Improving the Quantity and Quality  
Of Canada's Religious News  
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December 10, 2008
Wayne Holst, who teaches religion and culture at the University of Calgary, penned the following ... Read More

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June 04, 2008
Jerusalem – He is a professor of Islamic Studies at Al Quds University in Jerusalem, and he has s... Read More

On Holy Ground
March 24, 2008
Last week, the Mayor of Vancouver stood on the steps of a downtown Catholic church to make an imp... Read More

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Brainwashing or simple parenting?
March 24, 2008
Children being raised in a religious environment is a volatile issue, at least to anti-theists. A... Read More

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In Ontario’s it’s often the little things that kick up the biggest fuss. This time, i... Read More

Tip:

Religion and Politics in Canada is always a hot topic in a pre-election period.  For an informed look at how the Canadian government should reconsider the role of religion in our country, see the article by Iain Benson, Executive Director of the Centre for Cultural Renwal titled:   "Taking a Fresh Look at Religion and Public Policy in Canada: The Need for a Paradigm Shift."

http://www.culturalrenewal.ca and click on "Federal Study on Religion and Public Policy"

At long last, the report from Gerard Bouchard and Charles Taylor on reasonable accommodation in Quebec has been released, and provides a wealth of story ideas for reporters covering religion in Canada.  For an abridged pdf of the full report, check out this webpage for "Building the Future: A Time for Reconciliation".   Bear in mind that the Commission was launched out of concerns in Quebec over Muslim headscarves, Sikh kirpans, and the possibility of sharia law coming to Canada….so the implications of accommodating religious practices, values, traditions and rights are analyzed within the framework of Canadian society and national values.  Here is the website:

http://www.accommodements.qc.ca


Article Details

Article Added On: June 17, 2004 - over 4 years ago
Title: Faith coverage needs improving, media and religious leaders agree
Author: Andrew Wagner-Chazalon
Publication: ChristianWeek
Publication Date: January 01, 1998 - over 11 years ago
Themes: 1998 Faith and Media conference

Abstract:

It took Deborah Shaw just one day in journalism school to discover the tension between reporters and people of faith.

A professor told her class there is no place for religious faith in journalism since there is no absolute truth. Shaw disagreed and said there is truth in the death and resurrection of Jesus. It was a comment which cost her credibility.

"People told me afterward that they thought I was a religious zealot and a right-wing fundamentalist," Shaw said. "I had to work hard for the rest of the year to establish myself as someone who is credible and who has a thoughtful voice."



It took Deborah Shaw just one day in journalism school to discover the tension between reporters and people of faith.

A professor told her class there is no place for religious faith in journalism since there is no absolute truth. Shaw disagreed and said there is truth in the death and resurrection of Jesus. It was a comment which cost her credibility.

"People told me afterward that they thought I was a religious zealot and a right-wing fundamentalist," Shaw said. "I had to work hard for the rest of the year to establish myself as someone who is credible and who has a thoughtful voice."

Shaw was one of nearly 300 people who gathered at Carleton University June 7-9 for a conference on Faith and the Media. (Among those organizing the conference were ChristianWeek editor Doug Koop and former editor and publisher Harold Jantz.) Many delegates--including many journalists--agreed that people in the media often ignore, belittle or misunderstand the profound spiritual yearnings of our time.

Aloysius Cardinal Ambrozic, the Roman Catholic archbishop of Toronto, said it may be inevitable that a liberal, skeptical press should conflict with religious groups which proclaim divine rather than human truths. "I suspect there is almost an inevitable tension--not hostility, but tension between the Christian faith and the media."

Some senior journalists agreed. Peter Desbarats, the former dean of journalism at the University of Western Ontario, said it is just part of the tension between the "rational elite" and people of faith.

Great and growing void

"The big story of our time, the great and growing void between rationalists and fundamentalists, cannot be covered by journalists who are both liberals and religious illiterates," he said. It's not that journalists deliberately ignore faith issues; it's that they are ill-equipped to see the spiritual side of a news story.

Covering religion and faith no longer means writing about churches--particularly as more and more Canadians are exploring spiritual issues without the help of organized religion. Faith reporting really means trying to understand the moral foundation which makes people do what they do. Even a story like the threat to Atlantic salmon stocks is on some level about morality and ethics, said Ottawa Citizen editor Neil Reynolds. "Is this just a political issue?" he asked. "Is this a Liberal-Conservative-NDP issue, or is this a religious issue with fundamental moral implications? I think it's the latter." The Citizen was widely praised at several conference sessions for being one of the first papers in Canada to eliminate the "religion page ghetto" and instead use all parts of the paper to explore the spiritual side of the news.

Religion sells

Kirk Lapointe, executive editor of an as-yet-unnamed new national Southam paper, hinted that his paper may do something similar when it comes out in October. A paper which does not address the spiritual side of people's lives, he said, risks becoming irrelevant and unread--and unprofitable.

"Religion sells," was how Maclean's editor Robert Lewis put it. Of the five stories which have generated the most letters to the magazine this decade, three have been about religion.

ABC television has found the same thing. Peggy Wehmeyer is the religion correspondent for World News Tonight--the only religion correspondent on any major U.S. network. She says there is a huge audience for stories which explore faith issues, but most reporters don't know how to reach them.

Not only do reporters miss the spiritual elements in seemingly secular stories; many of them don't even know how to cover overtly religious stories. Professional, trained reporters were completely unable to explain the reasons behind the Southern Baptist boycott of Disney, or the rise of the Promise Keepers, or even talk intelligently about the religious faith which sustained the parents of the Iowa septuplets. "There is a real problem with religious illiteracy in the national media," said Wehmeyer.

Whoops

Faith leaders agree. "Quite often reporters who are sent in to do a story don't have a clue about religion or faith," said Bill Phipps, moderator of the United Church of Canada. Sometimes the mistakes are silly, such as the Globe and Mail article which referred to the Christian and Military Alliance (instead of the Christian and Missionary Alliance). Sometimes the mistakes sustain offensive stereotypes, such as the Maclean's cover which called Pakistan's nuclear device the "Islamic Bomb."

In all cases they call into question the accuracy of the reporting. "We don't expect good arts reporting from a reporter who doesn't know the difference between a pas de deux and a Picasso," said John Stackhouse, a professor of religion at the University of Manitoba. "So please, editors, don't send out on religious stories reporters who don't know the difference between a Sikh and a Hindu, never mind the difference between a fundamental Baptist pastor and the 'Christian and Military Alliance.'"

Lois Sweet, the former faith and ethics reporter for the Toronto Star, echoed the remarks of many conference presenters when she urged the media to recognize faith and religion as a powerful force in society, one which is worthy of hard-hitting, professional coverage by skilled journalists. "Covering faith should be seen as just one more aspect of journalistic exploration," she said.

ChristianWeek is "Canada's Christian News Source," publishing news and comment about Christian faith and life in Canada.





 
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