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The shameful tale of the Jewish boy kidnapped by the Catholic church

I meet the director of a new film about a six-year-old snatched from his family – after he’d been baptised by the family maid

April 26, 2024 11:22
KIDNAPPED_by_Marco_Bellocchio_Still02_Photo©Anna_Camerlingo
Wrenched away: Enea Sala as six-year-old Edgardo Mortara in the film Kidnapped
6 min read

Talk about a shameful piece of history. In 1858, in the Italian city of Bologna, Edgardo Mortara, a six-year-old Jewish boy, was taken by the Catholic Church from the bosom of his family, after officials learned that the child was baptised a Christian by the family maid. This began years of struggle for Mortara’s parents, and left them facing the prospect of losing their boy permanently as he became increasingly entrenched in Catholicism.

Chronicled in Daniele Scialise’s Il Caso Mortaro, it was this biased account that first caught the attention of veteran Italian writer-director Marco Bellocchio (2019’s The Traitor), whose new film Kidnapped dramatises these shocking events. “It was totally siding with the Vatican, defending the holy right of the papal site to take this child from the Jewish family because he had been baptised,” explains Bellocchio, when we meet in the white-walled offices of Kidnapped’s UK distributor.

Stolen: Enea Sala in a scene from the filmStolen: Enea Sala in a scene from the film[Missing Credit]

A former student in London, where he studied at Slade School of Fine Art, the 84-year-old director understands more English than he speaks, today sitting with a translator as he fine-tunes his thoughts on this complex subject. “Even if you get baptised by a layperson – and in a hidden way – that trumps everything,” he continues. “So it was [seen] not only the right but the duty of the Pope to take him out of his family and educate him in the Catholic faith, because, by virtue of being baptised, he had become a Catholic.”

Despite being raised in the Catholic faith in Piacenza, near Milan, Bellocchio “immediately sided with the family upon reading this book”, disagreeing with the conservative author. “Among the points presented… there was the ‘proof’ that the child was really Christian because he had chosen to remain within the church, instead of thinking that it was because he was so young and he was taken away and he was indoctrinated. [The author felt] that the Holy Spirit had possessed him and made him see the truth.”

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