Tubing carries pre-recorded voices and sounds…
Pink Hoses Hanging from Ceiling Latest ‘Art’ Madness in Austrian Cathedral
We all remember the repulsive and blasphemous sculpture installed in a side chapel of Immaculate Conception Cathedral in the diocese of Linz, Austria, at the end of June. Entitled ‘Crowning’, it depicted what was meant to be the Blessed Virgin Mary in an agonizing act of natural childbirth.
That installation was removed after enough public outrage had been raised, but another work of ‘art’ was installed a few weeks later. It is entitled ‘They Call Me Mama’ and consists of numerous pink hoses that hang from the ceiling and are draped over a balcony and around a column and the staircase leading up to the pulpit.
This theater of the absurd began on July 18 and is mercifully coming to an end this Sunday, Sep. 1. The ‘artist’ behind it is a certain Katharina Struber (b. 1967) from Vienna.
Let’s take a closer look:
But that’s only half of the insanity going on, and the other half isn’t any better.
It turns out that at the end of each hose there is a funnel one can put against one’s ear to listen to voices and sounds being played over a speaker somehow attached to the conduit. What pious messages are being played over these exciting sound tubes? Perhaps Catholic prayers such as the Our Father, Hail Mary, or the Creed? Perhaps acts of Faith, hope, charity, and contrition? Or maybe brief testimonies of recent converts?
No, of course not. Instead, people are treated to soundbites concerning migration, climate change, the extinction of species, and more. Here is how the diocese of Linz explains the nonsense:
THEY CALL ME MAMA addresses the family as a network of relationships beyond the nuclear family and the biological family of origin, as “becoming related” in the form of a global caring community. The installation metaphorically connects the cathedral with the outside world and addresses — also in terms of responsibility for creation — the need to care for planet Earth, especially for threatened and endangered creatures. A voice comes out of one pipe reading out the list of documented people who died fleeing to Europe in 2024. From two other pipes come the sounds of the endangered yellow poison dart frog, the crackling of fire, the falling of trees. They are exemplary and associative of the silent death of people fleeing to Europe, of climate change and the extinction of species. Another two pipes emit the sounds of people celebrating and gathering on all continents.
(translated via DeepL)
The Linz diocese has put up an entire web page proudly featuring this ‘artistic’ installation (with more photos!), from which the above words are taken. The text published is essentially just a repeat of what is written on the creator’s own web site about the project:
- ‘They Call Me Mama’ Installation (Diocese of Linz)
- ‘They Call Me Mama’ Installation (Katharina Struber)
You can’t make this stuff up! It’s obvious these people have completely lost their minds. The Vatican II Sect is a madhouse!
By the way: These meandering hoses remind one of a certain incident in Genesis 3 involving Eve listening to the whispers of a serpent, don’t they?
Anybody home? A visitor listens to the audio message transported through the hoses from a speaker
(image: dioezese-linz.at; cropped / fair use)
The man ultimately responsible for this crazy display in the cathedral is ‘Bishop’ Manfred Scheuer (b. 1955), who was appointed to mislead the diocese of Linz by ‘Pope’ Francis in 2015. It is the same ‘Bp.’ Scheuer, by the way, who also authorizes the Holy Hydra events that profane churches in his territory on an annual basis, and who was responsible for the abominable ‘Mary in childbirth’ statue.
Perhaps there is one positive aspect to this ‘They Call Me Mama’ freak show after all, though: People might be getting the message that if they put their trust in the Novus Ordo religion, they’re hosed.
Image source (unless otherwise noted): katharinastruber.net
License: fair use
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