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Does the devil eat hot dogs?
The Times Higher Education
Supplement (London)
December 21 2000
Domenico Pacitti
Massimo Salani says meals cement our relationship with God. But, he tells Domenico Pacitti, he never said fast food was fit only for Protestants …
AN
ITALIAN theology lecturer who was catapulted overnight to international fame
as a champion of Roman Catholic gourmets against satanic, hamburger-devouring
Protestants, feels that it has all been one hellish misunderstanding.
Massimo
Salani says that his views were seriously distorted by the press after he gave
an interview to L'Avvenire, the Vatican-backed daily newspaper, about his book
on the eating habits of different religions. The article bore a provocative
headline: "The hamburger? It's atheistic".
After
its publication, Salani was astonished to find himself widely credited with a
series of offensive remarks that he denies having made: that eating at places
such as McDonald's constituted a novel variety of deadly sin to be added to
gluttony; that hamburgers were fit for consumption by Protestants and atheists
but not by Catholics; that slow, sensible and salubrious eating was typically
Catholic and fast, foolish and frivolous eating tellingly Protestant.
What
Salani did say was that fast-food eating habits arguably reflected the
individualistic relationship between man and God established by Luther and
that such habits did not represent an ideal Catholic model because they lacked
the sharing spirit of communitarianism.
Salani
welcomes the opportunity to set the record straight. "I would never dream
of saying that hamburgers are the food of Protestants or atheists. All food is
a gift from God. I think man must learn a special sacred relationship with
food. I myself ate hamburgers during my lengthy stays in Texas and Virginia a
few years ago and saw absolutely no need to confess it.
"I
cannot blame L'Avvenire, but it is a pity that the media raised problems on
the basis of an article's headline without taking the trouble to read the
article properly, if at all, let alone my book, and above all without checking
the precise sense of the statements with the author before drawing
conclusions. My reference to Luther should be understood as no more than a
working hypothesis on how fast food developed in the United States. It was
certainly not my intention to offend or criticise my Protestant brothers in
any way, and I apologise if I did so."
What
Salani wants to stress is that dining in a "convivial" atmosphere
helps establish "correct" relations among individuals and between
individuals and God. The Catholic sacraments of confession and holy communion,
he argues, do not fit well with an eat-and-run culture that fails to see the
connection between time, space, food and God.
Why
then did fast food develop in the US? Salani thinks that it arose to meet
specific practical needs, but that its subsequent success and strong hold on
people may have been partly facilitated by a dominant Protestant ethic of
individualism. "Where fast-food habits are the exception, there is no
problem. When they become a way of life, they contribute to directing our
attention away from the idea that food is a gift from God."
Salani
says food is a positive thing and can be a way of caring for and valuing
others. "If I prepare food for my family or for guests - and this is
where the value of festa emerges in religions and the various dishes for
Christmas, Easter, Thanksgiving, New Year and the end of Yom Kippur or Ramadan
- I add to food my desire to be in their company, to have them participate in
my life, to share the space in my house and my time with them. Thus, through
food, we can also communicate with God, thanking Him for what He offers
us."
Jesus,
Salani notes, saw meals as occasions for spiritual nourishment as well as for
satisfying hunger. The first to grasp this food-God relationship were the
early church fathers - Justin Martyr (c. AD105-165), Irenaeus (c. 125-202),
Clement of Alexandria (c. 150-215) and Origen (c. 185-254) - who taught about
fasting and the need to thank God at mealtimes.
Salani
feels that such principles are far removed from the model underlying fast-food
consumption. He sees food-related illnesses such as bulimia and anorexia in
humans and BSE in animals as connected with the loss of a correct moral
relationship with food. But he rejects the hypothesis that BSE might be a
judgement from on high for contravening the divine plan.
Salani
believes that people need to stop rushing around and to think about the great
"void" that they are making for themselves. He believes religion can
help them to recover the positive values of eating.
The
past month of purgatory and adverse publicity has given Salani much food for
thought - and, although he thinks the press furore may have helped people
reconsider their relationship with food, he says he has decided that A Tavola
con le Religioni (At Table with Religions) will be his "first and last
book".
The
book offers a tastefully presented summary of the religious attitudes to food
of Hindus, Buddhists, Jainists, Muslims, Jews and Christians, complete with
representative recipes. It is peppered with quotes from specialist texts
designed to whet the appetite for further reading - from the Bhagavadgita, the
Bible and the Koran to works by Mahatma Gandhi, the Dalai Lama and Claude
Levi-Strauss.
Besides
its obvious ecumenical intent, the book aims to present religions to Salani's
students in an original and interesting way. He teaches patrology (the
writings of the early Christian apologists and church fathers) to seminarians
at Lucca's Interdiocesan Theological Institute, which is sponsored by the
Pontificia Universita Gregoriana in Rome, and religion at Pisa's Matteotti
State School of Hotel Management.
Matteotti
students learn how to cater for all religious culinary needs. Salani, who
holds that there is no such thing as a moral diet, favours the cuisine of his
native Mantua, which includes tortelli di zucca; pasta rolls filled with a
mixture of spinach, ricotta, egg and nutmeg; mushroom escalopes; and
sbrisolona, a traditional Mantuan cake made with soft flour, eggs, butter,
almonds and spices.
But
Salani also extols the virtues of fasting and abstinence, which he criticises
Catholics, Protestants and Anglicans alike for having neglected. "I would
like to invite people who are thinking of spending a fortune at Christmas
filling themselves with food and drink to consider fasting instead and
donating the money they have saved to those who are starving. I am sure they
would find it spiritually gratifying," he says.
A Tavola con le Religioni is
published by Edizioni Dehoniane Bologna, E25.
SALANI'S RECIPE FOR TORTELLI
DI ZUCCA
Pasta:
600g white flour and 3 eggs.
Filling:
1kg pumpkin, 200g Parmesan cheese, 2tbs sugar and pinch of grated nutmeg.
Remove
pumpkin's seeds, bake, then puree the fruit. Mix puree with cheese, sugar and
nutmeg. Mix the flour and eggs to make pasta dough. Roll out the pasta and cut
into bite-sized squares. Fill with the pumpkin mixture.
Boil the tortelli. Served topped with sauce made of peeled tomatoes fried in butter and sage.