New archbishop in row with disney

THE new Archbishop of Canterbury found himself embroiled in a row with the Disney Corporation yesterday, only hours after being installed as the leader of the world’s 70 million Anglicans.

With strong views on a range of subjects, including gay rights, women priests and the bombing of Afghanistan, Dr Rowan Williams, 52, was always going to be a controversial choice. As Archbishop of Wales, he was also the first clergyman from outside the Church of England to fill the post.

But it was a handful of comments critical of Disney, which were published in a book two years ago and recycled yesterday, that attracted much of the attention.

In the book, Lost Icons, Dr Williams singled out the US corporation as an example of how companies had turned children into consumers.

He wrote: "The perception of the child as consumer is clearly more dominant than it was a few decades ago. The child is the (usually vicarious) purchaser of any number of graded and variegated packages - that is, of goods designed to stimulate consumer desires.

"A relatively innocuous example is the familiar ‘tie-in’, the association of comics, sweets, toys and so on with a new film or television serial; the Disney empire has developed this to an unprecedented pitch of professionalism." Dr Williams, who also used the book to criticise the premature sexualisation of children by a consumer society, confessed he was "interested" to see comments he had made two years previously brought back into the public domain.

But he said: "I do have a very special concern about children, especially being a parent of young children myself. I have given high priority to working with schools and especially primary schools."

Disney, which has already found itself under fire from religious groups in the US for a variety of perceived sins, ranging from the cut of Pocohontas’s dress in the cartoon film to an insurance deal for gay partners, was stung by the criticism.

One company insider said: There are many examples where Disney doesn’t take the money and run because we think that’s incompatible with what we stand for, whereas another company perhaps would. I guess that if you are a pressure group of two people and you say you are going to boycott Disney, it becomes a headline immediately. At least he got his headline on the first day anyway."

A Disney spokesman said the company did not accept the archbishop’s criticism. He said: "Since the release of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs and the opening of the first Disneyland theme park decades ago, Walt Disney’s vision was to provide quality entertainment and experiences for parents and children to enjoy together.

"We are proud that, over seven decades, Disney has earned the trust and admiration of millions. Community decency and optimism are the centrepiece of what the Walt Disney Company strives to achieve in all that we create."

The debate is just one of many heated issues in which Dr Williams has passed comment, and his determination not to shy away from sensitive issues may lead the Church into further rows. He has spoken out in favour of gay rights, women priests and on the role of the government in various issues.

But senior clergymen said the archbishop was seen as an intellectual whose liberal opinions, mixed with conservative theological views, would help to unify the Church.