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Gingrich screens film on Pope John Paul II

News Writer

Published: Monday, September 20, 2010

Updated: Tuesday, September 21, 2010 14:09

NEWS - Gingrich - Coveney.jpg

Pat Coveney/The Observer

Former U.S. Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich speaks to audience members at the screening of his documentary Monday.

Former U.S. Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich screened his Catholic documentary "Nine Days That Changed the World" Monday night in Washington Hall and urged the audience to carry the film's lessons into an increasingly secular nation.  

"Nine Days That Changed the World," produced and narrated by the former speaker and his wife, Callista, chronicles Pope John Paul II's historic first visit to Poland in June 1979 and the subsequent beginnings of the solidarity movement that overthrew the Polish Communists in 1990.

"You cannot understand the history of the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War without understanding the power of religion and in particular the influence of Pope John Paul II," Newt said as he introduced the film.

He said the film and the pope's messages are still relevant today.

"The message of this film is not just for those places that might have overt dictatorships such as Cuba or China but are also for those places in the West that have aggressively and abundantly used courts and bureaucracies to weaken the religious impulse and the right of individuals to approach God on their own terms," Newt said.

"Conflict between a secular government determined to impose its power and a free people seeking the right to approach God on their own terms and seeking the right to openly profess their face is a conflict that has gone on for most of human history, and a conflict that goes on in the United States today."

At the end of the screening, the Gingriches greeted audience members and posed for photos with members of the College Republicans.

"It's easier to be an atheist in America than a Christian," Callista — a lifelong Catholic — told The Observer after the screening.

Callista said there are many parallels between Poland under its communist regime and America today.

"You see people that want to take down crosses or cover crosses. You see opposition to school prayer," she said. 

America is "going through a cycle [of secularism]," Newt said, "and cycles like this have been overturned before."

He referenced St. Paul, who spread "seeds of Christianity" during a time of widespread paganism.

"We need a new Aquinas, a new Benedict, new Wesley brothers," Newt said. "We need politicians who will take on secularism and defend belief in Christ.

"If you're willing to endure the scorn of the news media, you'll win the support of the American people," he said.

Newt, who converted to Catholicism in March 2009, acknowledged the personal and political implications of his new faith.

"The power of being accepted by the Church and receiving the Eucharist into your life … certainly shapes how you look at the world in general," he said.

In addition to speaking generally about Catholicism, Newt also said positive things about Notre Dame as a Catholic university.

"I can't imagine any place better in America to show the film," he said.

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4 comments

Anonymous
Wed Sep 22 2010 13:47
Why do the people that come on here and spew how much they despise Christians fail to understand why we believe what we do as Catholics. It takes like 10 to 15 people to explain why it is we believe the way we do. I am guessing these people are not students.
Anonymous
Wed Sep 22 2010 12:48
Christians get to impose their religious views on everyone else, or it's worse than a totalitarian government....
____________________
You could live in an Islamic totalitarian state or a real dictatorship like the Khmer Rouge. At least Christians don't force you to go to Church and dress you how they want you to be dressed and subject you to public lashings and stoning if you don’t agree with them. Seriously, I think anyone living under a heinous totalitarian government would kind of be ok if they couldn’t buy alcohol before noon on Sundays if they lived here. Christians aren't as much a part of your life as you make them out to be. What exactly is it that you would like?
Anonymous
Wed Sep 22 2010 11:55
What are you quoting from, Brian? Here's what the article says: " Callista said there are many parallels between Poland under its communist regime and America today. You see people that want to take down crosses or cover crosses. You see opposition to school prayer, she said."
No imposing of religious beliefs is advocated there. Opposition to school prayer includes opposition to students independently praying anywhere on school property. Such prayer violates no one's rights or views.
Brian Westley
Tue Sep 21 2010 09:33
"Callista said there are many parallels between Poland under its communist regime and America today.

“The opposition to school prayer and the removal of crosses from classrooms” are two such similarities, she said."

Because, as we all know, Christians get to impose their religious views on everyone else, or it's worse than a totalitarian government....

I'm sick of Christian supremacists' whining.







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