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'Rape of Proserpina' stirs hornet’s nest in Egypt

The image of an Italian baroque statue posted to social media has rekindled the debate in Egypt on whether Islam allows naked figures.
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CAIRO — Earlier this month, a 17th-century baroque statue depicting the rape of Persephone by Hades, the Greek god of the underworld, created an ongoing major controversy among Egyptian intellectuals and sheikhs over whether naked statues are reconcilable with Islamic teachings.

It began when doctor and journalist Khaled Montaser shared photos of “The Rape of Proserpina,” by the Italian artist Gian Lorenzo Bernini, on his personal Facebook page Nov. 2. The marble sculpture features two naked figures, Hades and Proserpina, better known as Persephone in Greek mythology. Persephone is in distress, with tears running down her cheeks, as she struggles to free herself from Hades' clutches. Alongside the photos, Montaser wrote in Arabic, "Any issue can be expressed by art – [Here] even the unpleasant issue of rape was converted into an exquisite sculpture."

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