LOS         ANGELES, March 10, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Ahead of         the release of Ron Howard's movie based on the best-selling novel         "The Da Vinci Code" in May, US Catholic bishops on Thursday,         March 9, launched a Web site to refute the novel's allegations about the         marital relationship of Jesus Christ.
  
"The         Da Vinci Code' is a mess, a riot of laughable errors and serious         misstatements. Almost every page has at least one of each," the         bishops wrote on the Web site Jesusdecoded.com, reported Agence         France-Presse (AFP).
  
The         United States Conference of Catholic Bishops launched the new Web site         to counter key claims made in Dan Brown's novel that are to be brought         to the big screen in Howard's movie.
  "What         this novel does (is) ... asks people to consider equivalent to the         mainstream Christian tradition quite a few odd claims. Some are merely         distortions of hypotheses advanced by serious scholars who do serious         research. Others, however, are inaccurate or false," the site says.
  The         bishops said the site was aimed at providing "accurate information         on the life of Jesus and the origins of Christianity prior to the         release of the movie.
  
It         offers articles written by theologians, media commentators, art experts         and others that "provide background and also rebut speculation and         inaccuracies about Christ and the origins of Christianity.
  
Brown's         novel, which has sold nearly 40 million copies worldwide, hinges on the         theory that Christ married Mary Magdalene and that they had children.
  
Countering         Distortion
  
Monsignor         Francis Maniscalco of the Diocese of Rockville Centre in New York,         however, said that the Web site was not a knee-jerk defensive reaction.
  
"Reporters         have asked whether even a bestselling novel can seriously damage a         Church of one billion believers. No, in the long run, it cannot. But         that is not the point. The concern of the Church is for each and every         person," he said on the Web site.
  
"If         only one person were to come away with a distorted impression of Jesus         Christ or his Church, our concern is for that person as if he or she         were the whole world."
  
The         movie version of the film, heralded as one of the major cinematic events         of 2006, will star Tom Hanks, French actress Audrey Tautou, and British         actors Sir Ian McKellen and Paul Bettany.
  
In         2003, a US news television was criticized by Catholic bishops for         intention to broadcast a one-hour program on whether Jesus Christ had         been a married man and a father.
  
The         ABC News program, based also on "The Da Vinci Code," was to         air "Jesus, Mary and Da Vinci," to explore the lives of Jesus         Christ and Mary Magdalene.
  
Muslim         countries have been pressing the UN to "pass binding resolutions         obliging all countries to respect religions and religious symbols,         similarly to the anti-Semitism laws" in the aftermath of Danish         cartoons that lampooned Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon         him).
  They         further wanted respect of religions a bedrock in the planned UN Human         Rights Council.
  
They         said in a proposal to the United Nations that the "defamation of         religions and prophets is inconsistent with the right to freedom of         expression" and that states, organizations and the media have a         "responsibility in promoting tolerance and respect for religious         and cultural values."
  
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