A Catholic priest has sparked outrage in Italy by claiming that women bring domestic violence on themselves by dressing provocatively and neglecting housework, Italian media reported yesterday.
“How often do we see girls and mature women going around scantily dressed and in provocative clothes?” Piero Corsi said in a Christmas message posted on the door of his church in the small town of San Terenzio in north-west Italy.
“They provoke the worst instincts, which end in violence or sexual abuse. They should search their consciences and ask: did we bring this on ourselves?” it read.
The leaflet, a copy of which was posted online sparking a wave of outrage across the country, said the 118 women killed in acts of domestic violence in Italy in 2012 had pushed men to their limits.
“Is it possible that all of a sudden men have gone mad? We don’t believe it,” Father Corsi wrote.
“The fact is that women are increasingly provocative, they become arrogant, they believe themselves to be self-sufficient and end up exacerbating the situation,” he said.
“Children are abandoned to their own devices, homes are dirty, meals are cold or fast food, clothes are filthy,” he added.
The region’s bishop, Luigi Ernesto Palletti, stepped in as the story went viral and said Fr Corsi’s words were “unacceptable and go against the Church’s common feeling on the matter”.
Amid protests from women’s rights and anti-violence campaigners, Fr Corsi was widely reported by Italian media to have apologised to his congregation and handed in his resignation.
He later denied the reports, saying a resignation letter sent to news agencies was “probably a fake”, adding that he was going to “take a rest” but had no intention of stepping down.
“I don’t know whether you’re a queer or not, but what do you feel when you see a naked women?” he asked a reporter for Rai Radio.
“Are women themselves not causing harm by unveiling themselves like this?”
The mayor of San Terenzio said the message had left the town’s residents “dumbfounded and indignant”.