http://www.the-tidings.com/2005/0311/difference.htm

Covering a sick pope    
By George Weigel        

Shortly after Pope John Paul II came home from his first February 
hospitalization, my NBC colleague, Keith Miller, sent me an e-mail. A foreign 
correspondent for decades, Keith has seen a lot in his time. But even he found 
"the level of speculation, rumor and innuendo that surrounded the pope's bout 
of ill health...amazing." 

What accounts for all this? Is it the press (as the Vatican would insist), or 
the Vatican's mishandling of the press (as the media would insist)? Perhaps 
it's a bit of both. 

Two false assumptions continue to blur the vision of a lot of journalists 
(although not, I'm happy to report, the people in charge at NBC or my friend 
John Allen, whose CNN commentary was level-headed and perceptive, as usual). 

The first false assumption is captured in a default phrase we've heard since 
1994: "the frail and failing pope" --- a phrase so common that it's assumed it 
must be true. Yet these ubiquitous adjectives obscure far more than they 
illuminate. The pope isn't "failing," if by "failing" we mean someone who's 
likely to die at any moment. As for "frail," when you touch John Paul II today, 
he still feels like the sturdy athlete he once was. 

Of course he's got a serious neurological problem and terrible arthritis in his 
knees; 26-plus years in the papacy have taken a considerable toll. But if 
"frail" connotes a porcelain figurine ready to shatter at any moment, that 
isn't the pope. A lot of the press corps believed its own "frail and failing" 
story-line --- and overly excited reporting (not to mention groundless 
speculation) followed.

The second false assumption that distorts reporting from Rome is the widespread 
conviction among reporters that the Vatican lies, or at least dissembles, about 
everything. Like every other institution of consequence in the world, the Holy 
See "manages" the news, in the sense of putting out the story it wants told. In 
this instance, though, as in previous cases when John Paul II was hospitalized, 
the story was, in the main, accurate --- if sometimes delayed longer than makes 
sense in a global 24/7 news environment. 

Still, if you believe "they're always hiding something important" or "they're 
always spinning," it's hard to see the facts for what they are. (At the 
beginning of the first February frenzy, I was trying to calm an interviewer 
who, following the "failing"/dissembling script, asked, "Well, then, why did 
they take the pope to the hospital so late at night?" "Because," I explained, 
"that's when he was feeling poorly.") 

It's certainly true that the higher echelons of the Curia could be more 
disciplined in their interactions with world press; ill-advised comments from 
one senior figure triggered a month-long sub-frenzy to the main frenzy, this 
time about a papal abdication being under active consideration among senior 
churchmen. On the other hand, that sub-frenzy was also the product of a media 
machine that, having been revved up to maximum RPMs, had to find something to 
justify staying at fever pitch for a while longer. 

I hope some lessons were learned in recent weeks. It's entirely possible that 
John Paul II will make many more trips to the Gemelli before he's called home 
to glory; it would be ridiculous if every future papal hospitalization 
triggered frantic speculation and rumor-mongering. 

By the same token, the codicil to this first lesson is that people really do 
care; the outpouring of concern for the Holy Father bore global witness to the 
unique place he holds in the hearts of men and women around the world, many of 
whom aren't Catholics. So attention should be paid --- if it's serious, 
sober-minded attention, not fevered, groundless speculation.

The other lesson to be taken from last month's drama is that the cast of 
characters isn't necessarily in place for the next conclave --- at least not 
yet. Don't be surprised, for example, if John Paul II creates new cardinals at 
some point this year. 

All of which brings to mind a truth neatly articulated by that great 
metaphysician, Lawrence Peter (Yogi) Berra: "It ain't over 'til it's over."

George Weigel is a senior fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy Center in 
Washington, D.C.





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