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JAPAN  UCAN Column - We Need Real Journalism In The Church
By Maryknoll Father William Grimm
January 29, 2008  |  JA04324.1482  |  0 words     Text size  

TOKYO (UCAN) -- Waseda University in Tokyo plans to open Japan's first graduate school of journalism in April.

ja_tokyo.gifThe school's program will be patterned largely upon that of Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism, in New York, the United States, and similar programs in other schools overseas.

Two reports about the opening highlight the need for such a program and prompt thoughts about the state of journalism in the Catholic Church today.

(Journalistic ethics require that I disclose I am an alumnus of the Columbia "J-school," so you might realize some of the biases I bring to this column.)

The Japan Times, an English-language daily that generally follows internationally recognized professional standards, carried a long article about Waseda's plans and included the voices of journalists who are not connected with the program. The article presented various reasons why a professional journalism school is needed in Japan. One of the major problems with the media in Japan is a tendency to defer to political and business leaders, making newspapers and other media little more than mouthpieces for vested interests and the powerful.

Kyodo, the Japanese news agency, also reported the plan, in an article about one-quarter the length of the Times report. The article only quoted the director of the new program and did not touch upon the problems that Times interviewees mentioned. In other words, the report was an example of the sort of journalism the new school is meant to counter.

And what of journalism in the Catholic Church?

Some news sources such as the independent UCA News and Catholic News Service (owned by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops but operating with editorial independence) hold to professional standards of timeliness, attribution, accuracy, balance and verification. There are also news "retailers" (newspapers, blogs, etc.) that hold themselves to the same standards.

However, there has been a proliferation of Catholic "news sources" that do not follow those examples. Bias, distortion, refusal to cover the "bad news," lack of balance, deference to officials and failure to verify are common.

Catholic media outlets with editorial freedom to accurately present the face of the Church to its audience rather than being mouthpieces for "Church authorities" -- Religious superiors, pastors, bishops, curial officials and popes -- are few. One diocesan newspaper I saw had 11 pictures of the bishop on its first nine pages. It was clearly not a paper that intended to present the life of the Church in all its variety.

The chief news that Catholic media must convey is the life of the men and women who are the main body of the Church, the laity. Their story is the story of the Church in the world today, and is too seldom the focus of Church journalism.

Archbishop John Foley (another Columbia J-school graduate) was recently moved from being head of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications to a new job, Pro-Grand Master of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. Though the new position comes with the cardinal's red hat that he did not receive before, it is hard to not see this as a demotion, and therefore a repudiation of the journalistic standards he advocated for the Church during his 23 years in office.

Why does it matter if the Church does not have a media voice like that which should prevail in the secular world?

One reason is that if the Church is incapable or unwilling to report on its life and activities with transparency, others will step in. However, leaving honest reporting of the Church to outside media leaves us open to misunderstanding and even sensationalism. It is hard to refute charges of "cover-up" when, in fact, Catholic journalism either consciously or inadvertently fails to present a full picture of the Church, "warts and all."

We need a trustworthy professional Catholic journalism in order to present the true face of the Church to the world and each other.

Being trustworthy means having a commitment to the truth rather than to looking good. If Church media are seen as PR rather than journalism, others will not believe us when we actually have good news -- as well as the Good News -- to convey, nor will they look to us for information and insight.

Perhaps the Church needs for one of the pontifical universities in Rome to announce that it is introducing a graduate school of journalism just like Waseda's, and for the same reasons.

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Maryknoll Father William Grimm is editor-in-chief of Katorikku Shimbun, Japan's Catholic weekly.

(Accompanying photos available at here

END

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One Comment

  1. mike, usa :

    this author isn't wearing his collar ! The clergy are also administrators of the Gospel, responsible for promoting the Truth of Jesus to all parts of the Earth. THe print organs they establish to help them in their mission, this author calls non-transparent, and more concerned about "looking good". He has some kind of chip on his shoulder. However, there is a point to be made that the laity should have, also, a newspaper dealing with the exercise of their religion. The constant danger with that is the clergy ALSO have a JURIDICAL responsibility in service to the Gospel. If the bishop determines that a publication of a lay magazine or newspaper is under-cutting the authentic representation of the Gospel, he can shut it down, or declare it not Catholic. That's the whole point. To be Catholic, one must be in communion with the visible church united to the Pope. If a lay magazine has that mandate, then it will be subject to Church authority, and its message will dovetail with that of the bishop, usually. Where conflict may arise, discretion must be exercised, humilty, and deference to a suitable degree.
    Otherwise, Catholic individuals can start their own publications, not call them Catholic, and publish what they wish to.....simple.

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