Subject: re: 6.11 Lord Harry Potter and the Religious Cult's Cracks Getting Harder to Hide
Author:
Posted on: 2025-03-07 14:14:39 UTC
Lily, congratulations on getting into grad school! I hope you’re able to get all the funding you need, and that your research projects are successful! You are extremely cool!
Ugh, I hate to say this, because I do love Hermione, but . . . I can understand Ron’s frustration with her a bit, too? She cares about her friends, but she expresses that care as a “mom friend,” enforcing rules and such. Hogwarts kids have enough adults in their lives; they don’t need more parenting from their own peer group! But . . . I’m also being a hypocrite, because that’s probably the type of friend I was as a child and teenager, too! We partly grow out of it???
Oh wow, the . . . Avalon cult is even more significantly worse than I realized! That hymn is dark beyond dark, like, the violence—the MURDER—is right there in the text! On the page! And they teach this stuff to children! (Yeah, I know the real Bible holds the record for “most characters murdered on page with an animal jawbone,” so real life isn’t really any better, but I’m still horrified.) Oh, and what a surprise, belief in Mother Magic comes with its own variation of rapture ideology. What’s the word for a religion that’s obsessed with the afterlife being more important than the living world, and looking forward to dying? Gosh, it rhymes with “breath tult,” what was it . . .
And speaking of things that were even more significantly worse than I realized, Cygnet Lodge needs to be, uh, razed to the ground and the earth beneath it salted? Because you are telling me, on top of all the troubled teens camp/gay conversion therapy coding, that the Carrows were also kidnapping Muggle children and telling the magic children to MURDER THE MUGGLE CHILDREN? And Draco refused, of course, but I’m betting some of the students actually do it? That is A LOT, wow. Now I’m scared to find out what happened between Draco and Lavender at Cygnet, because I’m scared it involved that Muggle boy somehow . . .
Little boy Gaunt isn’t quite as bad as his canon counterpart, in my eyes. Still malicious for sure, with his ire being focused on anyone “beneath” him, fitting with him growing up in privilege in a stratified society. But it’s also obvious that growing up with a parent has been good for him. He’s not a solitary figure lashing out with harm at anyone for any reason; he’s more calculating and indirect about what he does, with more concrete goals than “make others feel my misery.” It's also interesting that his name preference is chosen for a much more shallow reason: instead of Voldemort constructing a new name out of the old letters to forge himself a new future, Marvolo just wanted to “sound wizardy,” to fit in with (his perception of) his new culture. And of course, we know from Myrtle just how desperate he was to fit in . . . Oh, and Agatha cute, more Agatha please?
The ending scene was very lovely! After all the, uh, heavy? scenes between Harry and Draco this year, it was nice to see Harry just comforting Draco, and giving him somewhere safe to sleep. A nice cuddle for two tired kids!
—doctorlit is amused that if Harry had left Draco at the Slytherin common room, Harry would have been caught by Filch on the way back to Gryffindor’s