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Russian Church urges Madonna to tone down her act
From James Kilner
MOSCOW—Russia's Orthodox Church made a last-minute plea to Madonna to
drop symbols of the crucifixion from her stage show when she performs in
Moscow for the first time on Tuesday.
The 48-year-old pop star has outraged Christian groups across Europe by
staging a mock crucifixion and wearing a crown of thorns on her global
"Confessions" tour.
As the controversial star prepared to perform before an estimated crowd
of 50,000 at Moscow's Luzhniki stadium, an Orthodox Church spokesman
called on her to tone down her act.
"We are not against Madonna. We're against her blasphemous acts during
the concert," Father Sergei Zvonoryov, a member of the Moscow patriarchy
press department, said.
"Crucifixion, cross, diadem of thorns on her head. All this is a parody
on the crucifixion of Christ. She must respect the view of the country
and society, where she is going to perform," he said.
Other radical Orthodox groups threatened to stage protests outside the
stadium.
"We can't get the show banned but we can ask people to pray and protest
against her presence here," said a spokesman for two such groups, the
Union of Orthodox Banner-Bearers and the Union of Orthodox Brotherhoods.
"She wants to hurt our religious feelings," he said.
Russians lap up visits by Western pop stars who have made sporadic trips
since the 1991 fall of communism and, despite the strong church
reaction, the event has been an instant sell-out.
Wooden "matryoshka" dolls with Madonna's face have been on sale for
weeks off Moscow's Red Square and she has featured heavily in newspapers
before her first concert in Russia.
Hundreds of fans kept vigil to welcome her when she flew in to one of
Moscow's VIP airports by private jet on Monday night and then was
whisked by convoy to a city center hotel, a short walk from the Kremlin.
Madonna, a lapsed Roman Catholic whose shows have been denounced by the
Vatican, has attracted accusations of blasphemy throughout her career.
In the finale of her "Confessions" show, she sings while suspended from
a cross. |