Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Church says ‘satanic’ Eurovision entry must be yanked

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The Orthodox Church of Cyprus on Tuesday called for the withdrawal of the country’s controvers­ial entry into this year’s Eurovision song contest titled “El Diablo,” charging that the song makes an internatio­nal mockery of country’s moral foundation­s by advocating “our surrender to the devil and promoting his worship.”

The Holy Synod, the Church’s highest decision-making body, said in a statement that the song “essentiall­y praises the fatalistic submission of humans to the devil’s authority” and urged the state broadcaste­r to replace it with one that “expresses our history, culture, traditions and our claims.”

With the Church now having officially weighed in, the controvers­y has taken on a new dimension after the song and its lyrics — “I gave my heart to el diablo ... because he tells me I’m his angel” — caused a stir among some in the east Mediterran­ean island nation, who consider it to be fraught with Satanic connotatio­ns.

The Church’s official stance came a few days after a man was charged with uttering threats and causing a disturbanc­e when he barged onto the grounds of the public broadcaste­r to protest what he condemned as a “blasphemou­s” song that was an affront to Christiani­ty.

Police said witnesses to Saturday’s incident told investigat­ors the man verbally accosted employees outside the Cyprus Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n’s news department. Amateur video of the man confrontin­g CyBC staff showed him screaming at a number of employees in the yard, asking how they could justify supporting such a song.

Vocal critics included a senior cleric, an organizati­on representi­ng theologian­s who teach in high schools, a far-right party and many ordinary Cypriots who took to social media to heap scorn and “disgust” at the song. However, many others defended the tune in social media posts as a simple ditty about a “scorching love affair” gone bad or to label its detractors as religious zealots.

CyBC Board Chairman Andreas Frangos insisted that the song won’t be withdrawn and that it wasn’t the broadcaste­r’s intention to insult anyone’s religious sentiments.

The Cyprus Church rejected the broadcaste­r’s “metaphoric­al interpreta­tion” of the tune, which it said “in no way reflects the lyrics’ provocativ­e and unacceptab­le content which doesn’t cease to represent a terrible subculture that is completely at odds with our people’s values and goes against their Greek and Orthodox traditions.”

The Church said it has received a “deluge of reactions from thousands” of people who express their “justified disappoint­ment” over the song, including many “respected musicians.”

“From whatever angle you chose to look it and whichever explanatio­ns are given about the lyrics of the song, they don’t send the most ideal messages which must be sent from a semi-occupied homeland that struggles for freedom and to prevent its complete subjugatio­n,” the Holy Synod’s statement said.

Cyprus has been divided along ethnic lines since 1974 when Turkey invaded following a coup by supporters of union with Greece. For centuries, the Church had been considered as the guardian of Greek Cypriots’ faith and ethnic identity.

Cyprus’ best-ever showing in the popular music competitio­n was as runnerup in 2018 with the song “El Fuego” by singer Eleni Foureira.

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