Fact, Fiction And Opus Dei
The bestselling novel ÔThe Da Vinci CodeÕ puts the
Catholic sect in the spotlightÕs harsh glare. Some who have left call the group
manipulative and cult-like, but adherents cast it in a soft
By Paul Moses
Newsday - August 26, 2003
The Da Vinci Code" is the page-turner
of the summer, a sizzling mystery in which the plot revolves, in part, around a
blindly obedient member of the Catholic organization Opus Dei who commits
murder to conceal ancient evidence that the group believes would destroy the
Christian faith.
Of course, it's fiction. But in the front of
the book, a page headlined "FACT" offers this description of Opus
Dei: "a deeply devout Catholic sect that has been the topic of recent
controversy due to reports of brainwashing, coercion and a dangerous practice
known as 'corporal mortification.'"
Author Dan Brown has said that his
best-selling novel is meticulously researched. But that doesn't sit well with
Opus Dei. From the sparkling 17-story, $47-million Manhattan offices it opened
two years ago on Lexington Avenue, the organization says it has been trying to
correct the record - not an easy thing to do with a book that ran to the top of
every major bestseller list and was optioned to Columbia Pictures. Brian
Finnerty, Opus Dei's U.S. communications director, said a letter was sent
asking Doubleday to remove the "FACT" page and to correct such claims
as the novel's notion that Opus Dei had drugged college students to recruit
them.
"I think people reading the book will be
confused as to what's fact and what's fiction," said Finnerty, adding that
Opus Dei is simply an organization devoted to helping laypeople lead holy
lives. Doubleday has turned down Opus Dei, said Finnerty, who would not comment
on whether the letter was a prelude to legal action. "We hope that they'll
still make corrections in it. We'll see what happens in the future."
Even critics of Opus Dei say Brown's novel
grossly exaggerates. "The author is using Opus Dei as sort of a cardboard
villain. I have to feel sorry for Opus Dei for continually being cast this
way," said the Rev. James Martin, associate editor of America weekly and
author of a 1995 article in a Jesuit magazine that criticized Opus Dei.
Experts also reject some of the research
passed off in other parts of the novel, which cleverly packages the stories of
the Knights of the Templars, Leonardo Da Vinci, the Priory of Sion, the Holy
Grail and Mary Magdalene into a whodunit. They say the novel's elaborate claims
that Mary Magdalene gave birth to Jesus' children are over the scholarly edge.
"Not even the fringe," said Pheme
Perkins, a New Testament scholar at Boston College. She added: "Nice tale,
but not history." And William Petersen, director of religious studies at
Penn State, said that despite all the speculation about Mary Magdalene,
"We know next to nothing."
Doubleday did not return repeated calls and
Brown's agent, Heidi Lange, said he was not available to comment. On his Web
page, he asserts his story's authenticity. "I worked very hard to create a
fair and balanced depiction of Opus Dei," Brown says. "Their
portrayal in the novel is based on more than a dozen books written about Opus
Dei, as well as on my own personal interviews with current and former
members."
But it's not so easy to sort out fact from
fiction about Opus Dei.
Msgr. Josemaria Escriva founded the
organization in 1928 in Spain, insisting that laypeople as well as clergy were
called to holiness. He set out a detailed, stringent spiritual discipline,
which includes basics that many other Catholics follow, such as daily Mass,
prayer and spiritual reading. But Opus Dei, which means "Work of
God," veers from the modern Catholic mainstream with such practices as
banning books, encouraging members to inflict pain on themselves and consigning
women to do all domestic work.
Members speak of the organization in glowing
terms, noting that Escriva was declared a saint last year. "If the founder
was just canonized, he had to be doing something right," one former member
said.
Yet a steady stream of former members
portrays the group as manipulative and even cult-like. "We've heard from
too many former members who say the same thing," said Dianne DiNicola, a
Pittsfield, Mass., woman who started the Opus Dei Awareness Network after
resorting to an intervention expert to get her daughter to leave the group.
"They control a person's environment, their mail is read, what they watch
on TV is monitored," said DiNicola.
Martin said trouble spots include Opus Dei's
recruiting practices, view of gender roles and "penchant for
secrecy." But, he said, "I think that 90 percent of what Opus Dei does
is good and holy and beneficial to the church."
Robert Royal, president of the
Washington-based Faith and Reason Institute, said Opus Dei has "a kind of
energizing spirit" that has attracted many well-educated young people.
"I don't know many Catholic things that have that kind of juice," he
said. "It's kind of remarkable. I think the attack on it is because it's
been successful and it's been powerful in its kind of way."
Opus Dei members point out that Escriva's
emphasis on helping laypeople seek holiness in everyday life was later a goal
of the Second Vatican Council, during the 1960s. In 1982, Pope John Paul II
made Opus Dei a personal prelature, a sort of diocese without boundaries,
defined by membership rather than geography.
Today, Opus Dei says it has 85,000 members,
including 3,000 in the United States. The membership includes 1,820 priests.
About 30 percent of the members, known as "numeraries," adhere to the
strictest provisions: They are celibate, donate all their income to Opus Dei
and live communally. They are not called monks and do not wear robes, like
Brown's murderous character Silas. Most of the remaining 70 percent are
"supernumeraries," who agree to a regular routine of prayer and
meetings with a spiritual director, but marry and live with their families.
Nassau District Attorney Denis Dillon said
he was a supernumerary for nine years, but left several years ago because his
job didn't allow time for all the meetings, prayer circles and discussion
groups he was expected to attend.
"You're under a contractual obligation
of obedience to your superiors if you're a member," he said. Dillon
remains a "cooperator," a nonmember who contributes money and prayer,
and said he still tries to follow Opus Dei's spiritual guidelines.
Sharon Clasen, who joined while a student at
Boston College in the 1980s, said she wasn't prepared for how controlling Opus
Dei would be when she moved from supernumerary to numerary.
Clasen, 39, a mother of two in Dumfries,
Va., said she quickly discovered when she moved into a community of numeraries
that women - but not men - were expected to sleep on boards. (Finnerty said men
sleep on the floor once a week.) Clasen said she became disturbed at the
insensitive treatment of "numerary assistants," celibate women, often
recruited as teenagers, who cooked and cleaned for men.
Clasen said that the bloody whippings Silas
gives himself in "The Da Vinci Code" are exaggerated, although less
severe than the beatings Escriva is reported to have given himself.
But on her first day as a numerary, she
said, she was given a hand-sewn bag containing a cilice, a spiked chain to be
worn around the thigh for two hours a day, and a small whip.
The cilice, she said, "is kind of like
a barbed wire fence. It hurts. It depends on how tight you cinch it." She
said she noticed that some of the women had scabs from wearing a cilice, but
added, "I never drew blood." And she would hear one other woman whip
herself. (Opus Dei officials said such practices have a long tradition in
Christian spirituality.)
Clasen said that Opus Dei's overemphasis on
control and obedience finally drove her out when visits to her family were
limited, even during a family health crisis.
Former numerary Margaret Bruer, a mother of
five who lives in the Los Angeles area, reported a much different experience.
She lived in an Opus Dei center in Manhattan while a student at Marymount
College in Manhattan.
"I still have a great love for Opus
Dei," said Bruer, who left after 15 years because she felt called to
married life. "I think it's a wonderful organization for giving people a
means for finding God in ordinary life."
Bruer said Opus Dei doesn't discriminate
against women. "What Opus Dei teaches is that every job is equal,"
she said, adding that she was encouraged to get a law degree. "I did learn
to do things like cooking and cleaning, basic skills that everybody ought to
know how to do."
Cathy Hickey, 69, of Larchmont, a
supernumerary since 1973, said Opus Dei's daily diet of prayer, Mass and
spiritual reading has made her happy.
"Underneath the turmoil, way down at
the bottom, there's this really still stream, so that no matter what happens,
you know that your Father God - you're in His hands," she said. "I
know if I weren't in Opus Dei, I would not be faithful to prayer, because if I
didn't have somebody coaching me and encouraging me, it would be too easy to
give it up." Hickey is a former director and still a volunteer at Opus
Dei-run Rosedale Achievement Center in the South Bronx, which offers tutoring,
job training and other help to girls from fourth grade to high school.
Dennis Dubro, 52, also said he learned much
about the spiritual life from Opus Dei. But he said many members don't know
about some of the disturbing practices. "I found as I got deeper and
deeper that they were more like a cult," said Dubro, a Fremont, Calif.,
engineer. "The leadership was inner and secret."
Dubro, who joined while a student at M.I.T.
and stayed for 17 years, including 13 as a numerary, said his view of Opus Dei
began to go downhill when he had to deal with the misguided orders of an
inexperienced and authoritarian director.
Dubro also said he encountered unacceptable
financial practices while serving as the bursar of an Opus Dei dormitory in
Australia, and was treated as disloyal when he spoke up. (The Opus Dei
spokesman said that while there may have been poor bookkeeping in a small
nonprofit group, "nobody was trying to cheat anyone.")
Dubro said he made formal complaints within
Opus Dei. Years later, he met with an Opus Dei official visiting from the
international headquarters in Rome. "He listened to me for an hour. He
said, 'These things don't happen in Opus Dei,'" said Dubro, who left the
group in 1987. He has waited until now to speak to a reporter, he said, because
it became clear the church would not investigate his complaints.
Sim Johnston, 51, of Manhattan, a
supernumerary since the late 1980s, said Opus Dei is often falsely described as
secretive, elitist and conservative.
He said that since laypeople play such a key
role in Opus Dei, it is "an antidote to clericalism," which Johnston
said has been a problem in the church for centuries. "What Opus Dei is to
me is really a return to what the early church was," said Johnston, a
writer and former investment banker.
pus Dei says its message of calling
laypeople to holiness is, as one brochure puts it, "at the core of the
Second Vatican Council," when the world's Catholic bishops sought to
attune the church to the modern world.
But the Rev. Alvaro de Silva, a Boston
priest who left Opus Dei in 1999 after 35 years, said the organization refused
to change after the council revitalized Catholic teachings. "It was not
only conservative, it was reactionary," he said. "I know that's a very
strong word."
De Silva, 54, said that despite his advanced
degree in theology, he had to ask permission to read leading Catholic scholars
whose works were on Opus Dei's list of forbidden books.
He said he was forbidden to read the work of
the Rev. Raymond Brown, who served on a papal commission and was widely
considered the leading Catholic Bible scholar in the United States until his
death in 1998.
"They always say we are not monks, we
are just normal, ordinary Catholics," de Silva said. "I said, 'Wait a
second, how can you say you are like everybody else? You cannot read Raymond
Brown, you cannot go to the movies, you have to go to confession every week.
That is not normal."
De Silva said he also was concerned that
teenagers were being recruited aggressively. He said he tried to reform Opus
Dei from within, and that his directors tolerated his questioning for years.
But unknown to him, he said, an inquiry had begun, possibly after a few
students complained that he had been teaching about Raymond Brown's views on
the Bible.
The U.S. vicar, he said, told him to follow
the rules or leave. De Silva left, finding a job with the Archdiocese of
Boston.
"To this day, I do not know the whole
process of what happened here," he said.
Still, de Silva said Opus Dei members can be
justifiably upset at the group's portrayal in "The Da Vinci Code."
But he shared a hope that is also a premise of the plot: That the next pope
will be skeptical of Opus Dei.
"My hope is that Opus Dei will change
and embrace modernity and the modern Catholic Church," he said.
"Maybe the next pope is going to be different, and then Opus Dei will have
to change."
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