brian Burch will be the next ambassador to the Vatican.
 (Photo courtesy CatholicVote)

Aleja Hertzler-McCain and Jack Jenkins
December 20, 2024

(RNS) — President-elect Donald Trump announced Friday (Dec. 20) that he has nominated Brian Burch, the president and co-founder of CatholicVote, as ambassador to the Holy See.

Burch wrote on X that he was “deeply honored and humbled” to be nominated, expressing gratitude to family and those at his organization. “I am committed to working with leaders inside the Vatican and the new Administration to promote the dignity of all people and the common good,” he wrote.

CatholicVote has emerged as a reliable ally of the president-elect and helped to garner Catholic votes for the GOP in November; additionally the lobbying organization and political action committee has focused its efforts on fighting abortion rights, advocating against LGBTQ+ inclusion and civil rights, and criticizing immigrant ministries.

Burch has been a vocal critic of Pope Francis’ decision to oust two conservative Catholic leaders from their positions, and he has dismissed the efforts of the most recent synod, a top priority for the pope, as a ruse.


Ken Hackett, an ambassador to the Holy See during President Barack Obama’s second term, told RNS that while Burch’s opposition to Francis could possibly be overstated, he might run into some trouble in the post.

“This is the pontificate of Pope Francis, and while there may be many in the Curia that don’t agree 100% with everything Francis does or decides, he is still the pope, and if you’re seen as in opposition in any way to him, you’re not going to get the doors open,” Hackett said. “If he has a reputation that is in any way anti-(Pope Francis), I don’t think he’s going to find a lot of comfort.”

Hackett emphasized the difficulty of the job in an interview with RNS. “The job for somebody who has had nothing to do with the Vatican is exceptionally complicated. The Vatican and the various dicasteries in the Vatican operate in ways that you don’t intuitively understand,” he said. “State Department doesn’t tell you exactly how to work in the world of Pope Francis.”

The former ambassador said he received an important piece of advice when he began the job: “It’s not transactional, it’s all relational, and if you understand that, then you build the relations, and building relations takes a long time.”

RELATED: Conservative PAC sues Biden administration, targeting nuns, liberal Catholics in records request

CatholicVote has slowly emerged as a player in conservative politics, often as a sharp-elbowed crusader in the culture wars. In 2022, the group filed a lawsuit against Joe Biden’s administration targeting Catholic Charities, select bishops and even sisters such as Sister Norma Pimentel, an advocate for immigrants sometimes referred to as “Pope Francis’ favorite nun.” The effort was an attempt to secure communication records between the U.S. government and Catholic groups regarding humanitarian aid at the border. They filed a second, similar lawsuit, to gain access to communication between the groups around controversial abortion laws. In 2023, CatholicVote raised around $500,000 in a failed effort to change the Kansas Constitution to remove the explicit right to an abortion.



CatholicVote President Brian Burch in a recent video. (Video screen grab)

They have also led the way in several high-profile campaigns against LGBTQ+ people, including after the funeral of trans activist Cecilia Gentili at St. Patrick’s Cathedral and amid backlash to the Los Angeles Dodgers honoring a drag and charity group — the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, who dress as nuns — during Pride Night.
RELATED: Backlash to trans activist’s St. Patrick’s funeral reveals deep fault linest

Marianne Duddy-Burke, executive director of DignityUSA, an LGBTQ+ Catholic organization, told RNS, “CatholicVote is among the right-wing Catholic groups that have been waging war against LGBTQ civil rights and acceptance in the church for years, so his appointment as ambassador to the Holy See is a real setback.”

Duddy-Burke said she had worked “very closely” with the staff of the embassy during the Biden and Obama administrations and said the office had been “really effective in ensuring that LGBTQ issues have been part of the agenda of the U.S. dealing with the Holy See in terms of their vulnerable persons responsibility, and it’s just devastating to think that our country’s voice will no longer continue on that path.”

The group has also been willing to wade into traditional electoral politics. During the 2018 midterm elections, Steve Bannon teamed up with CatholicVote to use geofencing — a method that tracks cell phone location data — to target people who had been inside Roman Catholic churches in Dubuque, Iowa, with get-out-the-vote ads. The group ramped up its use of the technology in the 2020 presidential election, targeting nearly 200,000 voters in Wisconsin and framing the project as a potential game-changer for Trump.

“If your phone’s ever been in a Catholic church, it’s amazing, they got this data,” Bannon said in a deleted scene from the documentary “The Brink.”

CatholicVote also ran ads in support of Trump this year, including one featuring Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump’s choice to run the Department of Health and Human Services.

Massimo Faggioli, an expert on Pope Francis and professor of theology and religious studies at Villanova University, told RNS, “This appointment speaks more to the domestic politics of Donald Trump than to the international affairs.”

He said the choice was interesting given that Trump and J.D. Vance, his running mate and a Catholic, both seemed to position themselves on relatively good terms with the Vatican during the campaign. The Vatican seemed even cautiously optimistic that a Trump presidency could aid in their hopes for peace in Ukraine and Gaza.

“I think it’s possible that the Vatican will try to be less confrontational with Trump because they might think that he could solve these two wars,” Faggioli said.

The theologian said Burch seems to be different from Trump’s first choice for ambassador to the Holy See, Callista Gingrich, whom Burch described as more institutional and not “political” in her post.

Faggioli said it was possible Burch would become less partisan when he took the post, and he anticipates the embassy staff, who have been operating without an ambassador since Joe Donnelly stepped down in July, will “try to help the ambassador, at least in public.”

“It remains to be seen what this means for relations between the Trump administration and Pope Francis,” he said.
Churches consider what sanctuary might look like in Trump's second term

(RNS) — The news that Trump may rescind a policy discouraging immigration officials from arresting people at churches is making some church leaders reconsider sanctuary.


Edith Espinal arrives at Columbus Mennonite Church in Columbus, Ohio, to take sanctuary on Oct. 2, 2017. (Photo courtesy Columbus Mennonite Church)

Yonat Shimron
December 20, 2024

(RNS) — At a congregational meeting last week, members of Columbus Mennonite Church in Ohio’s state capital gathered to figure out how they might respond to President-elect Trump’s call to enact “the largest deportation” in U.S. history.

The church has long been a part of the sanctuary movement, which offers shelter for undocumented immigrants who might otherwise be deported. During Trump’s first term, the Mennonites in Columbus gave a woman with a deportation order a place of refuge for more than three years. Now, church members wanted to consider how their ministry to migrants might look in a second Trump term.

Before they broke into groups for discussion, the congregants heard about the history of the sanctuary movement since the 1980s. They also heard from immigration lawyers about Immigration and Customs Enforcement policies that since 2011 have discouraged agents from making arrests at churches.

Last week, NBC News reported that Trump plans to rescind the policy on his first day in office.

At the end of the evening, a straw poll was taken and found broad support for continuing to provide immigrants with housing, but less support for sanctuary.

“Sanctuary just seems like a less safe strategy this time around,” concluded the Rev. Joel Miller, the church’s pastor.

Last month, a group of North Carolina church pastors who had also offered sanctuary to undocumented immigrants during Trump’s first term reached the same conclusion.

“We were all like, we just don’t feel we can tell someone entering into sanctuary right now that we could keep them safe,” said the Rev. Isaac Villegas, the former pastor of Chapel Hill Mennonite Fellowship, who attended the meeting.

During Trump’s first term, 71 undocumented immigrants with deportation orders publicly announced that they had taken sanctuary in churches across the country. Other churches may have taken in undocumented immigrants secretly, making exact numbers impossible to know.

Now, with Trump’s aggressive calls for a mass deportation targeting millions of immigrants living in the U.S., and with threats to rescind a policy that kept immigration officials from raiding churches, many congregations are feeling less certain about sanctuary.

RELATED: Faith leaders express dismay amid report Trump will allow immigration raids at churches

The success of the sanctuary movement during Trump’s first term — limited as it was — lay in the fact that Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents never set foot on church grounds.



In this July 8, 2019, file photo, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers detain a man during an operation in Escondido, Calif. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

ICE agents, for the most part, respected a 2011 policy that discouraged its agents from conducting raids at so-called “sensitive locations” — churches, schools and hospitals. (Instead, they impose fines of hundreds of thousands of dollars on nine people in sanctuary for disobeying orders to leave the country. Most of those were reversed.)

In 2021, Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas updated that policy, making it clear that churches, schools and hospitals (but also playgrounds, childcare centers and emergency shelters) were not just “sensitive locations” but “protected areas” where ICE searches and arrests are discouraged, except in certain cases where there is imminent risk of death or physical harm or a terrorist attack.

Trump’s threat to set aside the policy is chilling the passions felt by many houses of worship for what proved to be a successful tool of resistance.

In public sanctuary cases, churches were upfront about who they were sheltering. They typically held press conferences or issued press releases informing the community — and, critically, ICE — who they were taking in to sanctuary.

“What’s difficult about the public sanctuary is you’re essentially bringing people out in the open into the media,” said the Rev. Noel Andersen, national field director at Church World Service, who helps organize and advocate for sanctuary. “But if that’s not going to help their case, then that’s not necessarily something we want to do.”

It may, however, be too soon to conclude that the protective areas memo will in fact be rescinded, said David Bennion, an immigration lawyer and the executive director of the Free Migration Project.

“I’ve seen some people saying don’t obey in advance, don’t concede before the thing has even been done, and I would apply that to this as well,” Bennion said.

Bennion pointed out that the protected areas policy is not law to begin with, but guidance. ICE’s actions will continue to be informed by political considerations, such as whether the public would support a raid on a church property.

“They’re subject to press and public opinion in a way that they wouldn’t be if this were an actual law or regulation, which it’s not,” Bennion said.

Churches, such as Columbus Mennonite, are now weighing all the options.

Church members embraced their sanctuary recipient, Edith Espinal, a mother of three, and worked around the clock to protect her from deportation. Espinal left sanctuary on Feb. 18, 2021 — as soon as the new Biden administration issued new guidelines stating she was no longer a priority for deportation.

Miller, the church’s pastor, said Espinal still visits the church for Sunday services on occasion and remains beloved by many in the church.

Her apartment, which the church created in an unused preschool area on the second floor of the building, is still being put to good use. Two asylum seekers, one from Africa, one from South America, lived in the apartment in the last couple of years. It is now occupied temporarily by a Haitian refugee.

Who its future occupant might be remains to be seen. The church of about 180 members is committed to the holy work of “being sanctuary people for one another.”

“We’re actively talking and preparing,” Miller said. “But a lot is unknown.”



In war-torn Sudan, Anglican primate asks for a 'silencing of guns' for Christmas

(RNS) — 'Enough is enough to the suffering of the innocent people. Enough is enough to death,' said Archbishop Ezekiel Kondo in his Christmas message.


Sudanese soldiers from the Rapid Support Forces unit secure an area in the East Nile province, Sudan (AP Photo/Hussein Malla, File)

Fredrick Nzwili
December 20, 2024
RNS

NAIROBI, Kenya (RNS) — As the globe readies for Christmas, a Sudanese bishop is reiterating his call for “silencing of guns” in his country, where 21 months of war have caused a terrible humanitarian crisis.

Archbishop Ezekiel Kondo of the Episcopal Church in Sudan, a province of the Anglican Communion, said Christians in Sudan are preparing to observe Christmas despite the war, with residents in relatively peaceful areas expected to welcome refugees.

“In the relatively peaceful states and areas, Christmas will be as usual, and (celebrations) will increase in number because of IDPs,” the archbishop told Religion News Service from Port Sudan, using the acronym for internally displaced persons. “In the war areas, Christmas will mainly be (held) indoors, just in case there are bombings.”

The primate has lived in Port Sudan since April 2023, when the fighting between Sudan Armed Forces and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces forced him out of his seat at the All Saints Cathedral in the capital, Khartoum.

The war is raging in densely populated cities and towns with little regard for civilian safety as the two rival militaries vie for control of the country, which they wrested from an interim civilian government last year.


Sudan, red, in northeast Africa. (Map courtesy Wikimedia/Creative Commons)

Days into the conflict, RSF had seized the All Saints Cathedral, the seat of the 67-year-old archbishop, converted it into a command center and later turned the church’s compound into a graveyard. On that day, Kondo, his family and other church leaders were inside the cathedral preparing for Sunday service.

Kondo said that for the second year, the majority of Sudanese will observe Christmas as displaced persons, as refugees or needing aid while living in miserable circumstances. Many have no food or are homeless.

“On this great occasion in which we celebrate the birth of the Prince of Peace, … I repeat my appeal of the last year to the two warring parties … to consider putting the guns beyond use and silence them for peace as a matter of urgency,” Kondo said in a Christmas message.

He warned that continuing the war would destroy the nation such that there will be no country called Sudan or people to be ruled.

“Enough is enough to the suffering of the innocent people. Enough is enough to death,” he said in the message.

He called for the Sudanese people to have faith that peace will be restored in Sudan and pleaded with the generals to see the suffering of the people and stop the war. “As we celebrate Christmas at this exceptional circumstances, let us continue to have faith in God … Despite the continued crisis and suffering, we thank God for his faithfulness, believing that he will intervene at his own right time,” he said.

At least 61,000 people have died in the war, according to the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, although other agencies have estimated deaths as high as 150,000. The United Nations says 12 million people — nearly half of the population — are displaced and 25 million are in need of humanitarian aid in what is now becoming a forgotten crisis.

In a briefing to the U.N. Security Council on Thursday (Dec. 19), Edem Wosornu, director of operations at the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, described the situation in Sudan as a crisis of staggering scale and cruelty.

In November, Cardinal Stephen Ameyu Martin Mulla, the president of Sudan and South Sudan Catholic Bishops Conference, said in a statement that the humanitarian consequence for the civilians in Sudan has gone beyond toleration and must be condemned in the strongest terms possible.
Winter solstice is having a moment — in churches, too

PITTSBURGH (RNS) — In mainline Christian circles, winter solstice celebrations and longest night services are growing in popularity.


Attendees make pomander balls with oranges and cloves during a winter solstice celebration at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Evanston, Ill., on Dec. 21, 2023. (Courtesy photo)

Kathryn Post
December 20, 2024

PITTSBURGH (RNS) — The Rev. Aidan Smith is no stranger to the dark, he told the members of Trinity Cathedral gathered beneath soaring gothic archways lit by candlelight in downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday evening (Dec. 18).

Raised in northwest Alaska, he grew up experiencing significant periods of real darkness — sometimes, he said, the light would barely crest the horizon. In that context, darkness can feel oppressive, and on the winter solstice, darkness is at its peak.

“Sometimes, our lives can feel like the longest night of the year,” said Smith. But, he reminded the congregation, “darkness doesn’t have the last word.”

The 40-minute service featured hymns, a liturgy of the Word and holy Communion. One couple in attendance, Lucy Price and Lizzy Williams, said they appreciated the quieter, more reflective service that didn’t shy away from the more painful realities of life.



The Rev. Aidan Smith, center at altar, leads a Longest Night service at Trinity Cathedral in Pittsburgh, Penn., Wed., Dec. 18. 2024. (RNS photo/Kathryn Post)

The cathedral is one of a growing number of mainline Christian churches across the U.S. to offer a service or celebration in conjunction with the winter solstice. While most are leaning into more somber Longest Night services, others are approaching the solstice as an opportunity for interfaith collaboration as solstice celebrations grow increasingly popular outside religious circles.

At St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Evanston, Illinois, a winter solstice celebration on Dec. 21 will feature wassail (a hot spiced beverage), earth-conscious crafts involving wax candles, oranges and cinnamon cloves, and a performance by the EcoVoice Project, a group that uses music to raise awareness of climate change.

The brainchild of EcoVoice director Kirsten Hedegaard, the interfaith community event is also curated by the church and by local groups Climate Action Evanston and Interfaith Action. Housed in a large stone gothic cathedral in a residential neighborhood, St. Luke’s, known in Evanston for its community activism, has previously collaborated with local churches to observe cross-quarter days, which fall midway between the solstices and equinoxes, via outdoor worship services involving prayer hikes, kite making and, in the fall, baking Communion bread from the first wheat harvest.


EcoVoice Project performs at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Evanston, Ill., on Dec. 21, 2023. (Courtesy photo)

“Adapting from having done the cross-quarter days into doing a solstice event was really, really natural for us,” said the Rev. Kathryn Banakis, rector at St. Luke’s.

Climate awareness is a key focus of the event, which will include tables populated by local environmental groups who will promote climate action items, including composting holiday trees, using sustainable gift wrapping techniques, and learning about proposed local ordinances that could impact greenhouse gas emissions. While the event will make space for grief, the framing of the event as celebratory is intentional.

“The enemy of climate action is climate anxiety, and the way to mitigate climate anxiety is group climate action,” said Martha Meyer, St. Luke’s representative to the Interfaith Action of Evanston’s Climate Change task force. “So it’s really important that we, when we are working on climate, that there’s a way to frame it as nature appreciation, love of seasons.”



The Rev. Burke Owens. (Courtesy photo)

Like the St. Luke’s event, the Winter Solstice program at First Palo Alto United Methodist Church on Friday evening is more spiritual than religious. The Rev. Burke Owens, who pastors the 130-year-old congregation in California’s Silicon Valley, hopes to introduce a bit of play at the inaugural service, which he said would feature an eclectic mix of songs (from Elizabethan carols to Joni Mitchell ballads), poems and a traditional Abbots Bromley horn dance that will acknowledge the cycles of nature and pay homage to animals.

“You have antlers, and you’re tapping them together and doing a simple dance around the chancel,” said Owens, describing the dance. “For some people, they might find it to be too far away from pure Christianity. I see that the relationship is there, because we’re celebrating the return of the sun, s-u-n, as well as the return of the son, s-o-n.”

St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church in Grand Junction, Colorado, is similarly hosting a winter solstice celebration that’s distinct from its Christmas or advent festivities. This will be the third year the event takes place, and the outdoor program will invite participants to walk the church’s labyrinth and place their written concerns in a fire that symbolizes God’s transformative power.

“We don’t try to connect this with the Christian holiday,” said the Rev. Janice Head, associate priest for healing and wholeness at the church. “It is a stand-alone event recognizing the cycle of nature, the movement from dark to light, from resting to waking.”

To medievalist Eleanor Parker, who wrote “Winters in the World: A Journey through the Anglo-Saxon Year,” the decision to hold separate winter solstice and Christmas events is interesting, given the historic overlap between the two. She noted that, when Roman Christians chose Dec. 25 as Christmas day (likely because it was nine months after the spring equinox, when some believed Jesus was conceived), it was the same day as the winter solstice. The date of the solstice has since shifted due to the inaccuracy of the Julian calendar. In the Middle Ages, Parker said, the winter solstice was seen simply as part of the yearly cycle, not a separate religious idea.

“They didn’t see any sort of conflict between the idea of, this is the solstice and we’re also celebrating Christmas … Really, they really are blended at that point,” said Parker. “That idea that lots of Christians think it’s a bit pagan to celebrate the solstice, that I think only comes back in the 19th century, the 20th century. It’s a really recent idea.” The 20th century’s New Age movements and revival of paganism, which views the solstices as the basis for the pagan year, according to Parker, contributed to the perception of Christmas and winter solstice as separate.
RELATED: Yule – a celebration of the return of light and warmth

While some Christians today are wary even of Christmas traditions that seem a little too pagan, in theologically progressive Mainline Christian circles, winter solstice services — particularly of the more traditional “Longest Night” variety — have been around for awhile and are steadily growing in popularity. In the Episcopal diocese of Pittsburgh, the number of parishes offering this service has grown from one to 10 in the last decade or so.


Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh, Penn. (Photo by Ken Smith)

“There is a real need in our various communities for a pastoral response that takes into account the complicated feelings parishioners struggle with during the dark days of winter and also the holidays when depression and grief are often exacerbated,” said Bishop Ketlen A. Solak of the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh.

When Bonnie-Marie Yager-Wiggan, now associate rector at Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh, first introduced the Longest Night service to Trinity Cathedral two years ago, it was in response to her own experience of losing a dear aunt to COVID-19 during the pandemic. She sees the pairing of advent and winter solstice as intuitive.

“We celebrate on the darkest night of the year because we remember that the light is coming, the sun will shine again,” said Yager-Wiggan. “And on a metaphysical, spiritual level, Christ is the light of world, and He will come again, which is the main theme of Advent: the second coming of Christ.”

Many clergy leading Longest Night or winter solstice events this year say the services are in response to both a desire to meet their congregants and community in the midst of the darkness of their own lives, and, perhaps, a broader, culture-wide desire to be more in tune with the natural world. To many clergy, this winter solstice — at the tail end of a fraught election year, in the midst of global wars, and in the wake of a pandemic — feels especially weighty.

“We’ve faced our mortality in new ways,” said the Rev. Brian Coulter, whose First Presbyterian Church in Fort Worth, Texas, is hosting its second Longest Night service in its chapel this Sunday. “There’s something in this idea of dark and light and hope and turning point that we feel as Christians, but it’s also just we feel as humans. … We’re not alone. The darkness is not going to win. We’re still here.”


An array of candles for the 2023 Longest Night service at First Presbyterian Church in Fort Worth, Texas. (Courtesy photo)




A Persian festival, Yalda, celebrates the triumph of light over darkness, with pomegranates, poetry and sacred rituals

(The Conversation) — People stay up all night, telling stories and eating dried fruits, in addition to watermelon and pomegranate, to celebrate the sunrise soon after the longest night of the year.


A table set for the celebration of the Persian festival of Yalda. ( Jasmin Merdan/Moment via Getty images.)

Pardis Mahdavi
December 20, 2021

(The Conversation) — As the days become shorter and the nights become longer and darker, we are reminded that indeed winter is coming. As a child I would dread this time of the year. Not only was there was less time to play outside, but there was a string of holidays that my Iranian family didn’t celebrate, from Hanukkah to Christmas, which made me feel I didn’t belong in our new home in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

At the age of 11, I asked my parents for a Christmas tree. That’s when my grandmother, Ghamarjoon, placed two pomegranates in my hands and two in my mother’s and introduced me to Shab-e-Yalda: “shab” meaning night, and “yalda” meaning birth or light. It is a holiday celebrated by millions of people from Iran to Azerbaijan to the U.S., on Dec. 21, the winter solstice.

My path to becoming an anthropologist who studies rituals and traditions in the Middle East was, in part, a way discover the stories of my past, and Yalda was one of my first inspirations.

Celebrating light

Originating in the pre-Zoroastrian tradition of worship of Mithra, the God of Sun, but popularized by Zoroastrians, Yalda, also referred to as Chelleh, celebrates the sunrise after the longest night of the year. Ancient Persians believed that evil forces were strongest on the longest and darkest night of the year. People stayed up all night, telling stories and eating watermelon and pomegranate, in addition to dried fruit, in anticipation of the sun rising.

As the light spilled through the sky in the moment of dawn, Persians celebrated its appearance with drumming and dancing. It was thought that the day after the longest night belonged to Ahura Mazda, the Zoroastrian lord of wisdom.

Religious studies scholar Joel Wilbush argues that the early Christians loved this ancient Persian celebration. They saw the themes of light, sun and birth as interconnected with the birth of Jesus.

Triumph of light

Today my family continues the tradition by gathering every year to celebrate this ancient tradition. Like our ancestors before us, we stay up all night, curled under a korsi, a special Persian blanket lined with lumps of coal for warmth. We tell stories, read the poetry of Iranian poets like Hafez and Rumi, and speak of the good that can overcome evil.

Foods such as pomegranate and watermelon are still eaten. A food indigenous to Iran, pomegranate is believed to be a symbol of life and resilience, for it blossoms during the harshest climate of winter. Persians also believe that eating summer foods, such as watermelon, will keep the body healthy through the winter, and that dried seeds like pumpkin and sunflower are a reminder of the cycle of life – of the rebirth and renewal to come.

While Christmas and Yalda are celebrated just a few days apart, the celebrations hold similar traditions and values. Family, love, resilience, rebirth and a triumph of light over dark.


(Pardis Mahdavi, Dean of Social Sciences, Arizona State University. The views expressed in this commentary do not necessarily reflect those of Religion News Service.)

 Switzerland

New left-wing wind on the shores of Lake Geneva?

Saturday 21 December 2024, by Thomas Vacchetta


The Swiss parliamentsdid not wait for a dissolution before dividing into three blocs at both the cantonal and federal levels. And, although the right and the far right joined forces to form a reactionary and neoliberal majority, the municipal parliament in the City of Geneva remains on the left thanks to the contribution of the radical left of which solidaritéS is a member.

Maintain a left majority

For the 2025 elections, there was a risk that successive splits within the movement would prevent this majority from being maintained, but also the role of left-wing compass vis-à-vis the pink-green executive!

Until very late at night, the day before the lists were to be submitted, the comrades negotiated an agreement between the Labour Party (the local communist party), whose president comes from a first split from solidaritéS and will be our candidate for the executive (also elected by direct universal suffrage) —, the DAL (a small local group) and the UP (Popular Union, also from the last split from solidaritéS ). In addition to the financial aspect negotiated in recent months (UP debt on the non-payment of attendance fees), solidaritéS had vetoed the candidacy of people who had participated in attacks on the personality (acts or words that undermine the physical and mental health, moral integrity and social reputation) of members of the movement.

Support the struggles at the city council

Once the agreement has been reached, our 51 candidates are united in their assault on the Municipal Council! To do what? Continue the work carried out by our elected representatives to support the struggles in the neighbourhoods, at the union level, those of the City employees , sometimes support projects of the left-wing majority and try at a local level to counterbalance the neoliberal projects of the cantonal parliament, or even the federal one.

For example, in the Pâquis district, the most densely populated and popular in the city, our elected representatives were able, in addition to participating in actions by local associations to remove asphalt, to support greening projects within the Council, andto alert people to the situation of buildings left abandoned in a city whose main problem is finding housing. It is also reminding the pink-green executive that the annuity paid to city employees is not a bonus at the employer’s discretion but rather a right of employees, but it is also allying with these same pink-greens to vote for a deficit budget that allows the creation of 108 jobs against the opposition of the right and the far right. It is supporting the left-wing projects of this same executive when they meet the needs of the population, such as the municipalization of daycare centres, or supporting the demands of the Feminist Strike when it asks for premises or the feminization of street names. This is in addition to participating in an occupation with unaccompanied minors of a public building, bringing to the Council the demand of their collective struggle in its request for a municipal identity card. And also participating in the strong mobilizations in Geneva (several thousand participants in each demonstration) in support of Palestine, against the federal policy of "pro-Israeli neutrality", voting 200,000 francs in subsidies to UNRWA to try to compensate for the disengagement of the Confederation.

Beyond this Geneva issue, solidaritéS will continue to fight on all necessary terrains, in the streets as well as in parliaments, from an anti- capitalist, eco-socialist, internationalist, feminist and anti-racist perspective, notably with our comrades from the NPA-l’Anticapitaliste .

13 December 2024

Translated by International Viewpoint from l’Anticapitaliste.




International Viewpoint is published under the responsibility of the Bureau of the Fourth International. Signed articles do not necessarily reflect editorial policy. Articles can be reprinted with acknowledgement, and a live link if possible.

 Italy

"The strike of 29 November is a sign of the resumption of social conflict, after a long period of passivity”


Friday 20 December 2024, by Gigi Malabarba





On 29 November, half a million workers in Italy took part in the general strike called by the CGIL (General Confederation of Labour) and the UIL (Italian Labour Union). Are we at the dawn of a new lease of life for social struggles in Italy? A faint hope in a Europe that seems to be sinking ever more surely towards barbarism. L’Anticapitaliste spoke with Gigi Malabarba , a former trade unionist and former senator on the Communist Refoundation lists.

After more than two years of Meloni’s government and the apparent lethargy of the social movements, does the general strike of November 29 indicate the beginning of a new phase of struggle?

The strike of November 29 is in fact the sign of the resumption of social conflict, after a long period of passivity that goes back to well before the birth of the far-right government of Giorgia Meloni, a passivity that has also helped her rise. The trade union movement had never adequately responded to the hard blows inflicted by the liberal policies implemented by all the governments that have succeeded one another for more than ten years, such as the repeal of Article 18 of the Workers’ Statute on trade union rights, the Fornero law on increasing the retirement age (much worse than that attempted in France), privatizations and draconian cuts in the health and education systems, the extreme precariousness of labour relations, penalizing tax measures in the face of plummeting wages, etc. The few strikes declared were at best the expression of a symbolic disagreement, never of a desire to oppose these measures.

Today, we have reacted, albeit very late, with the only effective instrument: the general strike. It is undoubtedly the result of a growing awareness of the abyss that is looming on all fronts, with the current government challenging democratic and constitutional rules, as well as the economic crisis that is affecting the entire productive apparatus of the country, without the shadow of an industrial policy appearing. The general strike has also given an outlet to company or sectoral struggles that had remained isolated for too long and incapable of changing the balance of power that was very unfavourable to workers.

Would you say that the working class is coming back to the forefront not only in a conjunctural way, but that it could also begin to reorganize itself for a long-term struggle?

When Maurizio Landini, leader of the General Confederation of Labour (CGIL), Italy’s largest trade union, spoke of the need for a "social revolt", even drawing accusations of subversion from the right, he appeared to have little credibility within his own apparatus, which is no longer willing to organise resistance struggles until a goal is achieved, and prefers to devote itself to finding an institutional mediation table, the so-called "concertazione" , an option that has long been a losing one.

On November 29, almost all the unions in the localities declared a strike, together with the CGIL and the UIL. It was the first time, and fortunately! even if with separate contingents. And some sectors of the social movements participated in the day of struggle with the aim of "generalizing the general strike". However, these positive signals are unfortunately not of a nature to allow the maintenance of the degree of mobilization necessary for the current level of confrontation.

For the moment, only the FIOM (Federazione Impiegati and Operai Metallurgici) and the metalworkers, who have opened their own national contract dispute and are at the centre of dramatic struggles in defence of jobs (think of the Stellantis crisis, the entire automotive supply chain and German industry on the brink of recession), seem able to give continuity to the struggles, having maintained an organised structure in the workplace and a clear combativeness, on 29 November.

What role do feminist struggles, international solidarity (particularly with the Palestinian people) and the climate emergency play in this resurgence of social mobilizations?

The role of social movements is decisive, especially in terms of their strategic value in the face of the so-called ecological transition that capitalism is unable to face. The ecological movement, which had experienced an extraordinary surge, especially among young people, has not regained the same momentum after the pandemic. However, the convergence between the workers’ movement and the ecological movement has seen extremely high levels of development, common platforms and initiatives around the struggle of the former GKN [automotive components plant] in Florence which, in the face of lay-offs, has been able, for three and a half years, to continue the fight for an ecological conversion and for the resumption of production under workers’ control aimed at relaunching a movement for climate and social justice on a national scale.

The feminist and LGBT movement also remains on the terrain with participatory mobilizations that have brought tens of thousands of women into the streets, again this year, around the deadline of November 23-25 [International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women]. Equally significant is the duration of the internationalist mobilization against the genocide in Gaza, especially in universities. Finally, this December 14, there will be the first national demonstration to combat Decree 1660 on security, which is preparing repression against all social and union struggles. Let us think of the more than 3,000 denunciations of unionists in Lombardy and Emilia! This is an aggravation of the infamous Rocco Code of the fascist era. Fortunately, a wide range of forces will be present in this mobilization.

How do you see the capacities of resistance of the working classes in the face of government policies (cuts everywhere, decree on security, autonomy, presidentialism, etc.)? What are the forces capable of organizing popular anger, but also of outlining a horizon for the struggles?

The ingredients for a change of phase are all there, and at the same time. However, the long wave of defeats of the radical left and the reformist left over the years shows no sign of remission. On the contrary, the ambiguities of the "anti-war" positions - between an exasperated Atlanticism on the one hand and a campist logic cut off from reality on the other - are the lead in the wing of the possible reconstruction of an alternative. There have been too many setbacks and too many losses of bearings to imagine a resumption of political initiative in the near future by the combative left. We must start again from "convergence", from the reconstruction of a social and political fabric of resistance that has been broken for decades: the seeds are there, but it will take a long time to make them develop.

Interview by Stéfanie Prezioso for the newspaper of the Popular Union (Geneva)

Gigi Malabarba , a worker for over thirty years on the Alfa Romeo (FIAT) assembly line in Arese, a former union leader of the FIOM and then of Sin.Cobas and then a senator elected twice on the lists of the Communist Refoundation Party, he has been involved in recent years in two workers’ self-management projects, first with RiMaflow in Milan and now with GKN in Florence. Self-management in Movement - Fuorimercato is the socio-political organization in which he is currently active and which has begun a common journey with other forces, starting with the GKN factory collective, to organically sediment the strong impact of this conflict.

12 December 2024

Translated by International Viewpoint from l’Anticapitaliste.
https://lanticapitaliste.org/opinions/international/italie-la-greve-du-29-novembre-est-le-signe-de-la-reprise-du-conflit-social



International Viewpoint is published under the responsibility of the Bureau of the Fourth International. Signed articles do not necessarily reflect editorial policy. Articles can be reprinted with acknowledgement, and a live link if possible.