The Mind of James Donahue Carlisle Crisis |
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Can A Curse Engraved
In Stone Bring Bad Luck? By James Donahue June 2005 The City of Carlisle,
England, paid 10,000 pounds to have an artist design and make the 14-ton granite slab in 2001 to mark the town’s Millennium
Gateway scheme. It was installed as the centerpiece of an underground gallery in the In historical retrospect, the
slab was engraved with a 1,069-word curse, issued by the Archbishop of Glasgow, Scotland, in 1524. The curse was an effort
to keep the plundering Scots from raiding After the slab was installed,
Things got so bad the
town fathers began debating whether the curse on the stone was actually the cause of so much ill fortune. The media began
calling the piece the Carlisle Cursing Stone. Councillor Jim Tootle
proposed that the stone be destroyed or at least moved outside the city boundaries. “The curse was laid in a serious
fashion and it should be taken seriously. I’ve had phone calls from people concerned that this curse should be removed,”
he said. Tootle said that some
folks believed that “the placing of a non-Christian artifact, based on an old curse on local families, would bring ill
luck to the city.” Vicar Kevin Davies wrote
in his parish magazine that he thought the stone was “a lethal weapon” and called for the curse to be broken “both
literally and spiritually for all time.” But local artist Gordon
Young, a descendant of one of the “reiver families” accused of raiding the town in the old times, objected. “They
want to smash it to pieces,” he said. “It is a powerful work of art but it is certainly not part of the occult.
If I thought my sculpture would have affected one Carlisle United result, I would have smashed it myself years ago.” The Carlisle United is
the name of the local football team. Never mind that three local people perished in the flood. After much debate, the
town fathers couldn’t muster enough votes to destroy the stone and it still remains in place at the museum. But the
issue may not be over. In the meantime, the
council have asked Archbishop Mario Conti of A spokesman for the church
said “the Archbishop would consider carefully any representation made to him by the civic or religious authorities in
So we don’t know
if he did or did not lift the curse. Perhaps he didn’t know how, since Christian cursing is not something done much
these days. |
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