A
scene from an animated film shown to visitors at the new Acropolis Museum that
depicts Christian priests destroying parts of the Parthenon has been deleted
following protests by the Greek Orthodox Church.
The creator of the segment, Greek-born French filmmaker Constantin Costa-Gavras,
has demanded that his name be taken off the film credits in protest.
The priests used to destroy ancient temples. Now they want to remove scenes
from a film, Costa-Gavras told Greece's Mega TV channel: This is the kind
(of censorship) that used to happen in the former Soviet Union.
Costa-Gavras' 1-minute, 40-second segment depicting the damage done to Parthenon
over the centuries — from marauding Germanic warriors in 267 A.D. to the removal
of a large part of the frieze by British diplomat Lord Elgin in early 19th
century.
The animated segment showed figures clad in black climbing up ladders and
destroying part of the Parthenon frieze; the scene referred to well-documented
episodes of destruction that took place in the early Byzantine period (5th-8th
centuries A.D.), when Christians often demolished monuments and temples
belonging to the old pagan era.
Church officials contended the film misrepresented the attitude of the Greek
Orthodox Church toward Greece's ancient heritage.
Greek media reported the segment was excised after the intervention of Culture
Minister Antonis Samaras.
|