http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-davinci18mar18.story20 Million Copies Later, Vatican Says Don't Read 'Da Vinci Code'
The bestseller is a pack of lies that maligns Jesus and harms Catholicism, a cardinal announces.
By Tracy Wilkinson Times Staff Writer March 18, 2005
ROME — OK, so maybe author Dan Brown takes a few liberties.
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The condemnation might have been prompted by the fact that the book's plots and assertions are about to become even more widely disseminated in a movie starring Tom Hanks. Or it could be the growing popularity of "Da Vinci Code"-based tours to Rome and Paris in which tourists, with book in hand, try to follow its clues.
Some priests have said they are alarmed that people really believe some of the book's wilder conspiracy theories.
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Bertone was joined at the Genoa conference by Massimo Introvigne, director of the Center for Studies on New Religions, based in Turin, Italy. He said the danger within Brown's book was that he stated early on that his descriptions of secret rituals and mysterious documents were factual.
The book's popularity, Introvigne said, stems from its combination of "two types of social 'tastes' which appear to be quite widespread: on the one hand, the notion of 'conspiracies' and secret societies that dominate the world; and on the other hand, an increasingly unashamed and virulent anti-Catholicism."
Bertone, Introvigne and others also took exception to Brown's use of Opus Dei, a controversial lay order that is well-connected in the Vatican, as the villainous foil.
In the book, an Opus Dei "monk" is a killer; critics point out that Opus Dei does not have monks and has risen in power and respectability, with the pope elevating its Spanish founder to sainthood in near-record time two years ago.
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