In digital a world we are hyperconnected yet still alone

In digital a world we are hyperconnected yet still alone

VATICAN (CNS): Good journalism has to be creative and promote communication that focuses on dialogue, intelligence and helping build active communities, Paolo Ruffini, the prefect of the Vatican Dicastery for Communication, said on August 15. 

In his talk to members of Signis, the World Catholic Association for Communication, Ruffini said that the challenge of good journalism is to find new ways for a new kind of communication by “focusing on dialogue rather than on marketing of ideas, on intelligence as a moral category rather than on fanatical moralism of the crowd.”

He said that “this calls for creativity, capable of reaching people where they are living, finding opportunities for listening, dialogue and encounter. We need to return to the simplicity and enthusiasm of the Acts of the Apostles.” 

The Signis World Congress took place online and in-person in Seoul, South Korea, from August 15 to 18, with the theme, Peace in the Digital World. Excerpts of Ruffini’s talk were published by Vatican News on August 16.

Ruffini reminded his audience that Pope Francis commented on some of the problems with social media in his message for the 2019 World Day of Social Communications. Quoting the pope, he noted how these networks are not automatically synonymous with a healthy community; too often, their identity is “based on opposition to the other, the person outside the group.”

…this calls for creativity, capable of reaching people where they are living, finding opportunities for listening, dialogue and encounter. We need to return to the simplicity and enthusiasm of the Acts of the Apostles

Paolo Ruffini

Too often “we define ourselves starting with what divides us rather than what unites us, giving rise to suspicion and to the venting of every kind of prejudice” and “what ought to be a window on the world becomes a showcase for exhibiting personal narcissism,” he said, citing the pope.

The paradox of today, he said, is that “we are hyperconnected and also alone.” The problem arises “when there is no longer communication, but only connection.”

He said, “We need to question ourselves, to make a personal and collective examination of conscience,” as well as to seek answers to such questions like, “How is it possible to be simultaneously hyperconnected and terribly alone? What is missing from our connection that can bridge this loneliness, and that is strong enough to endure over time?”

Ruffini said, “The only way to respond to the challenge of technology is not to think of it as an idol, but also not to demonise it. Not to believe that it has the task of redeeming humanity” or that it will be the source of “its perdition.”

He appealed to all Catholic communicators, Catholic journalists and people of goodwill working “in the difficult and great field of communication, inviting them to be “protagonists of a new humanism, embodied in active and participatory communities. We can weave a new idea of citizenship.” 

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