Entry tags:
McReligion
Interrupting the All Schiavo, All the Time reporting (hands up everyone who is waiting to hear the phrases "lovely plumage" or "pining for the fjords"), the Washington Post had this sad statement to make about McReligion outside the US:
On Feb. 3, the Demre City Council [of Turkey] voted unanimously to erect a statue of Santa Claus in the town square, replacing a bronze statue of the Saint Nicholas. "This is the one everyone knows," Mayor Suleyman Topcu said of the plaster-of-Paris figure put up in place of the elegant bronze. "We couldn't figure out what the other one is."
Apparently the Russian Orthodox priests, the tourists who prayed to the saint, and particularly the sculptor didn't have problems knowing who St. Nicholas was, and they're just a tad pissed off.
(For those who can't get into the WaPo site, since Bugmenot appears to be down, the same article is on MSNBC, although neither web version seems to have the pictures of both statues that were printed in the Post.)
I remember seeing St. Nicholas in a stained glass window in an Irish cathedral and thinking "What's HE doing there?! Oh, yeah, right, he really was a saint." Now the Disnification of belief goes on, with the image of the saint being literally replaced by a cheap rendition of the Thomas Nast character.
I guess we now know what's worse than turning a human being into a plaster saint. Turning a human being into a plaster caricature because "you can't figure out what [he] is." Not even "who," what.
On Feb. 3, the Demre City Council [of Turkey] voted unanimously to erect a statue of Santa Claus in the town square, replacing a bronze statue of the Saint Nicholas. "This is the one everyone knows," Mayor Suleyman Topcu said of the plaster-of-Paris figure put up in place of the elegant bronze. "We couldn't figure out what the other one is."
Apparently the Russian Orthodox priests, the tourists who prayed to the saint, and particularly the sculptor didn't have problems knowing who St. Nicholas was, and they're just a tad pissed off.
(For those who can't get into the WaPo site, since Bugmenot appears to be down, the same article is on MSNBC, although neither web version seems to have the pictures of both statues that were printed in the Post.)
I remember seeing St. Nicholas in a stained glass window in an Irish cathedral and thinking "What's HE doing there?! Oh, yeah, right, he really was a saint." Now the Disnification of belief goes on, with the image of the saint being literally replaced by a cheap rendition of the Thomas Nast character.
I guess we now know what's worse than turning a human being into a plaster saint. Turning a human being into a plaster caricature because "you can't figure out what [he] is." Not even "who," what.