Saints as national identity tools

Updated: 2025.10.07 14D ago 2 sources
Italy’s government made Saint Francis’s feast a national holiday and cast him as an icon of Italian identity, extending a long tradition of political actors repackaging religious figures to unify constituencies. From post‑unification monarchs to fascists and now Meloni, Francis is repeatedly reframed to reconcile Church, language, and nation, even if the theology doesn’t fit the politics. — It shows how states instrumentalize religious symbols as soft power for nation‑building, revealing the cultural mechanics behind contemporary nationalist projects.

Sources

Christian nationalism’s godless heart
Michael Ledger-Lomas 2025.10.07 55% relevant
The article shows Christian symbols and quasi‑canonization being used to unify a political identity: Charlie Kirk is eulogized in saint‑like terms by prominent Catholics (Cardinal Dolan, Bishop Barron) and venerated across denominations; Crusader crosses at Tommy Robinson’s rally function as shared sacred identity markers—parallel to political actors instrumentalizing saints to reinforce national or civilizational cohesion.
Giorgia Meloni’s patron saint of nationalism
Andrea Valentino 2025.10.03 100% relevant
Meloni’s 4 October national holiday for Saint Francis, framed as defending 'Italian identity,' alongside cuts to English in documents and bans on lab‑grown meat.
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