Persecution or Hijinks?
Good reporting is often hard to find. It is a rare thing for the beat reporter (or student reporters) to dig deeper on a routine story. Most of the time this isn’t a problem, but when you start dealing with stories that hint at persecution a little research is imperative. Two different stories dealing with modern Paganism raise the question of persecution, and are frustrating in their lack of detail and research.
First you have a story about books on Wicca and the occult going missing at the Stark County libraries in Ohio.
“Vicki Muzzy, collection development manager for the Stark County District Library, said the district’s 10 branches are missing 25 copies of books dealing with Wicca, one of the world’s oldest pagan religions and often associated with witchcraft. All the books have been checked out, but they never were returned, she said.”
So why are they missing? Library Executive Director Kent Oliver gives us two theories on the missing books.
“People take them because they don’t want other people to read about witchcraft, and people use them without returning them. I think we have a little bit of both going on.”
After that the article interviews a couple librarians, and ends with a quote about libraries being “content neutral”. So the reader is left to guess if this is more a case of Christians stealing the books to keep them out of the hands of the youth, or if it is more a case of the youth stealing the books because they couldn’t attain them otherwise. Commenters on Witchvox are split on the culprits, and I can’t help but think that a little more digging and time spent developing the story could have given a clearer picture of why all of the Wicca books are missing.
A similar problem can be found in the Mills College Weekly. Here we have a case of posters being defaced on campus, and the terminology “hate crime” being thrown around. But I can’t find any reporting on the issue by the paper, instead we get an editorial after the fact.
“We at The Weekly feel it is time for us to respond to recent events on campus that can only be categorized as hate crimes. From the posters put up in protest of Columbus Day in the Fall of 2005 that were taken down to the recent defacement of posters from the Muslim Student Association, the Mills Disability Alliance and the Pagan Alliance, we have a growing and serious problem here on the Mills campus.”
What were they defaced with? Slogans? Hate speech? A big “X”? The paper doesn’t say. Also, while one could see a radical right-winger defacing Muslim and Pagan flyers why the disability group? Is it persecution, or is it a group of drunken college students destroying a bunch of flyers? Again some basic reporting on the event could have given us the context to decide if these actions were part of a hate crime, or simply shenanigans.
Considering the increasingly polarized religious culture we live in, it becomes imperative to expect a higher level of journalism than vague allusions and outraged editorials. Both of these stories could have been important stories that revealed something about the day to day struggles of our faith communities. Instead of answers we are left with more questions and fuel for those looking to prove persecution.
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