K
kalt
Guest
What gives a relative he right to change someone’s relgigious affiliation (even just on paper) after the person is dead?Did you see my follow up thread? The mormontimes newspaper puts the story for all to understand.
mormontimes.com/mormon_voices/joel_campbell/?id=11233
…I am truly disappointed if LDS Church members who are not relatives to Father Damien did this. If relatives did this, then they followed the rules. Latter-day Saints have a connection to Father Damien. Because of the LDS membership in Hawaii, Latter-day Saints benefited from Father Damien’s service. In fact, an 84-year-old leprosy survivor who is Mormon attended the canonization service. Mormons should revere Father Damien, but not this way if there was no familial connection.
When newspapers run stories critical of someone or something they usually rely on more than one source.
Yet in Radkey’s case, it’s open-mic night at the Trib.
Another issue that ought to worry readers is just how Utah’s Independent Voice is independent from Radkey’s manipulation. Who knows if Radkey has hoarded a long list of perceived LDS offenses and is simply waiting to dribble them out each slowly to the Tribune for maximum self-serving effect.
Furthermore, in the most recent article about Father Damien, several key questions appeared unasked. Is it possible that Father Damien did have relatives that did submit his name for temple work? The Tribune never explains what a task it might be to police the LDS Church’s honor system. How often does the system fail? How many names are submitted a year? How many names are there in the system? Have violators been disciplined? What has the church done to improve the system? The church may not answer many of these questions, but there should be some evidence that the Tribune asked them. Let’s hope the award-winning religion reporters at the Tribune do a better job next time.
A draft of this column was provided to the Salt Lake Tribune for comment. The following a response from Terry Orme, Tribune managing editor for news and business:
"Our decisions on whether or not to report on LDS Church proxy baptisms are handled the same way we handle all news decisions. We ask: Is this news? And: Is this something our readers should know?
"You answer the first question when you say the story makes its way around the world. And as a prominent source of LDS Church news, it is safe to say a proxy baptism and sealing of a Catholic saint to a wife is a story Salt Lake Tribune readers would want to read. If we were to choose to not report it, I would have to ask: Are we fulfilling our commitment to readers?
“We always verify Helen Radkey’s information and of course the LDS Church was contacted for the story. We have run numerous questions past the church on this subject, but they rarely go beyond a statement. Any context they provide would be most valuable and welcome.”
About using Radkey as a source for stories: “We clearly identified her as a critic of the LDS Church, and pointed out that she hits on this issue a lot. Sen. Orrin Hatch is a critic of the Obama administration. Should we stop quoting him?”
About the story needing more context and voices: "We attempted to contact Roman Catholic leaders, but were unsuccessful. I, too, feel the need for more context on many stories. That is a reality of daily journalism. But in this case it wasn’t for lack of trying.
"The bottom line is that many people of many faiths take offense at the practice of proxy baptisms. And what made this even more troubling to many of them is the sealing of a canonized Catholic priest to a wife.
“You say The Salt Lake Tribune has been recognized nationally for our religion coverage. What you don’t say is that The Tribune’s coverage of the LDS Church is singled out when our coverage is called the best in the nation.”
LDS really just doesn’t get it. Are they being willfully dense?