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Meridian Magazine : : Home

An Open Letter to Journalists Covering the 2002 Winter Olympics
by Maurine Proctor
Editor-in-Chief, Meridian Magazine ( www.ldsmag.com )
The Place Where Latter-day Saints Gather

The 2002 Winter Olympics are just beginning, and already Latter-day Saints are learning that the persecution that drove us from state to state and finally, in 1847, to the forgotten, arid basin of the Great Salt Lake still continues.

The only difference is now the mistreatment is slightly more sophisticated, and instead of night riders, it is night writers—those members of the press who are bashing us in their coverage of the games.

Call it the journalists' temptation—going for flair instead of accuracy—but Latter-day Saints are continually perplexed how, with such contempt, the media portrays an international Christian church with more than 11 million members. As we anticipate the days ahead, many Latter-day Saints wonder just how the press will continue to weigh us, and whether the flood of news from the games will be more of the sometimes mortifying, smug treatment we are so often used to receiving.

The question is: will the reporters covering the Winter Olympics drop into Utah, do their drive-by reporting, and leave the population slumped under a new load of misinformation and stereotyping?

When journalists talk about members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, they ought to be wary of creating a caricature. The picture, too often drawn by carelessness or prejudice, is so woefully out of shape, Latter-day Saints don't recognize themselves in the articles. We either read that we are part of a vast wealthy, clannish and secretive empire or that we are Puritanical hicks. We see our rich history reduced to polygamy and our complex theology to a cartoon.

No wonder some who come to Utah are disappointed. They ask if they can see one of those Mormons, and are frankly disappointed to see that the normal people all around them are members of the faith.

Jan Shipps, professor emeritus in religious studies at Indiana University and the foremost non-Mormon scholar on the church, cited that a European reporter was so convinced of his own misunderstanding of Mormonism as bizarre that "they called me to say 'we know it's bizarre, tell us how' or 'give us a quote that will let people know we're right.'"

Our American society has struggled to come to a higher plateau in our sensitivity to minorities. We don't brook racial or ethnic slurs. A journalist who portrayed that attitude would be widely and justifiably excoriated. Yet, the press corps takes its often aggressively hostile stance toward Latter-day Saints as if a sign that it is enlightened and sophisticated.

The Press Sneers
Hugh Hewitt, the creator of the book and PBS series, Searching for God in America, notes, "The early Church practice of multiple marriages was abandoned a century ago, and although the Mormons remain opposed to alcohol use, they share this tenet with many other religions. To the average secular observer in the media, then, the LDS should be just another religion. But it has drawn and continues to draw a distinct hostility from mainstream media. As the Olympics approach, the criticism and snickering will increase. Listen for it. You will certainly hear it."

In the last few days, we've been hearing it. Try this opening to Time's article written by Terry McCarthy, who describes the offices of the church's First Presidency in sinister terms. "In these hushed precincts, groups of gray-haired men in identical black suits pass by, beaming smiles like undertakers. Everyone is scrupulously polite, but as a visitor, one feels that one has been dropped into the middle of a plot, without knowing the beginning or the end."

What McCarthy saw were men in business suits who smiled and were polite, but the scene has been recast by the reporter's prejudices. McCarthy concocted "identical black" suits, transformed smiles into the fawning mince of an undertaker, and made courtesy "scrupulous" as if it was put on like a mask. None of the dark nuances here escape the reader, but, if by some chance we should have missed the reporter's bias, McCarthy can't resist making it clear that it is all part of a "plot."

The Los Angeles Times gets away with headlines that call Utah a "theocracy," a word pregnant with meaning as the U.S. grapples with the Taliban. The Associated Press says that the Latter-day Saints made their wilderness migration to Utah in 1847 because "they were on the run from public scrutiny." This forgets the salient detail that they were driven from their homes in the middle of winter by other American citizens who had assassinated their prophet and despised them. Thousands of them wore out shoes and perished along that trail west. "Scrutiny" should be changed to "persecution." The Latter-day Saints didn't want to hide; they wanted to live.

In the drone of a Johnny-one-note, The New Yorker's recent lengthy article cites polygamy 22 times. U.K's The Guardian says mockingly, "Most of this seething mass of Mormon children do seem to grow up in a spirit of acceptance, going off to do their two-year missions elsewhere and then marrying other happy Mormons to produce many more children of their own." Translation: Mormons breed like rabbits, producing children who are too dumb to know better than to follow in the footsteps of their benighted parents.

Media Instills Prejudice
Latter-day Saints mostly ignore the strange press they get, but in a society where media becomes a prime source of education, journalists are our teachers, and their tilt can become society's.

Before my husband and I founded Meridian, an Internet magazine for Latter-day Saints now visited by over 100,000 unique readers a month in all 50 states and 112 countries, we held focus groups in New York with media buyers to determine their likelihood of placing ads in our forthcoming publication. They represented all-American clients—cold cereals and snack foods, disposable diapers and automakers—the very group that should have been eager to advertise with our family-centered, educated, and affluent readers. Behind a two-way mirror we watched while the moderator asked them what they knew about Mormons. Their answers were an embarrassment. They assumed church members were uneducated, rural, blue collar, stiff, uninteresting, bland, narrow-minded. One of these summed up his feelings, "I don't know any Mormons, but I know I wouldn't want one for a friend."

It was such a shocking moment of bigotry, the moderator stopped the session and came back to ask us if we were OK. What should have been surprising is that none of us was surprised. To be a Latter-day Saint means that a wave of misconceptions often precedes you, many of these powered by the media.

Ironically, it is the same media who mock that Latter-day Saints are overly concerned about the way they are portrayed. In recent days, we have been called alternately eager or self-effacing. When the church created story ideas for the press, reporters opined that the games were just an excuse for the Mormons to proselytize. If they hadn't reporters would have called the church secretive.

An Invitation to Journalists
This is a call to journalists who will be doing stories on the Latter-day Saints to be intelligent, tolerant, and careful in your reporting. Religious conviction—especially Christian conviction—too often receives a sneer from the press as if belief were something to belittle. Do you suppose that this does no harm? That in a world seeking to overcome cultural division and bigotry, you don't propel all of us backward?

If you are going to do a story on Latter-day Saints, ask the questions that really take the pulse of this people, that capture the reality that they know. What, for instance, makes The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints so dynamic and appealing that it is consistently the fastest-growing church in America? Why does it inspire so much loyalty from its people that youngsters, in the midst of college give up scholarships, and athletic teams to go on two-year missions at their own expense? What does it mean to this people to believe in a modern-day prophet—and how does President Gordon B. Hinckley interpret the meaning of religion in a world that is growing increasingly secular?

Surely, everyone is endlessly tired of the old saw that some Mormons once practiced polygamy. If you want to ask a really interesting historical question, ask how official persecution and mob rule could have so flourished in 19th century America, that the civil rights of a religious minority were thoroughly trampled.

What a story there is that in 1838, Missouri Governor Lilburn W. Boggs, could have gotten away with issuing an executive extermination order on the Latter-day Saints, demanding that they leave his state or be wiped out like so many insects. What compelling journalism could be in the little-known pathos of a people in the winter of 1846 who had to finish their temple in Nauvoo, Illinois while they also built wagons to flee into the western wilderness from persecutors who wouldn't let them stay until spring.

I have great, great grandmothers on two different lines who made part of that journey. They both died in their 30's of chills, fever, and scurvy in a hastily assembled Nebraska village called Winter Quarters, built because they didn't have supplies, strength or time to walk on to the West. The journals that the people left behind tell of their enormous woe. They described their scurvy, "The flesh would rot and drop off, some to the bones."

To capture the essence of a people, you have to listen to them. You have to go to the heartland of their experience and find what it means to them. An opportunity awaits journalists who descend upon Salt Lake in the following days. In your reporting you can open a window on a people that have been misunderstood, or you can reflect your story back upon your own prejudices. What you write may say more about you than it does about the Latter-day Saints.

 

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© 2001 Meridian Magazine.  All Rights Reserved.

 

 

About the Author:


Maurine Proctor started her writing career 30 years ago with the Chicago Sun-Times and has gone on to write more than a dozen books, a weekly radio show for 6 1/2 years (heard on over 300 stations), and edit two magazines. She wrote The Spoken Word for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir's weekly broadcast for fifteen years (broadcast to approximately 550 radio stations, 1,700 cable systems and over 100 TV stations). She is currently the Editor-in-Chief of Meridian Magazine ( www.ldsmag.com ) a daily updated, online magazine with a team of 70 writers. Maurine received her undergraduate degree in English from the University of Utah and her master's degree from Harvard. She is married to Scot Proctor (the Publisher of Meridian) and lives with her family in Fairfax, Virginia.

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