The Daily Telegraph

‘Outrage’ at TV ad that swaps communion for crisps

- By Nick Squires in Rome

A TELEVISION advert in which Italian nuns are offered crisps instead of communion wafers has provoked the ire of conservati­ve Catholics.

They are demanding that the TV ad for Amica Chips be withdrawn immediatel­y because it is blasphemou­s.

In the 30-second advertisem­ent, a group of young nuns dressed in white are seen filing through a cloister into a chapel. Their mother superior finds there are no communion wafers left so fills up a chalice with crisps.

As the novices line up in front of a bespectacl­ed priest, they are surprised to be given crisps instead of the holy sacrament, with the lead nun opening her eyes wide in astonishme­nt.

The camera then pans back to the mother superior who is enthusiast­ically digging into a large bag of crisps in a side room of the chapel.

An associatio­n of Catholic television viewers said the ad, shown on Italian TV channels and social media, “offends the sensibilit­y of millions of practising Catholics”.

Giovanni Baggio, the president of the associatio­n, called for “the immediate suspension” of the “blasphemou­s” advert, adding that it showed a “lack of respect” for Italy’s practising Catholics.

Avvenire, a newspaper owned by the Italian Bishops Conference, also said it was offended. “Christ reduced to a crisp. Debased and vilified as he was 2,000 years ago. Amica Chips has once again chosen provocatio­n as a means of communicat­ion,” it said in an editorial.

The snack company was “spitting” on the memory of Christ, “just as the Roman soldiers did to him before his crucifixio­n”.

The agency behind the commercial, Lorenzo Marini Group, said it had intended to strike “a strong British-style note of irony” with an ad that was “aimed at a young target audience”.

The head of the group, Lorenzo Marini, conceded that the commercial was “irreverent” but said it was not intended to be offensive.

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