Halloween
and Harry Potter
Many have asked me my opinion
about Harry Potter. There is, among good Catholics, a general unease about
the series, but the sense of disquiet is very, very difficult to define.
I am at a bit of a disadvantage to comment on any particulars of the books
since I have not read any of them or seen the movies, nor do I intend
to—I have an aversion to adolescent fads and not enough time to
spend on questionable materials when there is so much excellent fare for
the soul out there. I do, however, feel it is important to offer some
guidance on this issue from a third person point of view because some
things can be observed about the books without having read them.
First and foremost, all adolescent
obsessions have the capacity to steep the vulnerable souls of these kids
in imagery and language that strikes deeper than the sermons they may
(or may not) hear on Sunday. Some people give Harry an unqualified “wonderful”
rating too quickly because J.K Rowling apparently is a very good writer,
but the devotees of a sweeping force like this series tend to pass off
the propaganda aspect of these books as harmless because they see it as
“innocent” fantasy, and, in my opinion, this is dangerous.
4100 pages of word images about magic and the occult are not harmless,
even if they fit the literary genre of “fantasy.” Tolkein’s
Lord of the Rings Trilogy amounts to 1216 pages of beautiful
imagery, but relatively few of the pages are about magic, let alone imbued
with magic. Indeed, Tolkein’s trilogy is a self-consciously mythical
representation of reality in the light of the Christian faith, something
Rowling can’t claim. I find the “fantasy” comparisons
of Tolkein and Harry Potter to be deeply flawed.
Fundamentally, Harry Potter
indoctrinates young souls in the language and mechanics of the occult.
The fact that the fake curses and hexes are not able to be reproduced
because the “ingredients” are pure fantasy is beside the point.
Curses are not pure fantasy. The fact that “curse”
as such, and other elements of witchcraft, are presented in a glorified
state throughout the Harry Potter series means that our kids’ minds
are being introduced to and imbued with occult imagery.
Is indoctrination too strong
a term? How about socialization? Should it not concern parents that Rowling
only now, ten years after the introduction of the character Dumbledore,
admitted that she intended this character to be “gay”? For
goodness sake, this character is a father figure and a mentor in the books,
and he falls in love with his evil arch-enemy! Rowling has said that her
books were a “prolonged argument for tolerance” (Time,
10/20/07). Okay, so no indoctrination going on there, right?
The second dilemma for every
Christian parent should be the perennial Halloween fest of negative imagination
that these books generate. If Harry Potter is innocent fun, its
literary spawn certainly are not. One trip to the Harry Potter section
of a Borders bookstore (way before Halloween) gave me pause. Surrounding
the Harry Potter rack in the children’s section of the
store and in the front display were other titles that should raise the
hair on the back of any parent’s neck. I recount just a few titles
here: Dark Possession, The Wheel of Darkness, The Care and Feeding
of Spirites [sic], The Night of the Soul Stealer, The Thief Queen’s
Daughter, Blade of Fire, Secrets of Dripping Fang, My Father’s Dragon,
The Dark Hills Divide, Peter and the Shadow Thieves, Soul Eater, Chronicles
of Ancient Darkness, Vampirates Tide of Terror, Nightmare Academy, Enter
the Portal to Monster and Mayhem, Lyra’s Oxford (authored by
vicious anti-Catholic Phillip Pullman of “Golden Compass”
and “His Dark Materials” fame)…and others.
337 million copies of occult
imagery are being consumed by our youth in the Harry Potter series alone.
The books may be good writing, but the writing is about something dark
dressed up as something fun. That’s a great way to get kids hooked
on the occult.