By Wlady Pleszczynski on 4.21.05 @ 12:04AM
Mr. Kokoski has the first and last word on the new pope.
Amid the reactions to the elevation of Joseph Ratzinger to the
papacy, there have been some doozies. My favorite came from a
furious Ms. Cokie Roberts on Tuesday's night's Nightline.
She must have been venting something fierce all evening, because
Ted Koppel, none too pleased himself, introduced her with these
words: "Cokie Roberts, you, you were, I gather, able to contain
your enthusiasm, when you heard the news."
Whereupon Cokie shot back with this. (And if looks could kill,
Nightline would have lost its entire viewership, such as
it is.)
Well, this, this choice is really something that is
different from how Americans approach a lot of things. It's
Cardinal Ratzinger who wrote the letter "Dominus Iesus," about
[how] other religions are -- deficient. And, and he said, in that
letter, he said that, that, "relativistic theories which seek to
justify religious pluralism are bad." Well, now, the problem with
that is this country is based on religious pluralism. He has
written a letter on, on women and feminism that was very disturbing
to many women, myself included. Where he essentially, after Pope
John Paul II had apologized to women for the sexism in the Church,
this letter went back and essentially said that feminism was the,
the source of divorce, that it was the source of problems in, in
marriage. When, you know, without ever talking about the many
problems that, that happen in marriages where women are the
victims. So, there are a lot of areas here where American Catholics
will look at this papacy and not recognize it.
For a more eloquent version of such unhappiness, albeit more
hysterical, one could turn to Andrew Sullivan.
Perhaps because of sheer exhaustion he seemed more composed
yesterday, restricting himself to observations such as this:
"Ratzinger's views on freedom of thought within the church are
deeply authoritarian; his views on what conscience is are
totalitarian; his conflation of his own views with the Holy Spirit
are [sic] offensive." Two days into the new papacy and Sullivan is
a spent force.
For calmer, more respectful reactions to Ratzinger's election I
turned to an unexpected source: the correspondence pages of the
Washington Post and New York Times. In each case,
the lead letter was reverential. The Times' missive began in a voice of simple kindness: "With deep
joy I offer Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger my warm congratulations and
most fervent good wishes on his election to the papacy." The
Post's opener began with similarly kind words. "The
former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger is a man rich in spiritual
passion, humility, self-denial, and love for the cause of God and
of man." It then hit me that that last description was also to be
found in the second paragraph of the Times' lead
letter.
There was no reason why it shouldn't have been. Turns out each
letter was signed by the same man: Paul Kokoski, of Hamilton,
Ontario. Other than the abbreviated opening in the Post's
version, and a few slight editorial tics (the Post changed
Mr. Kokoski's reference to Ratzinger's defending Catholicism
against "modern errors," as the Times had it, to defending
against "the errors of modernity"), the letters were identical.
How do you like that! Has this ever happened before, the
nation's two top papers running the same opening letter? Was this a
case of great minds thinking alike? Or will each now feel it was
had?
By the way, you might be wondering how I knew the version with
"modern errors" was the correct one. Because that's the way it
appeared in the versions of Mr. Kokoski's letter that appeared in
yesterday's Miami Herald and National Post of Canada. The Los
Angeles Times also posted the letter, and also in the lead
spot, though without the disputed clause.
Who knows how many other outlets ran the Kokoski letter? At the
risk of earning Andrew Sullivan's wrath, I bet the Holy Spirit
does.
topics:
Religion, Catholicism