A week-long seminar in Rome aimed at helping journalists better
understand the Catholic Church is being called a success by organizers.
“I think that some of the prejudices that some journalists may have
about the Church fall away when they see things directly and meet the people
who are directly in charge of many different aspects of the Church,” course
coordinator Professor Daniel Arasa told CNA.
Entitled “The Church up Close,” the course concluded on Sunday, Sept.
16. During the previous week a group of 28 journalists from across the globe
took part in a series of seminars, personal meetings and on-site visits
throughout the Eternal City.
The goal of the course, according to its creators, is to give
journalists “an array of tools to strengthen their coverage” of the Church,
including “a basic sense of the lay of the land at the Vatican” and “a serious,
in-depth analysis of specific hot-button issues confronting today’s Church.”
It also seeks to introduce journalists to some of the key players in
the Vatican, provide them with an overview of the Catholic history and culture
and allow them an opportunity to discuss the relationship between the Church
and the media.
Paul Burnell, an online journalist with the BBC in Manchester, England
and course participant, said that the experience “opens journalists’ eyes to a
whole new way of thinking, a whole new way of being and a whole new way of
understanding, because normally all you get is a surface view of an
organization like the Catholic Church.”
This year’s itinerary included visits to the Vatican Museums, Vatican
Library and the Pope’s weekly general audience.
The journalists were also given off-the-record briefings from top
officials in various Vatican departments, including the Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith, the Secretariat of State and the Congregation for Bishops.
“This gave us a real understanding of the depth, the processes, the
thinking and the richness of a Church which has been here for a long, long
time,” Burnell remarked.
Among the guest speakers for the course were Cardinal Raymond Burke,
the Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura; Archbishop Rino
Fisichella, President of the Pontifical Council for the Promotion of the New
Evangelization; and Father Federico Lombardi, Director of the Holy See Press
Office.
“The Church up Close” is the brainchild of the Pontifical University of
the Holy Cross, Opus Dei’s university in Rome.
This year’s event is the third of its kind, and organizers are already
looking to the next one.
“I think the proof of the impact that this program has on journalists
is that many of the participants have come this year because previous
participants have told them about this course and recommended it,” the
university’s Professor Arasa explained.
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