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Mormons launch group to defend faith against media attacks

c. 2011 Salt Lake Tribune

SALT LAKE CITY (RNS) With two Mormons in the presidential campaign and a
hit Broadway show about LDS missionaries, a group of church loyalists
felt the time was ripe to begin scrutinizing media reports for
inaccuracies about the Utah-based faith.

On Thursday (Aug.4) the Foundation for Apologetic Information and
Research (FAIR) announced that it was launching the Mormon Defense
League (MDL) to help journalists "get it right," said Scott Gordon,
FAIR's president, who will direct the new project.

 

If the MDL notices a misstatement or mischaracterization, the group
will first contact the journalist, Gordon said. But if a pattern of
misrepresentation emerges, the defense league will "go after the writer"
by posting the piece or pieces on its website (mdl.org) and pointing out
the errors.

In this effort, the MDL will mirror the work of the church's own
Public Affairs Department. In recent weeks, for example, department head
Michael Otterson, a regular contributor to The Washington Post, decried
journalists' use of the word "cult" to describe Mormonism. During the
2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, the church posted articles it
viewed as inaccurate, spelling out the mistakes.

On Thursday, the LDS Church welcomed any "sincere efforts to correct
misconceptions and inaccuracies about The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints," spokesman Scott Trotter said, but emphasized that
"FAIR is neither sponsored nor endorsed by the [LDS] Church.".

Joanna Brooks, a Mormon writer who teaches English and comparative
literature at San Diego State University, believes it will be good for
the LDS Church "not to be the one to respond every time a crackpot takes
a shot at the church," and she applauds the move for "an independent
voice to respond to crude anti-Mormonism" in any media report.

But Brooks worries about what kinds of news pieces the MDL will
critique.

"We misdirect our energy when we respond defensively to legitimate
questions and criticisms of controversial church positions," she said.

"We can't be part of civil society unless we respond candidly. The price
of admission is forthrightness."

FAIR itself began in 1997 primarily as a defender of the faith.
Participants, each with expertise in aspects of Mormonism, found
each other on message boards dealing with controversial issues such as
polygamy, the role of women in the church, homosexuality, the exclusion
of black men from the faith's all-male priesthood until 1978 and
problems with the historicity of the Book of Mormon.

Those writers, located in various states, seemed to answer the same
questions and criticisms over and over. So they pooled their respective
research and thinking into one website (fairlds.org), which became the
nucleus of FAIR.

In 2001, FAIR focused its energies on Mormons themselves, giving
believers information and tools to explain all these issues to friends
and neighbors.

"We made a conscious decision to stop reacting," Gordon said
Thursday. "Now we hope to help shape the national conversation about
Mormonism."

FAIR's new defense league is aimed at journalists and non-Mormons
and is modeled after the Anti-Defamation League, created in 1913 "to
stop the defamation of the Jewish people and to secure justice and fair
treatment to all."

Peggy Fletcher Stack

Peggy Fletcher Stack writes for the Salt Lake Tribune.

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