The New Yorker is "a magazine that is not seriously edited,"
writes
George Weigel in his latest column ("The
New Yorker spins the pope"). Weigel reached his stinging conclusion
after examining
a recent article ("The Pope and Islam") from Jane Kramer, who pens a
"Letter From Europe" feature for the magazine. In addition to citing the
piece for falsehoods, mis-readings and errors, Weigel zaps Kramer's
article as a "lengthy tantrum" and "a wailing wall for left-leaning
Vaticanisti, disgruntled Curial bureaucrats, and Italian Catholic
activists unhappy with Benedict XVI's challenge to Islam."
Here's the beginning of Weigel's article:
The New Yorker was once famous for the ferocity of its
fact-checking and editing. No more.
Any magazine whose editors give a pass to falsehoods (e.g.,
Catholics believe that "heaven, and possibly earth, belongs
exclusively to them"), grossly tendentious mis-readings of documents
(e.g., Vatican II's Nostra Aetate taught "the dim possibility
of Jewish salvation"), and factual errors (e.g., Karol Wojtyla was
"one of the young theological advisers at Vatican II") is a magazine
that is not seriously edited.
Jane Kramer's lengthy tantrum in the New Yorker's April 2 issue,
"The Pope and Islam," is really several articles in one. It's a
wailing wall for left-leaning Vaticanisti, disgruntled Curial
bureaucrats, and Italian Catholic activists unhappy with Benedict
XVI's challenge to Islam.
Kramer's article intended to articulate the Church's recent approach to
Islam. Kramer's efforts, however, fall unpleasantly flat, Weigel opines.
In addition to negligent research, Weigel also takes issue with the
people whom Kramer interviewed for the column.
Finally, Jane Kramer really ought to find herself some new Roman
sources. The men she cites remind me of nothing so much as those
unfortunate Japanese soldiers found on remote Pacific islands in the
1970s --- men who never, somehow, got the word that Emperor Hirohito
had packed it in 30-some years before. One of
her-refugees-from-radicalisms-past sighs that Vatican II was "the
1968 of the Catholic Church." Memo to source: It's over. Get over
it.
Ouch.
The New Yorker: Funny cartoons ... Not-so-funny scholarship.
HT:
The Tidings.