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Lela Gilbert

Auteur van Their Blood Cries Out

19+ Werken 718 Leden 5 Besprekingen

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Just As I Am: the life of David Ring as told to Lela Gilbert (1993) — Collaborator, sommige edities123 exemplaren

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Vincent Carroll reviewed a new book in the Wall Street Journal in December of 2008 entitled Blind Spot: When Journalists Don't Get Religion. What a fascinating book, and it made me think of just how blind we all are, in one respect or another.

The headline for Mr. Carroll’s review was “God Is A Problem, Sources Say”, and launches with a statement made in an article in the New York Times in November of that year regarding the attacks on Mumbai. The statement was excerpted in this way: “It is not known if the Jewish center was strategically chosen or if it was an accidental hostage scene.” The Times also speculated that it was an “unlikely target” ………for Islam extremists?

Blind Spot discusses various conflicts throughout the world and the religious “blind spot” that seems to afflict most Western journalists. Editor Paul Marshall, as quoted by Mr. Carroll, said journalists reluctant to accept the “fundamentalist motives” of jihadist motives concentrate on “terrorist statements that might fit into secular Western preconceptions about oppression, economics, freedom and progress.”

I read that statement, and I was reminded immediately of the Kosovo Liberation Army’s attempt to destroy non-Muslim communities in the northern provinces when I was there in 1998, just as Israel today is using the issue with Hamas as a reason to destroy Palestine. Hamas is killing Israelis, and the U.S. – as a sovereign nation that used to be religiously tolerant – pushes to use the fundamentalist Christian God as a reason to infiltrate other conflicts, and so on.

Even in Africa, religion plays a part in conflict. Take, for instance, the Lord’s Resistance Army who hacked and killed hundreds in a church and the surrounding area in DR Congo not more than a couple of weeks ago. Not only was this not a top story in the U.S., the Lord’s Resistance Army – terrorists by all measures – was downgraded to the simple acronym LRA, and reported benignly as yet another hostile terrorist group. Take a look at all the predominant ruling parties in Africa and their adversaries. You will see that every single one of them is divisive not just ethnically, but religiously within that ethnicism.

Journalists ignore the religion factor, but the religion factor is everpresent – in conflict, in economics, in progress, in oppression. No one religious faction is more evil than another, either. They are all contributing factors to conflict, and yet journalists either bury their heads in the sand or are utterly ignorant of the factor religion plays in everything…or they wouldn’t plant a story in a news source as reputable as the New York Times that stupidly thinks that a Jewish center in Mumbai was not a calculated target for Islamist extremists.

Bias is everywhere in Western media – predominantly U.S. media – and most importantly bias against an understanding of fact-based reporting.

Terry Mattingly, one of the contributors to Blind Spot, has this recommendation for quality reporting: “Editors do not need to try to hire more reporters who are religious believers,” but reporters “who take religion seriously, reporters who know, or are willing to learn to hear the music.”

At a bookstore near you: Blind Spot: When Journalists Don’t Get Religion; Paul Marshall, Lela Gilbert, Roberta Green Ahmanson, ed. Oxford, 220 pages, $19.95.
… (meer)
 
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mreed61 | 2 andere besprekingen | Aug 10, 2014 |
A bit outdated in parts but numerous examples demonstrate just how blind journalists are to the subtleties and nuances in religion. A chapter on terrorism and generally the misreporting on the Middle East is particularly instructive.

One key to misinterpreting Al-Qaeda is to downplay what Bin Laden thought critical: the end of the Ottoman Caliphate (pp. 32ff). In an important video produced in November of 2001, in response to the 9/11 attacks Bin Laden maintains: "one of the key turning points in history was the ending of the Ottoman Empire and the fragmentation of the Muslim ummah by Turkish leader Mustafa Kemal Ataturk through his creation of modern secular Turkey and abolition of the caliphate" (p. 32). This basic religious hatred, fostered by Bin Laden and unleashed throughout the Islamic world, has largely been unreported by the secular, anti-Christian American press.… (meer)
 
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gmicksmith | 2 andere besprekingen | Feb 22, 2010 |
NCLA Review -On Our Own is a sensitive and honest book about the concerns and fears of single moms. Each chapter of the book tackles a different personal challenge that Gilbert heard articulated during research with women raising children alone. Gilbert addresses these concerns with practical advice that is never over-simplified or trite. Gilbert writes for an audience of single moms, but because she uses stories from women in a range of different circumstances, her book is eye-opening to a broader audience too. A central theme is how moms need to take care of themselves, forgive themselves, and accept God’s forgiveness. Chapters end with discussion questions. This book is a worthwhile addition to any church library and an excellent basis for a single mom support group or Bible study. Rating: 4 —AMG Navpress 2007, 155p, paper, 9781600061011, $12.99 [248.84]… (meer)
 
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ncla | Dec 13, 2009 |

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19
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Leden
718
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#35,342
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½ 3.4
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5
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