Australian Church Arsonist Blames Norwegian Black Metal Hero
Misc
A devoted follower burnt down a majestic Moonee Ponds church in a multimillion-dollar arson attack
Australia's TheAge.com.au
is reporting that a devoted follower of a Scandinavian band notorious
for its heavy metal anti-Christian music burnt down a majestic Moonee
Ponds church in a multimillion-dollar arson attack.
Novak Majstorovic (photo)
had drunken visions of the 107-year-old Ascot Vale Uniting Church being
responsible for society's problems with law, ethics and morality.
Majstorovic, 19, admitted his passion for the band BURZUM,
whose lead singer was allegedly involved in burning down numerous
Norwegian churches in the 1990s, helped create a heavy metal
ideological imagery based on good and evil.
"It can be explained
through any real meanings, you know, but using God and Satan is just
like a... it's an image," he told police after his arrest.
Victorian arson squad detectives treated Majstorovic as a suspect after investigations revealed his interest in BURZUM and "black metal" music and culture.
Police learnt the band's lead singer Varg Vikernes,
now in jail for murder, was commonly referred to as a Satanist, but was
regarded more as deeply anti-Christian and anti-Semitic.
Majstorovic
on Wednesday (May 4) appeared in the Melbourne Magistrates Court to
plead guilty to arson and burglary from the fire in Maribyrnong Road,
Moonee Ponds, on August 29, 2004.
His lawyer Shannon Dellamarta said the damage was valued at more than $3 million.
In
a summary tendered to the court, the church, widely used by its local
community, was described as majestic and ornate. Its irreplaceable pipe
organ and historic records were destroyed in the fire.
Majstorovic,
who had drunk half a bottle of bourbon, had earlier left a party,
telling guests he was going to burn the church. After entering, he lit
Bibles, scrap paper, books and flags near the pulpit and left.
Asked days later by Detective Sergeant Andrew Kerr if he considered the elderly who had cried over the church or what it had stood for, Majstorovic
replied: "It was what it stood for, but it's... it's just an object,
you know. It's just a building. Faith lies with the individual."
Pressed by Sergeant Kerr
about it being sacred and a "heart and soul of things", he said that
the church "doesn't like people to cling to any sort of idols here on
earth".
Majstorovic said that because he was drunk and
near a church he thought he would act on an ideological belief the
church was responsible for society's problems.
"A lot of the
concepts of my ideologies and stuff would, sort of, stem from heavy
metal, from the imagery of heavy metal, from the metaphors that heavy
metal uses with the, like, Christian sort of metaphors of good and evil
and such," he said.
Magistrate Lisa Hannan bailed Majstorovic, of Hoppers Crossing, to appear in the County Court on August 23.