Today,
Patrick Reilly, President of the Cardinal Newman Society, issued the following comment
on the strong statement by Bishop John M. D’Arcy, Diocese of Fort Wayne – South Bend, on Notre Dame’s decision to once again allow the Vagina Monologues:
“Bishop D’Arcy
has once again earned the gratitude of faithful Catholics scandalized by the
performance of the The Vagina Monologues
at the University of Notre Dame. His strong statement criticizing Notre Dame’s
decision to allow the play to be performed during Easter Week should be
required reading by students, parents and college officials committed to the
renewal of Catholic higher education.”
The Bishop’s statement follows:
The decision to
allow performances of ‘The Vagina Monologues’ at the University of Notre Dame
March 2008
Reverend John Jenkins, CSC, and I have been in communication about his decision
to allow performances of “The Vagina Monologues” at Notre Dame. I am grateful
to Father Jenkins for the extensive time he has put into our conversation and
correspondence on these matters over the last two months, and I have taken care
in this statement to present his position accurately in order to make a fair
response. Father Jenkins has informed me that, while he thinks that this play
is a bad play, he believes that permitting its performance under certain
conditions, namely, in an academic building without fundraising and with a
panel discussion afterwards in which the Catholic perspective is represented,
is consistent with the identity of a Catholic university. In particular, Father
Jenkins believes that reading the works of authors such as Nietzsche, Gibbon,
Luther and Joyce, who in various ways espouse ideas that are contrary to
Catholic teaching, in classes at Notre Dame, is comparable to permitting
performances of “The Vagina Monologues” under the conditions specified.
As bishop of this historic diocese, entrusted with the spiritual welfare of all
those who live within its borders, including the students at our beloved Notre
Dame, I believe that, once again, I must publicly and respectfully disagree
with Father Jenkins’ decision. I am convinced that permitting performances of
“The Vagina Monologues” is not consistent with the identity of a Catholic
university and not comparable to the long accepted academic tradition through
which a wide variety of authors are read and discussed in classes at Notre Dame
and in all institutions of higher learning.
In the first place, the difference between the works of authors such as
Nietzsche, Gibbon, Luther and Joyce, and “The Vagina Monologues” is a
difference, not of degree, but of kind. The former have written serious
philosophical, theological and literary works, which have influenced Western
thought. As such, their work has academic merit and is worthy of serious
discussion and critique in a classroom setting. Father Jenkins believes that
Eve Ensler’s play was written to shock and offend. How can one put such a play,
which many consider pornographic, on the level of serious works such as the
writings of Gibbon and Luther?
Even if one could make a case that this play has academic merit, it could be
read in class. When a book or play is read in class, the student expects it to
be discussed and critiqued; indeed, this is an essential part of the classroom
experience. This is not so when one attends the performance of a play. One
generally goes to a play and leaves; staying afterwards to listen to a panel
discussion about the play is not inherent in the activity of attending a play.
No one who comes to the play is required to stay for the panel discussion, and
Father Jenkins’ attempt to give the performances of this play an academic
quality seems deficient.
In addition, unlike reading the play as a classroom assignment, the
performances are themselves an endorsement of the international V-Day campaign,
even if this is done without fundraising. Is this not the motivation of the
departments that have asked to sponsor the play and the young women who will be
acting in it? Did they not propose to have multiple performances of the play
again this year because they believe it conveys an important message, and they
want as many people to see it as possible? In short, people push to have this
play performed year after year because they endorse the message it conveys, and
they want to be part of the international campaign to promote this message. In
allowing performances of the play on campus again this year, whether or not
they are officially considered part of the V-Day campaign, Notre Dame continues
to cooperate in advancing the campaign’s agenda, an agenda which, as I have
repeatedly reflected in my several statements over the years, is directly
opposed to the dignity of the human person and is antithetical to Catholic
teaching.
According to their Web site, the international V-Day campaign has extended the
time when this play can be performed to March 30. But if this play is performed
on the dates scheduled, it will be held during Easter week, the holiest time of
the church year. Notre Dame has a long and blessed tradition of liturgical
excellence, a tradition both theoretical and practical and eminently pastoral
and prayerful. Easter week is liturgically considered as Easter Day. Surely Notre
Dame will not prefer or even seem to prefer the requirements of the V-Day
campaign to the proper observance of Easter.
Perhaps an analogy might illustrate how critical the context is when making
decisions about what is appropriate to allow. Suppose that Notre Dame was a Catholic University in Nazi Germany in 1938, and
a portion of the faculty and student body were Nazi sympathizers. Suppose
further that there was a national movement to show a prominent Nazi propaganda
film on college campuses. Would not the showing of such a film at Notre Dame
involve the university in providing a platform for Nazi propaganda and entail
some level of cooperation with the evil of Nazism? Would providing a panel in
which the Catholic attitude towards Nazism was included as one among several
viewpoints, in any way mitigate the evil involved in showing such a film? Would
not the university bear moral responsibility for the fact that some students
who viewed the film on campus might be persuaded by the propaganda and became Nazi
supporters?
I chose this analogy because Father Jenkins, in our correspondence, made
mention of a series of documentary films shown recently on campus concerning
the early days of Nazism, which he believes would also have to be banned if
“The Vagina Monologues” were banned. But there is an enormous difference
between showing a Nazi propaganda film in 2008 and showing it in 1938. One is a
matter of historic and scholarly interest in a long-past event, and the other
constitutes active cooperation in promoting a current and threatening evil
ideology.
I am convinced that, in the current cultural context, allowing performances of
“The Vagina Monologues” at Notre Dame is analogous to the situation described
above. The play is little more than a propaganda piece for the sexual
revolution and secular feminism. While claiming to deplore violence against
women, the play at the same time violates the standards of decency and morality
that safeguard a woman’s dignity and protect her, body and soul, from sexual predators.
The human community has generally refrained from exposing and discussing the
hidden parts of a woman’s body, preferring to consider them private and even
sacred. Most importantly, the sexual sin, which the play depicts in several
scenes, desecrates women just as much as, if not more deeply than, sexual
violence does. The play depicts, exalts, and endorses female masturbation,
which is a sin. It depicts, exalts, and endorses a sexual relationship between
an adult woman and a child, a minor, which is a sin and also a crime. It
depicts and exalts the most base form of sexual relationship between a man and
a woman. These illicit sexual actions are portrayed as paths to healing, and
the implication is that the historic, positive understanding of heterosexual
marriage as the norm is what we must recover from.
Father Jenkins has informed me that after each evening performance there will
be a panel discussion, which will include someone who will give an informed and
sympathetic presentation of Catholic teaching. In so doing, he notes that Notre
Dame “has taken stronger steps than many other Catholic institutions to put
limits on the performance of this play.” While this may well be true, there are
a growing number of Catholic institutions of higher learning that have
permanently banned the play.
The overriding issue here is moral. The play is an affront to human dignity, as
Catholic teaching understands it. If it is performed, it should be denounced.
Otherwise, the university appears to endorse it as in some way good and the
impression is given that Catholic teaching is one option competing among many.
This method places faith in a defensive position and on the margin and is
unacceptable at a Catholic university.
“A faith that places itself on the margin of what is human, of what is
therefore culture, would be a faith unfaithful to the fullness of what the Word
of God manifests and reveals, a decapitated faith, worse still, a faith in the
process of self-annihilation.” — John Paul II, Address to Intellectuals, to
Students and to University Personnel at Medellin,
Columbia, 5
July, 1986. Cited in “Ex Corde Ecclesiae” 44.
Some claim that a performance of the play followed by a panel will “engage the
culture” and that out of such a discussion the “truth will emerge.” Sadly, “Ex
Corde Ecclesiae” is even cited in defense of this position. But what makes a
Catholic university distinctive is the conviction that in the search for truth,
we do not start from scratch; we start from the truth that has been revealed to
us in the Word of God, the person of Jesus Christ, and the teaching of his
church. The notion that truth will emerge from a discussion in which many
points of view are represented both disrespects revealed truth and separates
the search for truth from the certainty of faith; instead, as Pope John Paul II
stated in “Ex Corde Ecclesiae”: “A Catholic university’s privileged task is ‘to
unite existentially by intellectual effort two orders of reality that too
frequently tend to be placed in opposition as though they were antithetical:
the search for truth, and the certainty of already knowing the fount of
truth.’” — John Paul II, Discourse to the Institut Catholique de Paris, June,
1, 1980, cited in “Ex Corde Ecclesiae,” 1.
For these reasons, I believe that the performing of this play, even with one or
more persons willing to present Catholic teaching, is in direct opposition to
both the spirit and letter of “Ex Corde Ecclesiae.” Also, because it depicts
and endorses sinful sexual acts in direct opposition to church teaching, I
believe its performance to be pornographic and spiritually harmful. This
judgment is made after prayer, reflection and dialogue and after preparing several statements over many years.
Because of this pastoral finding, of which I am
convinced, and keeping in mind primarily the spiritual welfare of our young
students, the good name of Notre Dame and her well-earned position of academic
and Catholic leadership, and the blessed Easter week — I remain hopeful that
Father Jenkins will reconsider his decision for this year and future years. A
decision not to sponsor the play is not only consistent with academic freedom
but is a right use of such freedom for it shows respect for the truth, for the
common good and the rights of others. (ef. “Ex Corde Ecclesiae,” 12)