{"id":6220,"date":"2013-07-01T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2013-07-01T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.charming-bohr.160-238-31-172.plesk.page\/index.php\/2013\/07\/01\/the-firebrand\/"},"modified":"2013-07-01T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2013-07-01T00:00:00","slug":"the-firebrand","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.charming-bohr.160-238-31-172.plesk.page\/index.php\/2013\/07\/01\/the-firebrand\/","title":{"rendered":"The Firebrand"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>\n\tOn March 27, 2013, in the northern Italian city of Ferrara, Patrizia Moretti stepped out into the public square near her office building, unfurled a<br \/>\n\tposter-sized portrait of her dead son Federico Aldrovandi, and showed it to the crowd of protesters. The photograph was so unpleasant that some of the<br \/>\n\tprotesters doubted its authenticity and called it a fraud. Taken moments after his violent death, it showed the battered face of Aldrovandi, blood pooling<br \/>\n\tbehind his head. The 18-year-old was killed by four policemen in 2005. They were found guilty of using excessive force and were sentenced to almost four<br \/>\n\tyears each in prison. Yet a complicated appeals and pardon process means that the officers are unlikely to spend more than a few months behind bars, and<br \/>\n\tnone of the four have even lost their jobs.<sup>1<\/sup> Some have even claimed that the judicial process was obstructed by the police department.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tThe protest in March was actually organized by a local branch of a police union in Ferrara, whose members were angry at the court\u2019s decision to punish<br \/>\n\ttheir colleagues and frustrated at Moretti\u2019s decision to speak truth to power, so they gathered in the public square outside of her place of employment.<br \/>\n\tThey had not counted on her coming outside to show the photograph.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tCovered widely in the Italian media, the death of Federico Aldrovandi raised many questions, problems that the people of Italy have struggled with for<br \/>\n\tcenturies. Why are the rich and powerful protected while the powerless and impoverished are denied justice? Why must those with weapons succeed and the<br \/>\n\tunarmed always fail? What are the consequences for pushing free speech to the limits? Will there ever be a solution to the scourge of institutionalized<br \/>\n\tcorruption? What images are immoral and should be censored, removed from public display? And who in Italy holds the ultimate truth?\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tItalian politicians and high-ranking police officials roundly condemned the protest,<sup>2<\/sup> but were just as quick to criticize the location of the rally, which<br \/>\n\tmany believe was part of a plan to intimidate Moretti at her work. The choice of that particular square was indeed a fascinating one, and not only for the<br \/>\n\treason many have already expressed. The name of the square where the protest took place was Ferrara\u2019s Piazza Savonarola, named after the city\u2019s most famous<br \/>\n\tresident, the fifteenth-century apocalyptic preacher and martyred Reformer, Girolamo Savonarola.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tToday Savonarola\u2019s name is synonymous with religious fanaticism and the Bonfire of the Vanities\u2014one of the darkest chapters for many scholars of art<br \/>\n\thistory\u2014when under Savonarola\u2019s direction the people of Florence burned great works of Renaissance art and other treasures because of their supposed<br \/>\n\tcorrupting influences. But Savonarola was much more than a destroyer of fine art. The Dominican monk, who was born in Ferrara in 1452, was also a tireless<br \/>\n\tadvocate against corruption, a democratic reformer in the refined city of Florence, an advocate for the impoverished and helpless, and a believer in<br \/>\n\tabsolutes who refused to be silenced, knowing that his controversial sermons would cost him his life.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tSavonarola preached against the corruption and wickedness of Pope Alexander VI (Rodrigo Borgia) and also against the secular excesses of Renaissance<br \/>\n\tFlorence, making many enemies in the process, including the infamous Medici family, whose wealth had bankrolled so many of the great artists of the time.<br \/>\n\tDuring the period when the head of the Medici family and ruler of Florence, Lorenzo the Magnificent, was allowing for some of the greatest artistic and<br \/>\n\tcultural progress that Europe had seen since antiquity, Savonarola and his acolytes threatened to plunge Florence and much of Italy back into the Dark Ages<br \/>\n\tit had emerged from. Those Florentine infernos also consumed a great deal of gambling paraphernalia, makeup, carnival masks, and jewelry, but most famously<br \/>\n\tincluded works of the Renaissance master Sandro Botticelli, who painted the seminude mythological masterpiece <em>The Birth of Venus<\/em>, which survives<br \/>\n\ttoday very much unburned in Florence\u2019s Uffizi art gallery. Savonarola preached against the nudity and pagan themes circulating the art world in Florence at<br \/>\n\tthe time; and while we have no way of knowing how many great paintings were destroyed by Savonarola\u2019s followers (the amount is believed to be negligible),<sup>3<\/sup><br \/>\n\tit\u2019s enough for the priest to be almost universally hated in contemporary academic circles.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tFollowing the death of Lorenzo Medici and the overthrow in 1494 of his ruling family by the king of France, Charles VIII, a new period began when \u201cFlorence<br \/>\n\thad no master other than Savonarola\u2019s terrible voice.\u201d<sup>4<\/sup> The Dominican monk attempted to turn the city into a fundamentalist, religious state, with some<br \/>\n\twriters, such as John L. Allen, Jr., of the <em>National Catholic Reporter,<\/em> comparing his rule to Afghanistan under the Taliban.<sup>5<\/sup> During his brief<br \/>\n\trule in Florence, Savonarola persecuted and rounded up homosexuals and prostitutes, preaching against the immoral wickedness of both, and he used torture<br \/>\n\tto punish blasphemers and sexual deviants. For these reasons many consider him among the great villains of history. In April, Canadian newspaper columnist<br \/>\n\tCharles Jeanes, writing for <em>The Castlegar Source<\/em>, placed Savonarola alongside \u201cTrotsky, Stalin, Hitler, Mao, and Robespierre\u2014political powers who<br \/>\n\thave ruled us in various times and places [that] have been occasionally possessed of a ruthless self-righteousness that justified in their minds the<br \/>\n\texercise of extreme force to engineer human behavior by terror.\u201d<sup>6<\/sup>\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tBut the fiery preacher and Christian ascetic was also a pioneering political and religious figure in European history, and while some consider him a<br \/>\n\tpolitical ancestor of some of the twentieth century\u2019s most vile dictators, others hold Savonarola in much, much higher regard.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tThe largest monument to the Protestant Reformation is in the city of Worms, Germany. Erected in 1868, a statue of Martin Luther stands atop the monument,<br \/>\n\tflanked by a variety of influential German scholars and princes. However, at the feet of Luther, serving as the literal and figurative foundation, sit the<br \/>\n\tgroup of forerunners to the Protestant Reformation: Englishman John Wycliffe, who translated the Bible into English; Czech martyr and religious leader John<br \/>\n\tHuss; French medieval theologian Peter Waldo, credited as the founder of the Waldensians; and the Italian monk, Girolamo Savonarola. Additionally, in<br \/>\n\tGrenville Kleiser\u2019s classic, an early-twentieth-century compilation, <em>The World\u2019s Great Sermons<\/em>, the editor makes a strong comparison between<br \/>\n\tSavonarola and yet another of the great heroes of the Puritan Reformation. The brief biographical note describes how Savonarola\u2019s \u201cPuritanism, his bold<br \/>\n\trebuking of vice, his defiance of every authority excepting that of his own conscience, [laid the groundwork for] the efforts made by Calvin to regenerate<br \/>\n\tGeneva. Both men failed in their splendid attempts at social reformation, but both left an example of heroic although somewhat short-sighted unselfishness,<br \/>\n\twhich has borne fruit in history.\u201d<sup>7<\/sup>\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tAs both a significant contributor to European religious liberty, yet also a legendary fighter against personal and cultural liberty, Savonarola holds a<br \/>\n\tprecarious and ironic position in two different opposing groups\u2014those in history who have added to society\u2019s collective freedoms and those who have taken<br \/>\n\tfreedoms away. How can such seemingly opposing legacies be reconciled in one man? Every few years, Girolamo Savonarola is discussed in Catholic circles as<br \/>\n\ta candidate for beatification and eventual sainthood, with as many vigilantly opposed to the idea as those who are in favor. Even such a complex contrast<br \/>\n\tdoesn\u2019t tell the entire story given that Savonarola was also a key contributor, this time in a positive manner, to the story of Italy\u2019s progressive<br \/>\n\tdemocratic tradition. Despite his fierce critics, he was certainly no autocrat. Savonarola brought democracy back to the city council in Florence,<br \/>\n\trestoring the city-state to its republican rule.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tRoberto Ridolfi, director of the National Editions of the Works of Savonarola, explained that the democratic government introduced to Florence was \u201cthe<br \/>\n\tbest the city ever had. Savonarola has been accused, but unjustly, of interfering in politics. He was not ambitious or an intriguer. He wanted to found his<br \/>\n\tcity of God in Florence, the heart of Italy, as a well-organized Christian republic that might initiate the reform of Italy and of the church.\u201d<sup>8<\/sup>\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tThe way Savonarola went about initiating these changes was unconventional to say the least. He created and instituted in Florence what Johan Peter Kirsch<br \/>\n\twould later call \u201ca new and peculiar constitution, a kind of theocratic democracy. . . . Christ was considered the king of Florence and protector of its<br \/>\n\tliberties. A great council, as the representative of all the citizens, became the governing body of the republic and the law of Christ was to be the basis<br \/>\n\tof political and social life.\u201d<sup>9<\/sup>\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tSavonarola\u2019s decision to place Christian law at the center of political and social life was likely down to his extremely conservative upbringing and<br \/>\n\tmedieval theological training. In an almost anachronistic twist to his early life, Girolamo Savonarola was taught by his elderly grandfather Michael, who<br \/>\n\thad been educated so many decades before, that Girolamo was in essence a theological relic of a bygone era. The younger Savonarola grew up morally dogmatic<br \/>\n\tand theologically inflexible, preferring bloody flagellations and monastic seclusion to the artistic brilliance and financial splendor of an increasingly<br \/>\n\tsecular Renaissance Florence.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tGiven that he was surrounded by Italians from a new, vibrant, and radically different time than the world of the Middle Ages in which he was raised, it is<br \/>\n\tunderstandable that Savonarola became doggedly obsessed with moral reform and fought against what he saw as pagan influences in Renaissance culture and<br \/>\n\tart. He also became widely known as a great prophet, and his apocalyptic sermons, mixed with a series of accurate prophecies regarding the immediate future<br \/>\n\tin Florence, saw increasingly large crowds gather to hear him speak. He predicted the successful invasion of King Charles VIII as well as the death of<br \/>\n\tLorenzo Medici, and he made great sweeping statements about the church in Rome, angering the Papacy.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\t\u201cIn everything am I oppressed . . . [but] no human being can drive my cause from the world\u201d he preached in his sermon \u201cThe Ascension of Christ.\u201d \u201cCome to<br \/>\n\tthe truth,\u201d he continued, \u201cforsake your vice and your malice, that I may not have to tell you of your grief. I say it to you, O Italy, I say it to you, O<br \/>\n\tRome, I say it to all of you: return and do penance . . . . Wait not until the blows fall.\u201d<sup>10<\/sup>\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tAs his career progressed, he grew more and more frustrated and openly hostile toward the hypocrisy and great evil in the court of Pope Alexander VI, whose<br \/>\npapal reign contained such an outrageous catalog of scandalous sexual sins that they continue to shock contemporary audiences on the HBO show\t<em>The Borgias. <\/em>So when Savonarola saw that an opportunity lay in wait for Florence, which had already surpassed Rome in many ways by the fifteenth<br \/>\n\tcentury, a complete religious transformation for the city became his ultimate goal. Bringing a religious revolution to the city of Florence \u201cwas the object<br \/>\n\tof all his actions,\u201d Ridolfi argues. \u201cThe results Savonarola obtained were amazing: the splendid but corrupt Renaissance capital, thus miraculously<br \/>\n\ttransformed, seemed to a contemporary to be a foretaste of paradise.\u201d<sup>11<\/sup>\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tInterestingly, the Florentines enjoyed greater economic freedom during the short reign of Savonarola and his forces than under the powerful banker Lorenzo<br \/>\n\tMedici. His efforts appealed to the merchant class as well as the poorer, working classes. <em>The Online Library of Liberty<\/em>, a project of Liberty<br \/>\n\tFund, explains the complicated changes quite simply: \u201cSavonarola reformed the tax base of Florence to eliminate all but a broad-based land tax. This freed<br \/>\n\tthe merchant class from previously high levies and reassigned the tax burden to the landowners. In order to help the poorer elements of society, a state<br \/>\n\tloan office was established that offered loans at 5-7 percent, as opposed to rates of up to 30 percent charged by private lenders.\u201d<sup>12<\/sup> But as much as this<br \/>\n\tnew Florentine republic benefited from financial improvement, the financial elite were displeased, and the happiness of the citizenry did not last long.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tDenied so many of their vices and other forms of entertainment, even the financially placated common people became resentful of Savonarola\u2019s religious<br \/>\n\trestrictions. The monk rebuked them from the same pulpit in the same sermon: \u201cCome here and tell me: what have I done to you? . . . I have spoken the truth<br \/>\n\tto you; I have warned you to choose a virtuous life . . . . But I named no one; I only blamed your vices in general. If you have sinned, be angry with<br \/>\n\tyourselves, not with me. I name none of you, but if the sins I have mentioned are without question yours, then they and not I make you known.\u201d<sup>13<\/sup>\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tBut the power of the pulpit could not protect Savonarola for long. Because of his criticism of Pope Alexander VI, his compliance with French rule, and his<br \/>\n\trefusal to stop preaching and cease his religious activism after a papal excommunication, Girolamo Savonarola was arrested, and executed on May 23, 1498.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tHe knew that resistance was pointless, as the path to martyrdom had been paved ahead of him long before. The Dominican monk from Ferrara knew that violence<br \/>\n\tand power would not be able to bring about the kingdom of God on earth. He stated in his sermon on Christ\u2019s ascension that \u201cthe whole world knows that His<br \/>\n\tglory has not been spread by force and weapons, but by poor fishermen.\u201d<sup>14<\/sup> Savonarola knew that the way of God and the way of mankind were at odds with each<br \/>\n\tother in Italy, and without taking up a sword there was little else that he could do in terms of forcibly changing the world in which he lived. It is<br \/>\n\tbelieved that Niccol\u00f2 Machiavelli\u2019s adage that \u201call armed prophets have conquered, and all the unarmed ones have been destroyed\u201d was referring to Girolamo<br \/>\n\tSavonarola when Machiavelli wrote <em>The Prince<\/em> in 1532. However, the story of Savonarola is not a lesson in the necessity of violence for a<br \/>\n\tsuccessful revolution, but rather a lesson in the dangerous consequences of speaking truth to power.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tSavonarola\u2019s death in the public square, the Piazza della Signoria, was a deeply symbolic event. The authorities of Florence hanged and burned the monk,<br \/>\n\ttorching his body on a bonfire of their own, but not before the unarmed prophet could make one final gesture of liberty.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tEarly-twentieth-century historian Elbert Hubbard explained Savonarola\u2019s final moments as he faced a painful death at the hands of the people who had<br \/>\n\tfollowed him. \u201cScarcely had the executioner upon the platform slid down the ladders,\u201d Hubbard wrote, \u201cthan the . . . flames shot heavenward. . . . The<br \/>\n\tsmoke soon covered [his body] from view. Then suddenly there came a gust of wind that parted the smoke and flames, and the staring mob\u201d was silent.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tSwinging from the gallows, now visible to the crowd, was the nearly dead monk, Girolamo Savonarola, a tortured body with a steadfast soul.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n\tHubbard concluded that the people \u201csaw that the fire had burned the thongs that bound the arms of Savonarola. One hand was uplifted in blessing and<br \/>\n\tbenediction.\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>On March 27, 2013, in the northern Italian city of Ferrara, Patrizia Moretti stepped out into the public square near her office building, unfurled a poster-sized portrait of her dead son Federico Aldrovandi, and showed it to the crowd of protesters. The photograph was so unpleasant that some of the protesters doubted its authenticity and<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[294],"tags":[126],"class_list":["post-6220","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-july-august-2013","tag-july-august-2013"],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.charming-bohr.160-238-31-172.plesk.page\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6220","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.charming-bohr.160-238-31-172.plesk.page\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.charming-bohr.160-238-31-172.plesk.page\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.charming-bohr.160-238-31-172.plesk.page\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.charming-bohr.160-238-31-172.plesk.page\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=6220"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.charming-bohr.160-238-31-172.plesk.page\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6220\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.charming-bohr.160-238-31-172.plesk.page\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=6220"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.charming-bohr.160-238-31-172.plesk.page\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=6220"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.charming-bohr.160-238-31-172.plesk.page\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=6220"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}