The Los Angeles Times has joyfully discovered a way to keep the
clergy misdeeds of the Catholic Church forever in the minds of its readers and
the public: the obituary page.
Take a look at the obituary of former bishop G. Patrick Ziemann. At
over 900 words, it's not so much an obituary as it is a gleeful
relishing by Duke
Helfand and the Times over the sins of a Catholic authority.
Did Ziemann violate his vows, wreck the trust bestowed upon him, and
cause immense hurt? Absolutely. But is the appropriate place an
obituary for a paper to pile on about the most demeritorious moments of someone's life? About
80% of Ziemann's lengthy obituary does just that.
Michael Jackson publicly admitted to sharing his bed with young boys,
and he had two high-profile molestation cases filed against him. Yet
when the Times reported Jackson's death, the paper buried and glossed
over these episodes. Instead, it trumpeted the loss of the "King of Pop"
across the entire front page. (See
the image of the Times' front page that day.)
-=-=-=-=-
By the way, this is not the first time the Times has done this to a
Catholic clergyman. When Bishop Juan Arzube died on Christmas Day in
2007, the Times
published an obituary with the title, "Juan Arzube, 89; bishop was
lauded as an activist but tainted by accusation." After decades of
service and commitment to serving poor Latino immigrants, Arzube was hit
in 2003 with a single charge of molesting a minor 28 years earlier. Arzube vehemently
denied the charge and sought to meet the man who had accused him. The
Times' obituary of Arzube actually quoted the alleged victim's
attorney to make his case against the bishop.
And to add to the issue, the Times plastered
the word "ACCUSED" under Arzube's photo that accompanied the
obituary. "ACCUSED." Think about it for a minute. We can never know
for sure if any
molestation took place at all. Arzube was never tried in a court of law. (Before people raise the issue: Arzube's
case was part of the bulk $660-million civil settlement in 2007. But,
contrary to what many may claim, by
no means did the settlement itself prove any individual accuser's
claim of abuse.)
I'm just sayin' ...
See also:
TheMediaReport.com: Los Angeles Times - Anti-Catholicism
TheMediaReport.com: Los Angeles Times - Clergy Abuse and School Abuse