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NOTRE DAME, IN - Vagina Monologues audience shuns "dialogue with the Catholic tradition" prescribed by Fr. Jenkins.
In our letter of July 10, 2008, to
Father Jenkins, we
pointed out how this year's student production of The
Vagina Monologues failed to meet his requirement
that the students in the audience receive an
explanation from panelists of relevant Catholic moral
doctrine, and we urged that accordingly he should not
approve such performances in the future. Here, we
summarize and supplement our letter.
Father Jenkins's prior decision
Father Jenkins has not
taken a benign view of the play. It contains, he has
conceded, "graphic descriptions of homosexual,
extra-
marital, heterosexual, and autoerotic experiences" -
including "depiction of seduction of a sixteen-year-old
girl by an adult woman" - in "portrayals [that] stand
apart from, and indeed in opposition to, the view that
human sexuality finds its proper expression in the
committed relationship of marriage." "There is," he
said, "no hint of central elements of Catholic sexual
morality." (For the repellant but compelling evidence,
see our our description of the play.)
While Father Jenkins initially declared that, because of
his appraisal of the play, he thought it "problematical"
whether he should approve its performance, he
ultimately receded in the face of determined faculty
opposition. But he did so only on
condition that the
play be "brought into dialogue with Catholic tradition
through panels" following each performance.
Through "serious and informed discussion" of the
moral issues," he declared, there could be "creative
contextualization" of the play and a "constructive and
fruitful dialogue with the Catholic tradition" in
an "academic setting."
The performances
As we reported in our letter, this
rationale was completely undermined during this
year's three performances by the emptying of the
auditorium when the play ended and the panel
discussions were about to begin. With some 80% of
the students - 900 or so - shunning the discussions,
any "dialogue with Catholic tradition" took place in a
largely empty 450-person auditorium.
This alone should end the matter. But there is a good
deal more, as we explain in detail in our letter. For
example, the divided views of the panelists conveyed
the impression that the teachings of the Church on
these fundamental moral issues had an uncertain
hold in the Notre Dame and St. Mary's faculties; and
audience participation at times included immoderate
assaults on positions of the Church and the Bishop
that robbed the discussion of standing as an
academic event.
In sum, the notion that this sort of staging could
transform a largely pornographic performance into
some sort of "creative contextualization" that would
illuminate Catholic tradition for the students has
proved utterly fanciful. In these circumstances, Father
Jenkins can be true to the terms he has set only by
ending this play's long run.
The Pope's Address
There has been another relevant
recent development that we discussed briefly in our
last newsletter, the Pope's address to Catholic
educators.
Since the performances have been justified in terms
of academic freedom, and since as we note in our
letter two of the panelists reportedly cast doubt on the
Church's teaching respecting lesbian and
homosexual sex, it is useful to consider what the Pope
said about academic freedom:
I wish to reaffirm the great value of
academic
freedom. In virtue of this freedom you are called to
search for the truth wherever careful analysis of
evidence leads you. Yet it is also the case that any
appeal to the principle of academic freedom in order
to justify positions that contradict the faith and the
teaching of the Church would obstruct or even betray
the university's identity and mission: a mission at the
heart of the Church's 'munus docendi' and not
somehow autonomous or independent of it
[emphasis supplied].
But there is an even more fundamental principle at the
center of the Pope's address. "Catholic identity," the
Pope declared, "demands and inspires...that each
and every aspect of your learning communities
reverberates within the ecclesial life of faith."
It is preposterous, to put it conservatively, to view these
performances of this meretricious play as
reverberating with "the ecclesial life of faith." They
reverberated, rather, with a quite different, and quite
malign, culture.
To any who think that the Pope's declaration does not
indict Notre Dame's embrace of The Vagina
Monologues, George Weigel has proposed a simple
test. He writes:
Whether or not to produce Eve
Ensler's "Vagina
Monologues" - a "play" that mocks the settled
teaching of the Catholic Church - has become a
tedious annual ritual on many Catholic campuses.
Prominent among them is Notre Dame: to the public
mind, the flagship among U.S. Catholic institutions of
higher education. There, the university's president,
Father John Jenkins, CSC, has allowed Ensler's 'play'
on campus, acquiescing to the demands of some
Notre Dame faculty while rejecting the counsel of other
distinguished faculty members and the arguments of
the local bishop....So here's my proposal and my
test-case: Let Father Jenkins send Pope Benedict XVI
a copy of Ensler's 'play,' asking the Pope whether he
considers this material appropriate for production or
useful for discussion on a Catholic campus. The
answer, I predict, will not please the spin
machine.
Action
If this past year's experience does not bring
this annual celebration of wanton sex to an end, it is
hard to imagine what will. It is time to add your names
to our
petition if you have not done so, and it is not too
early to write Father Jenkins yourselves to urge that
Notre Dame relinquish the leadership of the small
and shrinking band of Catholic institutions still hosting
this pernicious play.

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