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By Lloyd Mackey
A BIT of Ottawa-centric trivia:
Singer Michael Jackson, the avowed "king of pop" died suddenly last week
at 50 -- the same age as Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
Earlier that same day, actor Farrah Fawcett of Charlie's Angels
fame died at 62 -- the same age as Opposition Leader Michael Ignatieff.
* * *
And, two more stories drawn from participation, in mid-June, in the 25th
anniversary celebrations of Write!
Canada, the popular Christian writers' conference staged each year in
Guelph.
One plenary session included comments from several writers, editors and
publishers in the Canadian Christian communication field. Each of us was
given four minutes to express our particular perspectives on the state of
the Christian publishing field in Canada. Each had four minutes to state
our case: I took three, much to the surprise of some of my critics who
periodically chide me for my alleged verbosity.
I wanted to encourage Christian writers and editors to build a respect in
their own mindsets for the opinions of others, with whom they might
strongly differ. Further, I expressed the hope that writers encountering
those opposite to them would prod those opposites to show the same
respect.
I have to say I was knocked off my mark a bit by surprise unexpected
support for a position I took preliminary to making my main point.
I spoke about the need for free speech and a free press, along with the
need for Christian writers to stand up for their right to free expression.
When I suggested that human rights commissions and other state-sanctioned
bodes have no legitimate role in causing people to alter the way they
think or express themselves, I was met with considerable applause.
I realized that, led by such luminaries as Mark Steyn of Maclean's
magazine and Ezra Levant of Western Standard, many Christian
journalists and other writers had been feeling strongly about the subject
of free speech.
I have avoided writing extensively about the subject, hoping that there
would be an opportunity to apply some conflict management concepts to a
periodically-more-civil approach to contentious issues.
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My sense was that many in the group to which I was speaking are not yet
quite ready for a 'civil society' approach. Understandably, they want to
be more pointed and direct than 'diplomatic' expression would permit.
* * *
Which brings me to Marianne Meed Ward.
A former editor of Faith Today magazine and, as a consequence, a
former director of the conference we were attending, Meed Ward has, for
some years, been a columnist at the Toronto Sun.
For some time, her 'beat' was religion and her column was called 'In your
Faith.'
Then, her editor, Lorrie Goldstein, suggested that, since she, her husband
(a World Vision executive) and her three children were living and active
in Burlington, she might want to try her hand at articulating on suburban,
'905 belt,' community life.
At Write! Canada, Meed Ward talked about her switch in beats, and her
efforts to continue to express strong opinions in a setting where she was
also attempting to communicate community values.
It has been interesting to watch her evolve into community-focused
journalism. (She also has aspirations for political office and has run a
couple of times already, albeit not quite successfully enough to win.) If
you read her columns carefully, you will also sense that she has carried
with her, many of the spiritual values she nurtured and developed at
Faith Today.
You can see the results of her work each Sunday on the Toronto
Sun's website.
(I always read her column before Edna and I head off for church. You know
what they say: The better the day, the better the deed.)
* * *
Lloyd Mackey is a member of the Canadian Parliamentary Press Gallery in
Ottawa and author of Stephen Harper: The Case for Collaborative Governance
(ECW Press, 2006), More Faithful Than We Think: Stories and Insights on
Canadian Leaders Doing Politics Christianly (BayRidge Books, 2005) and
Like Father, Like Son: Ernest Manning and Preston Manning (ECW Press,
1997). Lloyd can be reached at lmackey@canadianchristianity.com.
July 2/2009
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