Italian courts have ruled in favor of Benjamin Harnwell and Steve Bannon’s proposed “Academy for the Judeo-Christian West” at the Trisulti charterhouse in central Italy. Italy’s top state prosecutor had sued Harnwell for “fraudulently” obtaining the lease for the monastery and failing to pay €200,000 in rent. However, after years of grueling lawsuits through civil and criminal courts, Harnwell was fully exonerated, with the magistrate ruling that he had obtained the lease correctly and paid all funds due. This is a blow against politically-driven prosecutions of Trump-allied figures, said Harnwell, who was jubilant as he left the courtroom.
The proposed academy aimed to provide the world’s future populist politicians and influencers with the rhetorical skills to challenge liberal worldviews. Funded by Bannon and a coterie of unnamed associates in right-wing circles, Harnwell was the sole applicant to lease the monastery when the government sought new buyers in 2016. The curriculum was designed to include courses on “Cultural Marxism,” “The Church as an Early Business Enterprise,” and Islam, blending libertarianism and conservative Catholicism. This scheme promised to train right-wing politicians and influencers in the art of persuasive argumentation and help them combat the liberal agenda.
The ruling Thursday potentially lays the groundwork for Harnwell to reclaim the monastery after being pre-emptively evicted in 2021. The verdict was originally due in December but was postponed to March, leaving Harnwell questioning how he was removed from the monastery without ever being convicted of any crime.