Schooltime for the religious Right
A 13thcentury monastery is set to become a training ground for the next generation of European antiestablishment politicians. Alvise Armellini, of dpa, reports from Collepardo.
Aremote monastery on the slope of a mountain south of Rome seems an unlikely launchpad for the religious Right’s takeover of Europe, yet that is exactly what US President Donald Trump’s former strategist, Steve Bannon, has in mind.
The 13thcentury Trisulti Charterhouse in Collepardo, an hour and ahalf’s drive southeast of the Italian capital, is set to become ‘‘the spiritual home of Bannonite thought’’, according to its administrator, Benjamin Harnwell.
Bannon imagines the place as ‘‘half medieval university campus, half gladiator school for culture warriors’’, Harnwell says during a tour of the sprawling, walledin 15,000sq m institution.
Harnwell leads the Institute for Human Dignity (DHI), an ultraconservative Catholic group that last year won a government tender to run the mostly abandoned Trisulti for 19 years in return for an annual rent of ¤100,000 ($NZ168,000).
The DHI counts Bannon and US Cardinal Raymond Leo Burke — one of Pope Francis’ most outspoken conservative critics — among its supporters.
It plans to use Trisulti as the campus for a socalled Academy for the JudeoChristian West, a bastion of resistance against perceived threats to Europe such as mass immigration from Africa, Islamification and secularism.
The curriculum — inspired by a speech Bannon gave at DHI in 2014 — covers philosophy, economics, theology and history and includes a course from the former Trump adviser on ‘‘how to deal with the modern media’’.
Bannon’s speech included warnings on the threat posed by ‘‘Islamic fascism’’, a critique of crony capitalism, global elites and big government, an endorsement of European farright parties and messages in favour of traditional marriage and against abortion.
Harnwell, an Englishman who converted to Catholicism 15 years ago and worked previously at the European Parliament, is an enthusiastic Bannon fan. With his sweptback, longish hair, he even looks a bit like his mentor.
‘‘I thought he was captivating,’’ Harnwell says, recalling his first meeting with Bannon.
‘‘I would sit there and my jaw would [drop] as he was talking.’’
Now, he says, the two are in daily contact.
Like Bannon, Harnwell has controversial views: he talks about challenging Darwin’s theory of evolution, which he calls a ‘‘monstrous philosophy’’, and is sceptical — to say the least — about climate change.
He believes the survival of the fittest is what underpins Nazi ideology, and that thinking life has no divine origin ‘‘is a truly horrific principle’’.
Harnwell plans to get the academy started in Rome in June before moving it to Trisulti in 2020. The monastery should be able to host 250300 students, accommodated in former monks’ rooms or larger dormitories.
The academy thus will not be ready before the European Parliament elections in May, which tops Bannon’s list of priorities: He wants to help populist, eurosceptic parties do well, as part of a plan to shake up the EU political order.
The Movement, a Brusselsbased parallel Bannon initiative, is focusing on that.
The DHI academy is a longerterm project that aims to train the next generation of European antiestablishment politicians.
Its location is not without irony: the monastery was once run by the Order of St Benedict, the patron saint of Europe.
Trisulti is also an Italian national monument, whose monks ran a famous herbal pharmacy.
The monastery’s conversion to a campus is not without practical challenges. Mobile reception is patchy, and the winter months bring icy temperatures and snow that can block access roads. It is unclear who will pay renovation costs. The only publicly named DHI donor is Bannon.
Harnwell moved to the monastery in June with only an old prior, a guardiangardenercook and a cat to keep him company. He says he is learning Biblical Greek in his spare time to allow him to read the New Testament in its original form.
He has also been kept busy by local opposition: residents of nearby village Collepardo complained about restricted access to their local landmark and won an exemption from the ¤5 entry for tourists.
A centreLeft activist, Daniela Bianchi, organised a march against the Bannon academy late last month that attracted more than 300 people. She is looking to see whether the DHI’s lease for Trisulti can be revoked.
Turning a holy site that has been open to pilgrims and visitors for centuries into a ‘‘dark, obscure’’ training ground for populistnationalists is ‘‘completely in contrast with the nature of the place’’, she says.
Harnwell shrugs off the complaint. He is confident that, as long as DHI pays the rent, it will not be evicted.