Guest Post

Rupert Murdoch, papal knight

As British authorities look into the cellphone
hacking scandal surrounding the global media empire of Rupert Murdoch,
questions have reappeared about the 1998 award of a papal knighthood to
Murdoch--and how his family may have used its riches to appear in a favorable
light with the Roman Catholic hierarchy.

Murdoch's selection for the honorary
knighthood--the highest honor the pope can bestow on laypeople--upset many
people at the time. Murdoch's News Corp. was long known for sensationalist
tabloid newspapers and titillating programs on the Fox Network.

The ceremony was celebrated by Cardinal Roger
Mahony in a suburban Los Angeles parish, and I covered it for the Los Angeles Times. Later reports said
that Murdoch contributed $10 million toward building the Los Angeles
archdiocese's large downtown cathedral, dubbed Taj Mahony by many.

Those given the title of Knight Commander of St.
Gregory the Great ranged from generous donors to tireless volunteers. Honorees
were to be people of "unblemished character" who contributed to society and/or
Catholic institutions. "You are examples of good peer pressure, positive
influences on society and culture," said Mahony to some 60 inductees.

Murdoch attended, sitting in a section of the
pews well-distanced from reporters. His then-wife Anna, a Catholic, was one of
a dozen women named Dames of St. Gregory. She told me her husband grew up in
the Anglican Church in Australia but would occasionally attend mass with her at
a Beverly Hills parish.

Two other non-Catholic honorees stayed away from
the hoopla: comedian Bob Hope and entertainment executive Roy Disney. But
veteran actor Ricardo Montalban was sitting in a front pew. He frequently
appeared at Catholic charitable affairs during his long film and television
career. Four years before, Montalban underwent a spinal cord operation. Using a
walker, he still betrayed the pain of sitting down and rising in the church.

But he was all smiles to everyone who greeted
him. "This is probably my greatest honor," he said of the unanticipated award.
"It's a wonderful gift, medicine from God."

John Dart

John Dart is news editor at the Century.

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