from the site :
The Catholic Thing
 
The Anti-Church of Antonio  Gramsci
 
By : George J. Marlim
 
 
 
August 24, 2011
 
In recent months, mob unrest  has been on the rise throughout Europe. 
Overpaid and underworked bureaucrats and  other entitlement classes have taken 
to 
the streets in Greece and Spain  threatening to topple their governments if 
they must sacrifice any financial or  welfare benefits to help save their 
countries from fiscal and economic ruin. In  Britain, indignant students have 
wreaked havoc outside Parliament because the  government, to balance its 
budget, has dared to increase college tuition to  $5,000 a year.
 
Lately, gangs of British  hoodlums have rioted and looted neighborhoods in 
and around London. They have  broken into shops and assaulted passersby to 
steal the material goods they  believe they’re entitled to have. Prime 
Minister David Cameron, reacting to the  turmoil, rejected the social justice 
crowds’ excuse that poverty is the culprit  and blamed it on a culture of 
laziness, irresponsibility and selfishness: “We  have been too unwilling for 
too 
long to talk about what is right and what is  wrong.” He added: “We have too 
often avoided saying what needs to be said about  everything from marriage 
to welfare to common  courtesy.” 
 
This is the same Cameron who a  few months ago publicly announced that “
multicultural” diversity policies have  failed because they have been 
destroying the language and cultural foundations  of Britain, have segregated 
minorities, and heightened social  discord.
 
Britain is one of many Western  nations suffering from the effects of “
diversity” policies. And no one should be  surprised by this crisis because the 
blueprint for destroying Western culture –  designed by the Italian 
communist Antonio Gramsci – has been in circulation for  almost a century.
 
Gramsci (1891-1937) was born  in Sardinia, studied philosophy at the 
University of Turin, became a member of  Italy’s Socialist Party and editor of 
L’
Ordine Nuovo (The New Order).  Shortly after founding the Italian Communist 
Party (1921), Gramsci, fearing  imprisonment by fascist leader Benito 
Mussolini, fled to the Soviet  Union. 
 
In Moscow, Gramsci shocked his  hosts by daring to dismiss Marxist nostrums 
on dialectical materialism, economic  determinism, and the violent 
overthrow of capitalist systems by the proletariat.  Instead, he argued that 
Marx’s “
Worker’s Paradise” could not be realized as long  as Christian culture had 
a hold on the masses. For Gramsci, the number one enemy  was the Roman 
Catholic Church, not capitalism.
 
Realizing Stalin was not happy  with his unorthodox views, Gramsci returned 
to Italy and in 1924 became leader  of the communist delegation in 
Parliament. In 1926, Mussolini ordered his arrest  and a mock trial sentenced 
him to 
a twenty-year prison term. Gramsci spent the  remaining nine years of his 
life in his cell writing critiques of  Marxism-Leninism and drafting plans 
communists could follow to conquer the  West.


Unlike some anti-Catholics  today, however, Gramsci was well versed in 
Thomistic philosophy. He warned  Marxists that Christian workers were not 
defined by capitalist oppressors but by  their faith-based culture. Hence, he 
believed, Marxists who violently seize  power, eliminate private property, and 
govern by terror will ultimately  fail.
 
In the post-World War II  period, the Polish people were to confirm Gramsci’
s contention. Communist  tyranny only intensified their devotion to Christ 
and his Church. And it was the  Church led by a Polish pope that brought 
down that totalitarian  government.
 
Gramsci advised Marxists to  achieve power by democratic means and then to 
use it to destroy Christian  hegemony. “Gramsci’s principle,” French 
journalist Jean-François Revel pointed  out, “was that [Marxists] must begin by 
influencing the culture, winning the  intellectuals, the teachers, implanting 
itself in the press, the media, the  publishing houses.” Somewhat 
surprisingly, Gramsci pointed to the Jesuits’  response to the Reformation as a 
model: 
Marxists had to create a cultura capillare (“capillary culture”)  that 
would infuse itself into every nook and cranny of the body  politic.
 
Radical leftists in the United  States, Europe, and Latin America have 
adopted Gramsci’s methods and have made a  point of infiltrating churches, 
universities, and media outlets. Ecumenical  movements and peace and justice 
commissions have grown and have marginalized  basic Catholic doctrine. 
University curricula teach that all cultures must be  equally respected – even 
the 
ones that directly contradict Christian values. In  the name of human rights, 
secular humanist organizations have promoted policies  that have eliminated 
Judeo-Christian moral  restraints.


Liberation theology based on  Marxist doctrines and cloaked in Christian 
vocabulary became a force in many  third-world nations.  Though it retreated 
somewhat after the fall of the  Soviet Union, it remains the basic social 
template among radicals. Malachi  Martin observed that “Liberation theology was 
a perfectly faithful exercise of  Gramsci’s principles. . . . It stripped . 
. . any attachment to Christian  transcendence.  It locked both the 
individual and his culture in the close  embrace of a goal that was totally 
immanent: the class struggle for  socio-political liberation.”
 
Today, Catholics are  witnessing the effects of Gramsci’s “anything goes” 
strategy. In Europe,  Catholic Churches are empty on Sundays.  Fewer than 10 
 percent of baptized Catholics attend Mass. In 2009, 37.4 percent of all 
European  children were born out of wedlock – up from 17.4 percent in 1990. 
The number of  births is significantly below the replacement rate. In fifty 
years the majority  of the populations in the heart of old Catholic Europe –  
Italy, France, and Spain – may well be Muslim. Crime is also rampant.  
Between 2002 and 2008, violent crime rose in France by 15 percent,  in Italy by 
38 percent. 
 
Pope Benedict XVI has wisely  warned that the replacement of the West’s 
Christian roots with moral relativism  has ushered in a “confused ideology of 
liberty [that] leads to a dogmatism that  is proving ever more hostile to 
real liberty.” Because Gramsci’s heirs have  “developed a culture that in a 
manner hitherto unknown to mankind excludes God  from public awareness,” the 
Holy Father fears that the West may be entering a  new Dark Age in which man 
exists solely for the benefit of a divinized state and  will be stripped of 
his God-given human dignity.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to