
5 8 December - January 2017
has a duty to drive us from the shadows into the
sun and to rescue us from our cosy illusions by
forcing us to face reality. That is why, when illu
-
sion becomes all-pervasive, journalists become
indispensable to the moral health of society.
Their authorship assumes an authority which
elevates them well above the ‘chatter sphere’ of
Cyberia. This relationship between authorship
and authority is not popular in an age of equal-
ity, an age when the very notion of authority is
routinely dismissed as an elitist concept. Either
way, we shall always have need of those whose
authority is not assumed but earned by convey
-
ing the truth in a way that challenges the popular
consensus. These are the people we look to, and
rely on, to tell us what really happened. Their
authority is founded on the fact that they have
earned our trust.
The moral vocation of a journalist is, in my
view, that he or she tells a story that is rooted in
truth and based on solid evidence. There is, of
course, a big distinction between knowledge and
information – the latter being the raw dissemi-
nation of factual data. Knowledge, on the other
hand, is predicated on a deep understanding of
our world and the human condition. It cuts
through images, illusions and appearance in
order to reach the heart of the matter. To possess
knowledge is, thus, to have authority over your
subject, to understand things objectively. If
Cyberia is a sphere dominated by subjective
opinion, journalism ought to be a domain in
which people write objectively, truthfully and
authoritatively. That is because journalism is the
last redoubt of the written word in a world which
has withdrawn behind the screen.
An age without imagination hungers for imme-
diate and limitless stimulation. Having made the
transition from book to screen, we are no longer
satisfied with stories that leave something
unsaid or unseen. We crave every lurid detail,
and those stories that fail to reveal their darkest
secrets run the risk of falling stillborn from the
press.
Again, however, we must always remember
that stories – all stories – are what constitute
life, and upon those stories rest, not only repu-
tations, but very often a person’s survival. That
is why trust and truth are so important and the
basic moral lamps which should guide our way.
All of this has convinced me that the best train
-
ing ground for journalists is amid the flickering
embers of our dying culture. We need to see our
-
selves, in the first instance, as authors – writers
whose goal is to use language in the service of
truth. We need to use our pens and our pads in
the service of something greater than ourselves.
It is not easy to stare at the sun. It is not easy to
follow a story wherever the facts and details may
lead. An anecdote from my own experience high-
lights the point.
Having taken temporary refuge from academia
at the Sunday Independent in 2003, I started
writing on the issue of
Islam in Ireland. I had
been approached by
some concerned Mus-
lims about the
radicalisation of their
community. The
group was led by the
son of Saddam Hus-
sein’s former physician,
a woman who had been
in the dictator’s favour until
she openly voiced moral con-
cerns regarding the brutality of
his regime. His response was to have
her summarily shot. Her husband fled to Leba
-
non, but her son was apprehended and
imprisoned in Abu Ghraib prison. While there,
he was subject to ritual torture and humiliation,
resulting in one side of his face being hacked
open with a broken bottle. His injuries were so
extensive that he required facial reconstruction.
It was this courageous man - a doctor in exile -
who revealed to me the full horror of Hussein’s
tyranny and the equally disturbing nature of rad-
ical Islam in Ireland.
When, thanks to this brave and good soul, I
revealed that the Irish Muslim community was
being terrorised from within by individuals who
were travelling to Syria on Irish passports in
order to commit atrocities in Iraq, and that the
spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood,
Yusuf al Qaradawi – a man banned from entering
the United States and known as the ‘Sheikh of
Death’ - was chairing meetings of the ‘European
Council of Fatwa and Research’ in Dublin, I was
threatened for my troubles. This resulted in
police surveillance of my home and phones over
the course of many months.
The truth had led me to a dark place, some
-
where I was not eager to go. However, as
someone trained in philosophy and theology, I
had some understanding of the nature of Islam,
and my writings on its spiritual values and way
of life were appreciated by most Muslims who
took the time to read them. Hence, the charge of
‘Islamophobia’ could not so easily be levelled by
those who see any criticism of Islam as a cover
for prejudice and racism. The big problem is that
those who have subse-
quently written about
the subject possess
little or no insight
into the theology of
Islam. This means
that they can often
sound ill-informed
or even bigoted. In
other words, even if
the truth leads you to
places you would rather
avoid, a comprehensive
understanding of the details of
your subject will enable you to make
vital distinctions. In my case, the distinction
between Islam and Islamism made all the differ-
ence and, in drawing it, I earned the trust of the
silent majority of Irish Muslims. In the absence
of a literary culture rooted in philosophy, art,
religion and politics, those distinctions, and the
deeper understanding they promote, are rou-
tinely ignored.
Truth demands that we pay attention to detail
and to language, but it also requires a heavy
dose of moral courage. Practically speaking, this
means abandoning the thick fog of ideology – or
what American theologian Mark C Taylor calls
‘imagology’ – for the pure light of truth. The pris-
oners in Plato’s cave had become slaves to ‘a
dictatorship of relativism’. Their vision had
become so restricted that they could only see
things from one very partial and parochial per-
spective. Plato called this doxa (opinion) in
contrast to epistêmê (knowledge). The tyranny
of doxa is, of course, operative all across Cybe
-
ria, but it should not, I believe, be a feature of
the mainstream media. If we are to serve as
agents of truth, we must break free of our ideo-
logical chains or from the imagology by which
we often become constrained. This does not
require abandoning our core convictions, but it
does mean challenging the cosy consensus that
often surrounds them – especially when truth is
at stake. That is because our profession is not a
means of ‘manufacturing consent’. Neither is it
there to determine the political direction of a
country solely on the basis of ideological agen-
das backed up by ‘opinion polls’ – something
which, as we have witnessed in recent elections
and referenda, is lamentably becoming estab-
lished practice. If anything, our purpose is to act
as agents of integrity, even when doing so con-
flicts with our innate ideological instincts.
Mark Dooley is a philosopher, broadcaster and
columnist with the Irish Daily Mail www.
drmarkdooley.com.
This is an edited version of a paper he gave to
the recent Cleraun conference on investigative
journalism in the digital age, co-sponsored by
Village.
In our age of opinion, the
journalist ought to be an
agent of truth. We very often
forget that journalists are
primarily authors.
MEDIA