Fr Lombardi reflects on lasting legacy of Vatican
Radio
(Vatican Radio) Jesuit Father
Federico Lombardi steps down as Director General of Vatican Radio at the end of
February, in the context of a major overhaul of the Holy See’s media and
communications organisations.
After a quarter of a century
of service at Vatican Radio, 12 years as head of the Vatican Television Centre
(CTV) and a decade as director of the Holy See press office, Fr Lombardi
reflected on the lasting legacy of the Radio and his vision for the future of
Vatican communications.
Philippa Hitchen takes a
closer look……..
When the former superior of
the Italian Jesuits was appointed as director of programmes at Vatican Radio,
he’s the first to admit he had no radio experience and was unfamiliar with the
complex machinations of the world’s smallest city state.
What he did have, however,
was over 10 years’ experience with the prestigious Jesuit magazine
‘Civiltà Cattolica’ and a mathematical mind which, he says, helped him to make
the transformation from lengthy, erudite articles to short, succinct radio
stories.
Vatican Radio became his
“home”, Fr Lombardi says, where he was fascinated by the wealth of cultural
diversity, with employees from over 60 nations, working in almost 40 language
programmes with some 15 different alphabets. Cutting down on that rich
diversity to save costs, he warns, would be “a real impoverishment of Vatican
communications”.
Fr Lombardi admits his
biggest regret was the inability to convince his superiors to begin
broadcasting in Hausa, one of the main languages of northern Nigeria, currently
wracked by the violence of the Boko Haram terrorist group. With running costs
of less than 30 euros a day, plus support from both Nigeria’s bishops and local
Nigerian religious communities he says, the Radio could have provided a small
but vital sign of support for some of the poorest and most persecuted Catholics
on the African continent. Within the DNA of the Radio throughout its 85 year
history, Fr Lombardi insists, there has always been a sense of service to the
poor and oppressed minorities, rather than a slavish addiction to improving
audience ratings.
With the advent of new
technologies, Fr Lombardi says he sought to lead the Radio from exclusively
audio production into a broader, multi-media provider – something that wasn’t
always understood by its critics. Furthermore, he notes, the Radio continues to
provide other, less visible services, such as technical audio support for papal
ceremonies, Vatican input at international telecommunications conferences,
translation and language services, documentation and archive material – and all
this, while implementing a significant downsizing of staff over the past
decade.
Fr Lombardi’s departure from
the Palazzo Pio headquarters marks the end of an era for the Jesuits too, whom
Pope Pius XI entrusted with the running of the Radio back in 1931. Pope Francis
has made clear he wants the order to continue working in communications, though
it’s not yet clear how that service may take shape. The name – Vatican Radio –
will also cease to exist in the coming months, as it becomes more closely
incorporated into a combined output of TV, newspaper, web and social media production.
What Fr Lombardi says he hopes will remain at the heart of the new media
operation is the dedication of those committed to their mission of proclaiming
the Good News to those on the margins of today’s ‘throwaway culture’.
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