Is the Los Angeles Times "piling on" when it
comes to covering sex abuse by Christians? Have they misled their
readers again?
In the front section of today's Los Angeles Times
(Tuesday, September 5, 2006) is an article,
"Sex Charges Shadow a Local Curiosity in Texas: Five monks at the Christ
of the Hills Monastery are accused of abusing boys. Police also say the
church's famous crying icon was 'a scam'" by Times staffer
Lianne Hart. The piece is accompanied by three color photos and a
small map of Texas (to illustrate the location of the story,
Blanco, Texas (population 1505)).
In a large color photo above the article is a man
dressed in black, as a priest, surrounded by several relics and icons
depicting Jesus and other Christian imagery. The caption of the photo
reads, "Caretaker: Christ of the Hills Monastery in Blanco, Texas, is
empty now. Father Thomas Flower of a San Antonio urban mission says he
is looking after the place." Another color photo shows an icon of the
Virgin Mary.
"Christ of the Hills," "Monastery," "Father," "urban
mission," "monks," "Virgin Mary" ... Another example of abuse in the
Catholic Church, right? At first glance, it would appear so. But
it isn't. Buried more than halfway through the article is the
fact that the monastery was affiliated with the
Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, and they cut ties
with the monks seven years ago. Why are these facts
practically hidden in the article? Deception, anyone?
It's difficult to ignore the appearance of an ongoing
anti-Catholic and anti-Christian agenda at the Los Angeles Times.
The Times coverage of the sex abuse scandal in the Los Angeles
archdiocese has been challenged numerous times for inaccuracy and
distortion. (Check out
LA-Clergy cases.com for several examples.)
The Catholic
League has found
several instances of Catholic bashing at the Times. In
addition, here at NewsBusters, we've posted several stories that point
to an anti-Catholic and/or anti-Christian agenda at the paper (here,
here,
here, and
here are
just a few examples).
Also witness: On November 19, 2005, the Los Angeles
Times devoted much of the top of its front page, several
photos, and a very generous 3805 words to instances of clerical
abuse
three decades ago in two remote villages in
Alaska. As with all stories of abuse, it was a sad,
angering, and tragic story. But what about proportionality? Alaska?
Here's what I mean:
Last month, a substitute teacher who worked in
13 Southern California school districts reportedly told
police he molested between 100 and 200 girls. Here is a story in
the paper's backyard, yet the Los Angeles Times
reported the story (August 5, 2006) on page B3 with
723 words, less than one fifth of the word total of the story
thousands of miles away and decades ago in Alaska. (And, yes, it was
also fewer words than we had about Texas today.)
"Why Haven't Teachers Received Same Scrutiny As Catholic Priests?"
I'm not the only one asking. Tom Hoopes at National Catholic
Register and National Review Online is asking also. He's
right on (bold mine):
Any institution that has allowed children to be
harmed by predators deserves to be taken to task for it. No
institution should get a pass. And no profession should get a pass.
Not preachers, not priests — not even teachers.
Especially not teachers. And yet …
Consider the statistics: In accordance with a requirement of
President Bush’s No Child Left Behind Act, in 2002 the Department of
Education carried out a study of sexual abuse in the school system.
Hofstra University researcher Charol Shakeshaft looked into the
problem, and the first thing that came to her mind when Education
Week reported on the study were the daily headlines about the
Catholic Church.
“[T]hink the Catholic Church has a problem?” she said. “The
physical sexual abuse of students in schools is likely more than 100
times the abuse by priests.”
"More than 100 times"?!
In addition to Hoopes' excellent piece, check out
"Abuse cover-up in schools seen as church's deep pockets targeted"
by Wayne Laugesen (National Catholic Register).
Proportionate reporting at the Los Angeles Times?
No way.