[Mb-civic] The New Pope and Journalism?s Crisis of Faith
ean at sbcglobal.net
ean at sbcglobal.net
Fri Apr 22 22:41:50 PDT 2005
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2005-04/22solomon.cfm
The New Pope and Journalisms Crisis of Faith
By Norman Solomon
The papacy of Benedict XVI confronts journalists with a key question:
How much critical scrutiny is appropriate when a religious leader gains
enormous power?
So far, most American media outlets seem to be walking on eggshells
to avoid tough coverage of the new pope. Caution is in the air, and
some of it is valid. Anti-Catholic bigotry has a long and ugly history in
the United States. News organizations should stay away from
disparaging the Catholic faith, which certainly deserves as much
respect as any other religion.
At the same time, the Vatican is a massive global power. Though it has
no army, it is more powerful than many governments. And in the
present day, the headquarters of the Roman Catholic Church is the
capital of political reaction garbed in religiosity. Many dividing lines
between theology and ideology have virtually disappeared.
After more than two decades as a Vatican power broker, Joseph
Ratzinger is now in charge as Pope Benedict XVI. He is extremely
well-positioned to push a longstanding agenda that includes hostility
toward AIDS prevention measures, womens rights, gay rights and
movements for social justice. No one in the hierarchy was more
committed to stances like vehement opposition to condoms while
millions of people contracted cases of AIDS that could have been
prevented. And he has been the commander of the Vaticans war on
liberation theology.
During the 1980s, it was Ratzinger who led the charge from Rome
against the wondrous spirit and vibrant activism that galvanized
Catholics and others across Latin America. While many priests, nuns
and laity bravely joined together to challenge U.S.-backed regimes
inflicting economic exploitation, intimidation, torture and murder with
impunity, Ratzinger used the Vaticans authority to undermine such
community-based resistance. He silenced outspoken Church officials
and installed orthodox clergy who would go along with the deadly
status quo.
Hours after the smoke cleared over the Vatican and the world learned
the name of the new pope, Mary Jo McConahay -- an insightful
journalist who has long covered Latin America -- wrote for Pacific
News Service about a question blowing in the wind. What would have
happened, Guatemalans and El Salvadorans ask to this day, if
Ratzinger and Pope John Paul II had regarded the Latin American call
for liberation from autocratic rulers with the same force with which the
European churchmen supported the Polish Solidarity revolution?
For right-wing religious activists, Ratzinger has been a Godsend. And
now that hes running a church with 1.l billion members, the odds are
excellent that he will proceed to gladden the hearts of misogynists,
homophobes, and anti-left crusaders around the world. Contrary to the
predictable media spin since Tuesday about the uncertainty of his
papal course (reminiscent of the claims in early 2001 that George W.
Bush might turn out to be some kind of moderate president),
everything we know about Ratzingers extensive record during the last
quarter-century tells us that he is a reactionary zealot who is
determined to shove much of the worlds history of progressive social
change into reverse. He is a true believer whose ideological theology
accepts scant diversity and no dissent.
The new papacy is a huge gift to the minority of conservatives in the
United States who are trying to impose their version of morality on the
country and the world.
Soon after the 2000 election, an astute analyst of far-right religious
movements, Frederick Clarkson, wrote that both the evangelical and
Catholic Right are developing and promoting a long-term, fundamental
approach to the practice of faith that links political involvement with
faith itself. In this case, the Catholic Church is building on its own
history and also benefiting from the Christian Right's recent efforts to
create wider space for public expressions of religiosity in civil
discourse. Clarkson added that a shift in the political culture suggests
that personal and unedited expressions of religious belief for political
purposes are no longer considered unseemly. Indeed, the suggestion
is that they are beyond reproach.
And thats much of the problem. When a highly debatable position is
beyond reproach -- when religiosity provides cover for all manner of
manipulations and repression -- its easier for demagogic power-
mongers to get away with murder.
Journalists should not let any pious proclamations intimidate them.
When the policies of a president or prime minister result in
suppression of human rights or fuel public-health disasters, the news
media should not hesitate to expose the consequences. And the
policies of a pope should be no less scrutinized.
________________________________
Norman Solomons latest book, War Made Easy: How Presidents and
Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death, will be published in early
summer. His columns and other writings can be found at:
www.normansolomon.com
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