Jack Valero, a director of Opus Dei, says that even Dan Brown would be hard-pushed to invent the strange and circuitous business of complaining to the BBC
So we turned, eyes rolling when not cast heavenwards, to Ofcom, the broadcasting regulator. While the BBC had taken our complaint seriously and dealt with it swiftly, even if they were determined to see it off, Ofcom met our September 2007 submission with a magnum silentium unbroken until mid-December, when the complaint was thrown out as ‘frivolous’. We had ten days to appeal and did, pointing out the holes in their arguments and the violation of Ofcom’s own Rule 7.10 on fairness, which was just like the BBC’s.
Fair point, said Ofcom in February; we’ll look again. Another silentium. Then, last week, with all the furious arrogance of a Dan Brown villain, Ofcom threw out the complaint again.
‘Ofcom considered that there were a number of indicators given to viewers that the programme was a fictional drama and was intended to be viewed in that context,’ we were told. After 18 months and a pile of documents of Da Vinci Code length and tedium, with nowhere left to appeal, our questions still hang in the air. Why is it OK for the BBC to misrepresent an innocent religious organisation? And who Ofcoms Ofcom?
Mysterium magnum.
Jack Valero Is A UK Director Of Opus Dei.
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james
April 24th, 2008 9:55am Report this commentInteresting article but not entirely honest.
The mysterious workings of Opus have interested the world for a very long time and it was for that reason that Dan Brown used it in his book.
When I first came to Spain more than thirty years ago it was an open secret that Opus Dei was involved in the government and financial system of Spain and behind most of the many dictatorships in South America.
It is said that the reason why it enjoys such autonomy from local religious authority is because of the financial help it has given to the church.
It is also said to be like a sect where people are brainwashed into contributing all their money,living in a community forcibly seperated from their families. There are in fact Catholic orgnaizations which help people whose family members have been'sequestered' in this way by Opus Dei. The internet abounds with these stories and I have personally heard of one here in Spain.
Some of these stories may be fanciful but anyone who has spent time in Spain knows there is little smoke without fire.
Notting Hill Nonsense
April 24th, 2008 1:21pm Report this commentI think you give us a good indication of Opus Dei's strange paranoia in your description of its obsessive attempt to get an apology for what was a work of fiction - one that I had never previously heard of.
Dodgy Geezer
April 24th, 2008 1:34pm Report this commentGiven the BBC decision-making processes so aptly illustrated here:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/04/08/bbc_blog_bully/
I wonder why you didn't get an immediate reversal of all smears?
Chris
April 24th, 2008 1:41pm Report this commentHmm. I don't know what 'fact' is - but the BBC do seem exempt from having to provide any level of neutrality or unbiased reporting in both their 'non-fiction' programmes such as the news(!) and 'fictional' programmes such as drama.
Conspiracies abound, i've never read much about Opus Dei, but isn't the reason why the BBC are free to do as they please because they're actually just a mouthpiece for the government propaganda machine? Maybe the problem lies between the government and Opus Dei rather than with the BBC?!!
John Thomas
April 25th, 2008 6:36pm Report this commentJack - you say the BBC claim to be fair to religious minorities - er, but - remember - not Christian ones (and yes, the Salvation Army would receive bad treatment as well, just like opus Dei). Actually, the documentaries bashing the Salv. Arm. a few years ago encouraged me to support them (well, that may have been Channel 4, but they're both the same). As the government's propoganda mouthpiece, it is a function of the BBC, in our society, to bash Christianity.
Paul Potts
April 25th, 2008 7:00pm Report this commentOpus Dei constitutes, among other things, a spy network on local clergy, who have to watch their words in case they are reported. No wonder there are so few of them left.
Paulo
M. A. McClavey
April 30th, 2008 12:52am Report this commentMore and more hearsay, James. And as far as your idea that "It is also said to be like a sect where people are brainwashed into contributing all their money,living in a community forcibly seperated from their families.", seems to me that convents and monasteries did exactly that as well in former times. If the member chooses to join up it's his or her choice seems to me, just like joining a religious order. And it makes sense because it is hard to be a religious person in today's society which is rabidly anti-faith and especially anti-Catholic. Funny thing is, the first person to tell me that Opus Dei interrupted family life was herself a nun. It's all in one's point of view I think.
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