- Feb 5, 2002
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A Pablo Iglesias collaborator shouts desecration of a church altar in southern France
Basque activist Ane Miren Hernández Unda, a regular contributor to subsidized media outlets such as ETB and Pablo Iglesias's personal project Canal Red, was involved in a serious desecration last weekend at the Catholic church of Saint-Laurent d'Arbérats, in the French region of Soule, during the Euskal Herria Zuzenean (EHZ) festival.
In a video she posted on social media (indirect link posted in source article), Hernández Unda—who presents herself as “Ane Lindane”—appears standing on the church altar, shouting blasphemous words, mocking Christianity, and pretending to insert a microphone between her genitals, while some 200 people watched. The worrying thing is that the scene, far from being a marginal improvisation, was part of the festival's official program and was openly celebrated by the activist herself, who wrote on her public profile: "Yesterday I gave a great monologue at the Euskal Herria Zuzenean festival. In an unconsecrated church, 200 people shook the foundations of Catholicism with uproarious laughter. We desecrated, blasphemed, and denounced the sexual abuses in the church. Hil da Jainkoa!" (God is dead, in Basque).
An act of desecration
Continued below.
cathcon.blogspot.com
Basque activist Ane Miren Hernández Unda, a regular contributor to subsidized media outlets such as ETB and Pablo Iglesias's personal project Canal Red, was involved in a serious desecration last weekend at the Catholic church of Saint-Laurent d'Arbérats, in the French region of Soule, during the Euskal Herria Zuzenean (EHZ) festival.
In a video she posted on social media (indirect link posted in source article), Hernández Unda—who presents herself as “Ane Lindane”—appears standing on the church altar, shouting blasphemous words, mocking Christianity, and pretending to insert a microphone between her genitals, while some 200 people watched. The worrying thing is that the scene, far from being a marginal improvisation, was part of the festival's official program and was openly celebrated by the activist herself, who wrote on her public profile: "Yesterday I gave a great monologue at the Euskal Herria Zuzenean festival. In an unconsecrated church, 200 people shook the foundations of Catholicism with uproarious laughter. We desecrated, blasphemed, and denounced the sexual abuses in the church. Hil da Jainkoa!" (God is dead, in Basque).
An act of desecration
Continued below.