Pope Francis 'scores goals' for image of Catholic
Church
Very recently, it was
hard to find a good word about the Catholic Church in the world's press, amid
sex abuse and other scandals. That has changed dramatically, with Pope Francis
riding the crest of a wave that has culminated in him being named Time
magazine's person of the year.
We asked Vatican
commentator Gerard O'Connell, who reported on the PR failures
three years ago, to examine what has changed.
Pope Francis has been
a godsend to the Catholic Church and to the Vatican. Prior to his election, the
Vatican was bogged down with a negative image in the world's eyes, due to
scandals and blunders.
It was in free-fall,
with little sign of relief on the horizon. But after Benedict XVI resigned on
28 February, and Argentina's Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was elected Pope 13
days later, the tide turned.
Ever since Pope
Francis made his first appearance on the central balcony of St Peter's Basilica
on the evening of 13 March, the Vatican has basked in the glow of positive
media as he touched hearts across the globe by embracing people with
deformities, reaching out to the mentally and physically disabled, kissing the
feet of young prisoners, including a Muslim woman, and launching a global
consultation on the family.
“Start Quote
Yes, we have a strategy: kick the ball to
Francis and he scores the goals! He's better than Maradona and Messi combined”
Has the first-ever
Latin American Pope been responsible for this dramatic transformation, or has
the Vatican suddenly become media savvy thanks to a carefully honed
communications strategy?
I put that question to
Greg Burke, 53, a former Fox News TV reporter whom the Vatican hired in July
2012 to help improve its failing media strategy. International media recently
credited him with being behind this amazing turnaround in the global perception
of the Vatican.
They hailed him as the
"PR genius", "marketing mastermind", that has quietly
worked behind the scenes to project Pope Francis into the international
limelight and lead the Catholic Church out of one of its darkest periods in
recent history.
"Give me a
break!" Burke retorted sharply when I put this theory to him. Dismissing
it as a total misrepresentation of reality, he insisted: "It's him! It's
him!", referring to Pope Francis. "He's the one who's done all
this." Then he confided: "Yes, we have a strategy: kick the ball to
Francis and he scores the goals! He's better than Maradona and Messi
combined."
He cited two
high-profile initiatives that Francis decided to undertake at short notice and
"scored goals": his visit to Lampedusa to highlight the tragic plight
of migrants from Africa and the Middle East who drowned at sea while fleeing
poverty and war in search of a better life in Europe; and his peace initiative
for Syria, involving a day of fasting and prayer just as the US was considering
bombing the country. "The ideas were his, we just helped with the
media," Burke recalled.
Encounter
not confrontation
Francis tends to
prefer actions to words to convey the message of Jesus, and frequently takes
the Vatican off-guard with spontaneous gestures of compassion, love and
tenderness. "We never know what he will do next," Burke admitted.
"Do you seriously
think that we planned to have the Pope embrace and kiss the man with boils? Or
respond with such tenderness to the five-year-old boy that came up and stayed
beside him while he was addressing a large audience?" Burke asked me. He
was referring to two recent happenings in St Peter's Square which photographers
and TV cameras immortalised and broadcast worldwide.
Messi's rival?
Vladimir HernandezBBC Mundo
It may come as a
surprise to those outside Argentina that Pope Francis was not always seen in
his home country as the unifying figure he is considered today by many
Catholics around the world.
When he was still
Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio he was known as a staunch critic of liberal reforms
that have recently been approved in Argentina, in particular the legislation
that allowed same sex marriages.
This stance often set
him against most liberal or left-leaning sectors of Argentine society.
But Cardinal Bergoglio
was also a very powerful figure, and on many occasions his Sunday sermons even
made it into the headlines of the right-wing press.
Today, however, being the first Pope from
Argentina and Latin America, it is probably fair to say he is a figure of
enormous national pride, rivalling the footballer Lionel Messi as one of the
country's icons.
"The Francis
effect" has energised the Catholic Church and opened many people's hearts,
in Asia and the Middle East too, but it has also led to rising expectations
that this Jesuit Pope will introduce radical changes in the Church's stance
towards women, the divorced and remarried, homosexuals and many other issues.
This is causing
concern among many Vatican officials and Church leaders, including such ardent
supporters as Cardinal Walter Kasper who, in a new biography of Francis
(Francisco: Vida y Revolucion, by Elisabetta Pique), warned against
"exaggerated expectations that will necessarily end in new disappointments"
because "the new Pope can renew the Church, but he cannot invent a new
Church".
Vatican officials are
aware that "the golden glow" could fade under new attacks or
disillusionment, even if "the Teflon Pope" can help soften their
impact.
One such attack came
last week when the Vatican was accused of not responding adequately to the UN
Committee for the Rights of the Child. For this reason they are working hard
behind the scenes to overcome past communications failings and develop an
integrated media strategy that can better respond to future challenges.
Pope Francis rivals the footballer Lionel
Messi as one of Argentina's icons
Many believe this will
require structural changes too, as Archbishop Claudio Maria Celli, head of its
Council for Social Communications, acknowledged recently. He noted that besides
his office, which handles the new social media and has links with the world's
broadcasters, there are several largely independent actors on the Vatican media
front: the Press Office, Vatican Radio that broadcasts in 45 languages,
L'Osservatore Romano - the 150-year-old Vatican daily with weekly editions in
various languages, and Vatican TV.
While these cooperate
together to some extent, they are far from being a well-coordinated,
fully-integrated media operation. But all that could change over the next two
years when Francis reveals his reform plan for the Roman Curia, which could
result in the Vatican establishing an overall Ministry for Communications.
Right now, Archbishop
Celli told me, the Vatican media offices are promoting "the culture of
encounter" that Francis is insisting on, together with
"transparency" and rejection of "the idea of
confrontation". Francis is blazing the trail, but how well the Vatican
team follows him remains to be seen.


No comments:
Post a Comment