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Angelus News | June 3, 2022 | Vol. 7 No. 11

On the cover: The eight men set to be ordained priests for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles on June 4 are pictured outside the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels. Starting on Page 10, Steve Lowery tells their stories: where they come from, how they discerned their vocations, and what they have to say about the people they have to thank for helping them say yes to their special calling.

On the cover: The eight men set to be ordained priests for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles on June 4 are pictured outside the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels. Starting on Page 10, Steve Lowery tells their stories: where they come from, how they discerned their vocations, and what they have to say about the people they have to thank for helping them say yes to their special calling.

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A question of distance?<br />

The legacy of newly canonized St. Titus Brandsma offers a chance to<br />

reflect on tensions about the role of Catholic journalism.<br />

BY JOHN L. ALLEN JR.<br />

Pope Francis greets journalists aboard a flight from Rome to Santiago, Chile, in 2018. | CNS/PAUL HARING<br />

ROME — Pope Francis canonized<br />

10 new saints on May<br />

15, among them St. Titus<br />

Brandsma, a Dutch Carmelite priest,<br />

philosopher, and journalist who was<br />

murdered at Dachau for his vehement<br />

opposition to the Nazis.<br />

St. Brandsma had been arrested in<br />

January 1942 while carrying a letter<br />

from the Dutch bishops to Catholic<br />

newspaper editors, ordering them<br />

not to print official Nazi documents<br />

despite an edict to that effect from the<br />

Nazi authorities, and died six months<br />

later from a lethal injection as part of<br />

dubious medical experimentation on<br />

prisoners.<br />

In the run-up to the May 15 canonization,<br />

a group of Dutch Catholic<br />

reporters circulated a petition asking<br />

Pope Francis to declare St. Brandsma<br />

the patron saint of journalists, a designation<br />

currently held by St. Francis de<br />

Sales. The petition was endorsed by a<br />

number of Rome-based foreign correspondents<br />

who cover the Vatican.<br />

At one level, it’s an innocent enough<br />

gesture — after all, St. Brandsma’s<br />

story is undeniably compelling, and<br />

God knows journalists could use some<br />

spiritual support. Yet it also raises the<br />

question of whether journalists ought<br />

to be attempting to influence the policy<br />

decisions of the institutions they<br />

cover, no matter how seemingly noble<br />

the cause or how relatively minor the<br />

32 • ANGELUS • <strong>June</strong> 3, <strong>2022</strong>

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