John Paul II statue sparks controversy in Rome | Inquirer News

John Paul II statue sparks controversy in Rome

/ 08:42 PM May 19, 2011

ROME—An enormous statue of John Paul II, unveiled in front of Rome’s central station just weeks after the ex-pontiff was put on the path to sainthood, has sparked controversy – with locals calling for it to go.

“We don’t want this statue, they have to get rid of it. It looks like a box and it’s embarrassing us in front of the tourists,” said an elderly woman quoted in Italy’s Repubblica daily.

“I really don’t like it, it looks like a sentry box,” said a priest who had come to watch the unveiling on Wednesday.

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The five-meter (16-foot) high bronze statue, designed by the Italian artist Oliviero Rainaldi, depicts John Paul II with his arms outstretched, reflecting the pope’s “message of welcome and openness towards others.”

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John Paul smiles benignly down on passersby, his bronze head supported by a structure with no body, but a large cloak which falls to the ground on three sides, leaving a gaping hole at the front.

Critics have claimed the monument is an eyesore that does nothing to capture John Paul’s spirit: “for many citizens it is ugly and doesn’t look much like the pope,” Italy’s Corriere della Sera said.

As the bronze pope was unveiled – with his back to Rome’s central Termini railway station – Mayor Gianni Alemano said it was “the best place for the statue, which will welcome and protect everyone.”

“Homeless people will sleep in there in the winter: the welcoming sense is guaranteed,” a protesting bystander told the Repubblica.

John Paul II was beatified on May 1 by his successor Pope Benedict XVI in a ceremony that drew over a million people to the Italian capital.

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TAGS: art, John Paul II, Pope, Religion, Vatican

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