July 28, 2022
Editorial
The muting of approval following Pope Francis’ wholesale, emotional, and historic apology on Canadian soil for the “evil” done to Indigenous people has come in two forms.
One is an entirely understandable cautionary response from Indigenous people themselves – often political leaders on First Nation’s territories – who voice appreciation for the pontiff’s words but insist speech is but a preliminary to reconciling action. Given the history of sweet promises and bitter betrayal Indigenous people have experienced for centuries, the caveat qualifies as wisdom.
The second is the predictable sour approach of a swath of secular journalists who are covering the papal penitential visit as though it were a garden-variety campaign by generic political figures subject to the Iron Law of Election Reporting: find the negative and amplify. Of course, its source is primarily the fundamental intellectual laziness that attracts an alarmingly high percentage of practitioners to the journalistic craft. But to consume much of the coverage is to detect more than a mere soupçon of good old-fashioned anti-Catholic hostility as well.
The hostility plays out in classic media gas lighting fashion:
Nor have Canada’s Catholic bishops made only lofty promises to raise the $30 million. As The Catholic Register reported five days before Pope Francis arrived, the fund’s the all-Indigenous national board has already underwritten a first project. Using some of the $4.6 million raised to date by Catholics, the Cote Culture Camp in Saskatchewan, northeast of Regina, put “children and youth in practical touch with their language, ceremonies, history and heritage through land-based instruction and continuing language classes,” our Associate Editor Michael Swan reported.
More, without question, will follow. Does that obviate the Church taking further action in future to redress past wrongs? Does it make the evil and sins for which Pope Francis apologized simply go away? By no means. Making good things happen doesn’t mean wrong things never happened. Wrongs are history. They endure. But actions, particularly actions that seek genuine forgiveness, can be signifiers of change, indeed, of progress.
Indigenous people have every right to choose to test the reality of that progress to their satisfaction. But that must be carefully distinguished from media negativity and, yes, measures of journalistic animus toward Holy Mother Church, intended to wrap the papal visit in a shroud of sour insignificance.
Editorial