Deutsche Welle: This year's culture prize awarded by the German state of Hesse looks set to become a major scandal. The award was supposed to jointly go to four men from four different world religions – to a Catholic, a Lutheran, a Muslim and a Jew. But now, Muslim author Navid Kermani has been dropped from the quartet after a controversial article has upset the two Christian candidates.
Catholic Cardinal Karl Lehmann of Mainz and Peter Steinacker, the former head of the Lutheran church of Hesse and Nassau have objected to sharing the prize with Kermani, a Cologne based writer who was born in Iran.
In March, Kermani penned an article for Switzerland's Neue Zuercher Zeitung about a recent trip to Rome, where he went to see a 17th century painting by Guido Reni depicting the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.
Author Navid KermaniBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Kermani's personal reflection is at the centre of this dispute
Kermani's piece is an analysis of the painting and leads to a philosophical discussion of the crucifix as a religious symbol.
“I'd express my personal rejection of the theology of the cross frankly with 'blasphemy and idolatry'."
"Not that I respect people who pray before the cross any less than other people at prayer. This isn't an accusation. It's a rejection," he wrote.
This did not go down too well with Cardinal Lehmann and Peter Steinacker, who formally complained to the Cultural Committee of the state of Hesse. Giving in to the pressure, the committee has responded by simply withdrawing the prize from Kermani. The fourth recipient is Salomon Korn of the Central Council of Jews in Germany.
Dilemma doesn't end there.
The argument looks set to become a major scandal. Aiman Mazyek, the General Secretary of the Central Council of Muslims, has described Lehmann and Steinackers' reaction as "immature and childish." The President of the German parliament, Dr Norbert Lammert, said that if Kermani's article really is the reason for taking the prize away from him, then perhaps the state should abolish the prize altogether.
Meanwhile, the Lutheran Bishop of Berlin, Markus Droege, on Saturday said he had little understanding of the controversy, adding that Kermani's stance should rather have been taken up as an offer for dialogue.
The prize, worth 45,000 euros ($US 61 thousand) is scheduled to be awarded on July 5. Meanwhile, the question of who will stand to receive it is bound to trigger more controversy.
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Is this a direct translation
by Parham on Sun May 17, 2009 08:13 AM PDTIs this a direct translation from German? Cuz I didn't understand much!