‘The Last Supper’: Oyo bishop Badejo condemns offensive Paris Olympics opening ceremony painting

The Catholic Bishop of Oyo diocese, Emmanuel Badejo, has condemned the recreation of ‘Last Supper’ scene by drag artists and dancers in the opening ceremony of the 2024 Paris Olympic Games on Friday, saying it was offensive and disrespectful to Christianity.
“The religious depictions of Leonardo da Vinci’s “The Last Supper” painting with contemporary ideological figures that are clearly offensive to Christianity at the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games 2024 in France is to say the least shocking and disrespectful,” Mr Badejo said in a statement on Tuesday.
Organisers of the Paris Olympics apologised following outcry over parody of the Last Supper scene of Jesus Christ with his 12 disciples — an incident which many Christians around the world consider sacrilegious to the faith.
The scene from the ceremony went viral with Catholic Church and Christian groups, politicians and individuals subsequently condemning the scene depiction which the Olympic organisers claimed was the interpretation of the Greek God Dionysus.
Joining other Christian figures around the world to condemn the incident, Mr Badejo who is also President of the Pan African Episcopal Commission for Social Communications, tagged the move as part of the deliberate attempt in Europe and America to repurpose and cheapen Christian.
“Sadly, it is a perpetration of deliberate ongoing attempts in Europe and America to repurpose and cheapen Christian themes without regard for peace loving Christians who practise and profess their religion in peace,” the 63-year-old clergyman said.
“That this decadent caricature of one of the most cherished events of Christianity is publicised in France, a country with a rich and old Christian heritage, and at the Olympic games, detracts from the status of the Olympics and belies all claims to enduring civility and respect for freedom of religion in the West.”
He said “Christians should exercise their right of outrage and boycott to the extent that the damage already caused can be mitigated and redressed and future occurrences prevented,” noting that “governing bodies and organisations should take full responsibility for accommodating such insulting, tasteless art.”
We have recently deactivated our website's comment provider in favour of other channels of distribution and commentary. We encourage you to join the conversation on our stories via our Facebook, Twitter and other social media pages.
More from Peoples Gazette

Agriculture
FG tasks ECOWAS on leveraging financing strategies for agroecology
The federal government has urged stakeholders in the agriculture and finance sectors in the West Africa region to leverage financing strategies to enhance agroecology practices

Politics
Katsina youths pledge to deliver over 2 million votes to Atiku
“Katsina State is Atiku’s political base because it is his second home.”

Economy
SEC set to deliver sustained zero trade fail rate in T+1 settlement cycle: DG
The DG said the focus would be on full delivery-versus-payment discipline across custodians, brokers and the Central Securities Clearing System Plc (CSCS).

Lagos
Lagos residents decry soaring corn prices
A corn trader, Justina Odion, blamed the high retail price on increased wholesale costs.

NationWide
Afam Okeke wins NBA general secretary election with 8,478 votes
The live results portal showed that a total of 82,167 voters were accredited for the general election held on Saturday.

States
Tinubu is pillar of my infrastructural development: Gov Sani
The governor said that the N1 trillion Light Rail Project will commence in the next two months.

States
Students killed as troops foil abduction attempt in Borno school
He said that the terrorists reportedly gained access to the facility with the assistance of suspected collaborators

Rights
Civil society organisations key to strengthening Nigeria’s democracy: CDHR
He said civil society organisations serve as a bridge between the government and the people.





