Rome: The Vatican Thursday issued a stern condemnation of a new global ad campaign by Italian clothes company Benetton including a photo montage of Pope Benedict XVI kissing a leading imam.
"We must express the firmest protest for this absolutely unacceptable use of the image of the Holy Father, manipulated and exploited in a publicity campaign with commercial ends," Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said in a statement.
"This shows a grave lack of respect for the pope, an offence to the feelings of believers, a clear demonstration of how publicity can violate the basic rules of respect for people by attracting attention with provocation," he said.
The Vatican was examining what steps to take "to guarantee a fair defence of respect for the image of the Holy Father", he added.
The ad showed Benedict kissing on the lips Egypt's Ahmed el Tayyeb, imam of the Al-Azhar Mosque in Cairo and a leading voice in Sunni Islam.
There were other shock pictures showing US President Barack Obama kissing Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao in one picture and Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez in another. One picture showed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu smooching Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas. In another, French President Nicolas Sarkozy is depicted kissing German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
A picture of Silvio Berlusconi kissing Merkel was pulled at the last minute after the jovial billionaire submitted his resignation last week.
The posters, part of an advertising campaign entitled "UNHATE", have appeared in Benetton clothing stores across the globe as well as in newspapers, magazines and on Internet websites. The passionate embrace between the pope and the imam was briefly shown on a banner held up near Rome's landmark Castel Sant'Angelo castle not far from the Vatican.
Benetton deputy chief Alessandro Benetton said in a statement that the ads were "constructive provocation" intended "to give widespread visibility to an ideal notion of tolerance".
Benetton "chooses social issues and actively promotes humanitarian causes that could not otherwise have been communicated on a global scale", he said.
But Luca Borgomeo, head of the Association of Italian Catholic Television Viewers, also called for the ad to be removed.
"Is it possible Benetton could not come up with anything better?" he said.
Bowing to intense criticism, Benetton later pulled the controversial ad.
"We must express the firmest protest for this absolutely unacceptable use of the image of the Holy Father, manipulated and exploited in a publicity campaign with commercial ends," Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said in a statement.
"This shows a grave lack of respect for the pope, an offence to the feelings of believers, a clear demonstration of how publicity can violate the basic rules of respect for people by attracting attention with provocation," he said.
The Vatican was examining what steps to take "to guarantee a fair defence of respect for the image of the Holy Father", he added.
The ad showed Benedict kissing on the lips Egypt's Ahmed el Tayyeb, imam of the Al-Azhar Mosque in Cairo and a leading voice in Sunni Islam.
There were other shock pictures showing US President Barack Obama kissing Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao in one picture and Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez in another. One picture showed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu smooching Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas. In another, French President Nicolas Sarkozy is depicted kissing German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
A picture of Silvio Berlusconi kissing Merkel was pulled at the last minute after the jovial billionaire submitted his resignation last week.
The posters, part of an advertising campaign entitled "UNHATE", have appeared in Benetton clothing stores across the globe as well as in newspapers, magazines and on Internet websites. The passionate embrace between the pope and the imam was briefly shown on a banner held up near Rome's landmark Castel Sant'Angelo castle not far from the Vatican.
Benetton deputy chief Alessandro Benetton said in a statement that the ads were "constructive provocation" intended "to give widespread visibility to an ideal notion of tolerance".
Benetton "chooses social issues and actively promotes humanitarian causes that could not otherwise have been communicated on a global scale", he said.
But Luca Borgomeo, head of the Association of Italian Catholic Television Viewers, also called for the ad to be removed.
"Is it possible Benetton could not come up with anything better?" he said.
Bowing to intense criticism, Benetton later pulled the controversial ad.
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