CATHOLIQUES INTEGRISTES, MUSULMANS INTEGRISTES : MEME COMBAT !
Christians and Muslims unite
...in new bid to silence Lady Gaga
Fans defend singer's freedom of speech as Philippines protests threaten star's concerts
A Biblemode Youth member waves placards at an anti-Lady Gaga protest in Manila. Photograph: Noel Celis/AFP/Getty Images
Christian groups in the Philippines have called for a ban on Lady Gaga's Manila concerts, alleging that her song Judas is an offensive mockery of Jesus Christ.
Youths
gathered at a rally outside the mayor's office, chanting "Stop the Lady
Gaga concerts", while members of the Biblemode Youth Philippines group
called her videos religiously offensive.
In the song, she calls
herself a "holy fool" who is "still in love with Judas", singing: "Jesus
is my virtue/And Judas is the demon I cling to." In the video, Gaga
plays a biker chick riding behind a man wearing a crown of thorns, while
longing for another biker with "Judas" emblazoned across his leather
jacket.
The singer is due to play the 20,000-seat Mall of Asia
tomorrow and on Tuesday, and James Imbong, a lawyer filing a petition to
ban the concerts, said Christian groups would not accept a compromise
as organisers in South Korea did when Seoul authorities agreed to forbid
under-12s from attending instead of cancelling the concert.
"She
has a song that suggests that she wants to have sex with Judas and
performs it with a dance," Imbong told the news website PhilStar. "Of
course, it would be accompanied by a costume that has pornographic
elements."
Manila's mayor has issued a statement ordering Gaga not
to "exhibit any nudity or lewd conduct which may be offensive to morals
and good custom", with the stark reminder that the penal code in the
primarily Roman Catholic country of 93 million can convict anyone up to
six years for offending race or religion.
Tens of thousands of
Gaga fans, from Seoul to Jakarta, are campaigning for the singer's right
to freedom of expression, after numerous attempts by Christian and
Muslim groups to ban shows during her Born This Way Ball Asia tour,
calling her music, persona and style the "work of Satan", "dangerous to
youth" and "spreading unhealthy sexual culture".
Indonesian
activists called the cancellation of a gig in Jakarta a sign of the
country's "Talibanisation" after authorities withdrew permission for
her concert on 3 June, making her the first foreign artist to be banned
despite selling out a 52,000-seat venue.
The 26-year-old has
received an outpouring of support on Twitter, where she has 24 million
followers, since the trouble over the tour began last month.
Indonesian human rights activist Andreas Harsono has said the concert ban represents "the Talibanisation [of] Indonesia",
while sociologist Ida Ruwaida said it was up to the government to
"facilitate different interests without allowing the cultural hegemony
of one group over another".
Police denied the singer a concert
permit amid claims from hardline Islamic groups that the suggestive
nature of her show and lyrics would sabotage the country's moral codes
of conduct. "During her concerts, Lady Gaga looks like a devil
worshipper," said Suryadharma Ali, the religion affairs minister of the
nation of 240 million people, mainly Muslims.
The ministry of
tourism added that foreign performers should dress modestly on stage,
and the government warned music promoters to consider cultural
traditions when planning concerts. The hardline Islamic Defenders' Front
(FPI) threatened to send 30,000 members to the airport to stop Lady
Gaga from getting off her plane. It warned that if she tried to perform,
Indonesia "should be prepared for chaos in Jakarta". It said: "We are
ready to be thrown in jail and be killed – we will do anything to stop
[the show]."
Human rights activists and academics have questioned
the government's continued defence of Islamic militants' threats – which
have resulted in calls to parliament to ban miniskirts, the banning of
beauty pageants and Valentine's Day in some provinces, and the
persecution of religious minorities.
Representatives of the
country's tens of thousands of Gaga fans have argued that the
government's defence of Indonesia's "moral fibre" is dubious given the
nation's obsession with dangdut, a form of music known for its
provocative dancing and scantily clad singers.
Fans have also
questioned the government's worry over Lady Gaga's supposed promotion of
homosexuality. "Nothing can stop me from meeting my queen," says Ali, a
26-year-old openly gay banker in Bandung, West Java, adding that the
ban would have no impact on homosexuality in Indonesia, because it "will
not make gay people turn straight".
The Gaga saga started in
April in Seoul, the first stop on her 17-date tour. Calling Lady Gaga's
music "the work of Satan", Christian groups held prayer meetings
dedicated to banning the concert. Ju-Hyun, a prayer organiser, said the
meetings were organised "so that homosexuality and pornography [would]
not spread around the country".
Tickets sold to children were
eventually refunded after the government rated the concert unsuitable
and the Korean Association of Church Communication vowed to take
"concerted action to stop young people from being infected with
homosexuality and pornography".
It would be a dramatic turn of
events if Lady Gaga ended up in jail in Manila this week, but, to quote
the lady herself: "In the most biblical sense, I am beyond repentance."
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