Post Lock-down reading
About two years ago I let my National Geographic
subscription lapse as a protest to Rupert Murdoch taking a 75 per cent
shareholding and with no editorial comment re Murdoch’s likely impact on the
popular magazine.
Recently I met
up with a long-time colleague and former television reporter, Simon Williams.
Simon visits the US occasionally to catch up with a daughter living near LA. He
told me how he thoroughly enjoys reading the local newspapers. ``They are so
beautifully written.’’ Got me thinking how much I enjoyed reading NG. I was
even missing it arriving in the post-box month by month. Curiosity getting g
the better of me, I picked up the June 2020 issue from my supermarket’s
magazine corner.
The cover story recording the last voices of WW2 had
contributions from US, British, German and Japanese veterans. A British woman joined a messaging decoding
division because she, ``wanted to contribute more to the war effort than making
sausage rolls.’’
Further on was a story about Hiroshima 75 years on. I
thought it was a fair reflection on the first ever use of an atomic bomb. An environmental story was about Emperor
penguins struggling with climate change in Antarctica. Finally, Leading the way was about the struggle for
women making waves in politics. New Zealand got coverage that included a double
page photo of Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern addressing Parliament earlier this
year as Covid-19 was starting to bite internationally. Jacinda Arden’s famous
quote formed the bulk of the caption.
``I have a very keen sense of the magnitude of this
moment. Kiwis go home. Be strong and be kind.’’ Her Government’s action in
locking down New Zealand paid handsome dividends. Was great to see our PM
getting generous acknowledgement in NG. The local New Zealand media, by
comparison, has done little more than criticise the PM and her smart Government
who acted on the best scientific evidence to hand and spared five million New
Zealanders the brunt of Covid-19.
On another occasion while awaiting for a colleague who
fortuitously failed to keep a café appointment, I fell into conversation with a
stranger waiting for his takeaway coffee. I joined him on the stools near the
takeaway window. He chatted about the book he was reading, The Expected One by Kathleen McGowan. When I introduced myself he
told me I would enjoy the book. It includes some Sinclair history from the
French Pyrenees.
I found the book on Book Depository and purchased my
copy. ``The Expected One’’ is the only person who will discover a Gospel
written by Mary Magdalene. The gospel and its hidden location is protected by
supernatural forces. The account by Mary Magdalene claims Jesus Christ –
referred to as `Easa’’ in the story was married to Mary Magdalene and the
couple had children. The book is quite a page turner. (It is a New York Times
best seller.)
``The Expected one’’ in the book is a journalist,
Maureen Paschal, who has an intriguing cousin, Father Peter Healy. History will
confirm when the bible as we know it was compiled it was a lengthy process of
selection, editing and copying by hand. We know a pile of material available,
including some gospels, was omitted. Hence the credibility Mary Magdalene wrote
her version of events. McGowan presents the story as an historical novel as a
cover while changing some names of real people. But she claims it is based on
fact and extensive research. For McGowan, part of her mission is to restore
credibility to women side-lined in history.
She asks if what is written is what actually happened?
She started to question history despite it being composed by accepted academic
scholars. ``History needs to also include personal accounts and culture.’’ The
scholars however were men of a certain social and political strata. ``The authenticated histories were written
during dark ages when women had a status lower than animals and were believed
to have no souls!’’
Women who did make it into history were frequently labelled
as schemers, adulterers and villains –even murderers. Hence they have been misunderstood and
maligned over time. I found The Expected
One as convincing as it is readable.
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