November
1997
No
Bull: Pius V and Bullfighting
By Jean Thaler |
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On November 1, 1567, Pope Pius V (1566-1572), issued
a papal bull entitled "An injunction forbidding bullfights and other
similar sports with wild animals and the annulment of vows and oaths
previously made." Jean Thaler explains the background to the bull and
the extremely mixed record of this particular pope.
He excommunicated Queen Elizabeth the First of England.
He burnt heretics in the piazza. He terminated the Turks. But... he
saved the bulls!
At first I was chagrined to learn the history
of Pius V, the most animal-friendly prelate since St. Francis. His life's
work was the Inquisition. He increased the burnings of heretics and
kicked the Jews out of the papal territories. People said he was turning
the Vatican into a monastery. He took severe measures against blasphemy
and tightened the censorship of books. Yet, modern sensibility aside,
a pope with a grander vision had not been seen in generations. In Pius
V's lifetime, priests were sleeping around and selling tickets to heaven.
Each pope outdid the last in conspicuous consumption (the results are
being admired this very moment by busloads of Perillo tourists). The
Church rebuffed Martin Luther's petition for reform, triggering the
first of many Protestant movements to come. The Council of Trent's attempt
at Counter Reformation barely gained ground. Meanwhile, the Turks were
battering the gates of Vienna. Pius V was elected to turn back the clock.
He put teeth into Trent. He formed and financed the alliance that defeated
the Turks at Lepanto, the biggest naval battle since the days of Antony
and Cleopatra. Above all, his virtuous example restored the moral standing
of the papacy. Pius V was canonized 200 years later for making the impossible
happen. The past thousand years boast only a handful of papal saints.
The papal bull that follows prohibited
bullfights and other public spectacles where animals are fought and
killed for enjoyment. I see the bull primarily in the context of Pius's
efforts to wipe out the decadence he found everywhere around him. He
seeks to save the souls of men who engage in these sports or sponsor
them. He also seeks to save the life and limb of men in the ring. To
these ends, he excommunicates princes and other secular authorities
who would set up -- or even permit --blood sports. He also excommunicates
churchmen who participate in blood sports. He exhorts churchmen to carry
out the papal bull. Bullfighters who succumb in the ring are banned
from a Church burial.
When Pius refers to souls and to his responsibility
for the Lord's flocks, he means human souls and flocks. Still, concern
for the Lord's non-human flocks is very clear. Pius calls bloodsport
the cruel and base spectacles of the devil, removed from Christian piety
and charity. It is erroneous, he says, to think that blood sports can
honor a saint or religious event. I like to think that today Pius V's
prohibition is also applicable to sport hunting.
Binding Prohibition
Pius V's bull is extremely important because its prohibition
of blood sports should be binding for 700 million Catholics. A bull
is an official pronouncement of the pope. It is named for the bulla,
or metal seal, which marks its special status. Over the centuries, several
popes and other prelates have confirmed that blood sports remain prohibited,
although excommunication for these deeds has been dropped. The doctrine
of papal infallibility also throws weight behind the bull. Even a Catholic
encyclopedia in my local library states that wanton and unnecessary
infliction of pain on animals should be discouraged or forbidden.
Why, then, haven't lay folk and many church people
ever heard of the prohibition? In the 1930s Pius XII forbade priests
from attending bullfights in Spain. He consistently denied an audience
to torreros and rejected a present offered by their union. After him,
the bull does not appear to be enforced at all.
Today Pius V's legacy lives on in Italy, where
gladiators and coliseums are ancient history. Unfortunately, we see
still see blood sports in Spain and several other countries with Catholic
majorities. We see bullfights and similar atrocities committed in the
name of holy days and saints. We see church people promoting the bullfights.
The only thing that has changed is that now the bulls are often drugged
or maimed, so they are less likely to harm the torreros. To anyone who
thinks it was enough for the Vatican to condemn bullfighting 430 years
ago, I say it's not working.
The Papal Bull
"Divine Providence granted us the responsibility
for caring for the Lord's [human] flock and with deep concern we are
so compelled by relevant pastoral duties to at all times deviate all
the faithful of our congregations from imminent perils to the body and
from condemnation of the soul.
"Verily, although the abominable use of
the duel, introduced by the devil to also gain condemnation of souls
through the cruel death of bodies, was forbidden by a Decree of the
Council of Trent [the council that from 1560-1563 formally began the
Counter Reformation], up to now in many cities and places, so as to
demonstrate their strength and courage at public spectacles, many individuals
have not ceased engaging with bulls and other wild animals, frequently
resulting in the death of men, in mutilation of members and endangering
[human] souls.
"Therefore, considering such spectacles
which are removed from Christian piety and charity, in which bulls and
wild animals are challenged in circuses and plazas, and desiring to
abolish such cruel and base spectacles of the devil and not of man,
and to take measures for the salvation of souls as far as we are able
with the power of God -- to each and every Christian prince, in any
kingdom or enjoying any high position, whether ecclesiastical, civil
or imperial, proclaimed by any name by any community or republic in
perpetuity, by means of our constitution valid for the future, on pain
of ipso facto excommunication and anathema, we interdict and prohibit
the carrying out of spectacles of this nature in their provinces, cities,
lands, castles and places where spectacles of this kind are realized,
where bullfights and similar sports with other wild animals are permitted.
We forbid military personnel and other persons from daring to join such
spectacles, whether on foot or on horseback, to confront bulls or other
animals.
"Ecclesiastical burial will be denied to anyone
who is killed as a result of participating in such bullfights.
"We also prohibit churchmen, both regular and
secular, with ecclesiastical benefices or constituted in Holy Orders,
from participating in such spectacles, on pain of excommunication.
"We totally prohibit, we abrogate, annul and
decide and declare forever invalid, null and useless all obligations,
oaths and vows made by persons, communities or groups of persons to
this date, or which may be made in the future, related to bullfights,
even though they may have erroneously thought that they were honoring
the saints or giving greater splendor to ecclesiastical solemnities
and festivities. Such festivities must be celebrated with divine praise,
spiritual joy and pious works and not with similar sports. ...
"And all venerable patriarch brethren, primates,
archbishops and bishops and other high Church officials, by virtue of
the holy obedience and on pain of divine judgment and eternal interminable
condemnation, shall adequately divulge and seek to obey our letter in
their own cities and dioceses, on pain of incurring ecclesiastical punishment
and censure. ...
To ask Pope John Paul II to condemn bullfighting publicly,
write to: His Holiness Pope John Paul II, Vatican City, Palazzo Apostolico,
Rome 00187, Italy. Jean Thaler is the founder of Big Apple Vegetarians.
Thanks to Adela Pisarevksy for help on this article.