Templeton prize winner

ENI – Many church leaders do not understand what journalism is all about, while secular media are often suspicious of religion, says Portuguese journalist Antonio Marujo, this year's winner of the John Templeton Prize for the European Religion Writer.
“In the eyes of many church leaders, the media are just a modern form of pulpit. This is one of the biggest misunderstandings,” said Marujo, religion writer with a daily newspaper, delivering the annual lecture that goes with the prize.
“As a professional journalist I have to write on religious institutions, of course. But I find it equally important to give exposure to unknown voices, to give voice to humble but significant faith experiences. Because the religious dimension is a fundamental part of the human being, still today.”
The prize, administered by the Conference of European Churches on behalf of the U. S.-based John Templeton Foundation, honours journalists who write about religion in the secular press with accuracy, impartiality and in an ecumenical spirit.
“The secular media show a great ignorance of and suspicion towards religion,” said Marujo. “On the other hand, religious institutions show a lack of confidence in the media and seem to be unable to understand the fundamentals of journalism as well as to grasp the challenges of modern information technology.”