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Saulo de Tarso F. Netto
(photo), editor
of Correio Espírita
and president of the
Cultural Centre Correio
Espírita in Niterói,
talks about the role of
the Spiritist media and
the history of
challenges the
publication has faced.
Dear Saulo, tell us
about your journey: how
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you came across Spiritism and what your
involvement with
the Teachings
has been. |
I lived in Niterói and
was on the last year of
university in the city
of Rio de Janeiro when
my father recommended
that I began attending a
Spiritist centre he was
going to regularly, UMEN.
I never really accepted
the principles of the
Catholic Church and
became interested. But I
was busy with my course
and missed most of the
sessions. But after I
finished my degree I got
fully committed and
began attending the
meetings at UNEM
regularly. Eventually I
joined the board and I
am now in charge of the
newspaper.
How did the idea of
publishing the paper
begin?
It is a long story. In
the beginning we
published on A4 paper
and had 50 copies for
each issue. We had
another paper, CEPEAK,
which was distributed
free of charge to many
Spiritist groups. But I
could hear an inner
voice telling me: “The
paper needs to expand,
the paper needs to
expand.” After 5 years,
CEPEAK had grown into a
12-page tabloid-format
newspaper with 5,000
copies published for
each issue. We then
decided to found
Correio Espírita,
which was first
published on December 3rd
2004.
Correio Espírita
is now sold on
newsagents. Tell us a
bit more about the
paper.
We began the enterprise
without realizing how
big it could get. The
paper was published
every two months and had
a low profile. But we
had the determination,
the Spiritual support
and the experience from
five years with CEPEAK.
We then went out looking
for advertisement and
were rejected again and
again, including by
Spiritist businessmen.
We decided that the
paper would try to reach
the whole state of Rio
de Janeiro, not only the
city of Niterói. Many
Spiritist leaders used
to question us and our
credentials, our
knowledge of Spiritism
etc. To be honest, we
have had more
disappointments than
joys. Many criticised us
for being after money
because we carried ads.
But we signed contracts
with a major publisher
in Rio, which made
sense. The idea was to
take Spiritism beyond
the boundaries of
Spiritist Centres. But
we faced all sorts of
problems with the
distribution, including
prejudice by some
newsagents who used to
hide our publication
instead of selling it.
We were determined to
carry on, however,
knowing that the paper
would get credibility
through the quality of
its articles. A message
psychographed by the
medium Ermance Dufaux,
in Posthumous Works,
sets the guidelines for
the effective and
serious dissemination of
Spiritism, followed step
by step by Kardec. But
unfortunately most of
the Spiritist leaders
know very little about
how to disseminate the
Teachings. We recommend
the chapter Spiritist
Review in the
aforementioned book. The
beginning was difficult
and keeping the
publication going is not
easy. But we now have
monthly editions with 16
pages, 4 of each in
colour, sold in eight
Brazilian capitals and
hundreds of cities.
With so many Spiritist
books published, what do
you think is the role of
the specialised
publications?
I will start by
mentioning Emmanuel, who
said: “The biggest
charity we can make for
Spiritism is its own
dissemination.” But the
vast majority of
Spiritists in Brazil is
too focused on the
social aspect of
charity, not in the
daunting task of
disseminating the
Teachings and supporting
the Spiritist media.
There are few
specialised publications
in Brazil and the
publishing houses are
struggling to keep
afloat. Spiritist
information will draw
people to Spiritist
institutions. I have
many examples of people
who joined Spiritist
groups after reading the
comforting pages of the
newspaper Correio
Espírita. I don’t
want to be patronising,
but I know Spiritists
who attend groups
regularly but have not
been able to buy tickets
to see the recent films
and plays with Spiritist
themes produced in
Brazil. That would be an
important way of
supporting Spiritism.
What is the profile of
the Spiritist writers in
most specialized
publications?
Most of them have
already realised that
Spiritism is dynamic.
Allan Kardec used to
write about the themes
of his time in The
Spiritist Review. His
publication was a
reflection of the
thinking of a real
genius, who used the
magazine to provoke and
encourage debate, that
courted the reader not
only through its clever
titles, but also through
a selection of high
quality articles that
would be the envy of any
journalist now. I find
very interesting
articles in Brazilian
publications. It is sad
that many Spiritists
stay away from
newspapers and magazines
and miss good
opportunities to take
issues relevant to our
times for discussion
within Spiritist
Centres.
How do your contributors
work, how do you select
their pieces?
All journalists are
volunteers. There is no
interference from the
newsroom. We just give
guidelines on the issues
we are interested in.
There are articles sent
to us that do not fit in
our agenda and are
therefore rejected.
What are your views on
the growth of the
Internet? What does it
mean for Spiritist
media?
Newsagents complain that
the Internet has taken
away a great deal of
their customers. The
sales of magazines and
newspapers have
declined, but that is
evidence of a new model
of communication. I
believe we are going
through a major
development, with the
growth of social media,
which shorten distances
and reduce time gaps.
That is very good news
for Spiritism, which has
always been on the side
of technological and
scientific development.
The Spiritist Movement,
like any human
organisation, will have
its controversies and
public disagreements.
What is, in your
opinion, the role of the
Spiritist press in those
controversies?
Spiritist Movements are
the result of the ideas
of each person. Opinions
may differ. The most
important thing is to
have Kardec as the
reference of the
codification of
Spiritism. I believe the
controversies exist due
to the lack of
theoretical knowledge,
not because of the lack
of theory. In other
words, the ideas of
Allan Kardec continue to
be ignored by many. Many
of our readers will not
have studied Heaven
and Hell. In my
opinion, the role of the
Spiritist media is to
give continuity to the
dissemination of the
Spiritist Teachings. We
avoid publishing vain
discussions and debates
in our paper. But we do
not stay away from
debates on themes like
homosexuality, abortion,
death penalty etc.
Correio Espírita has
always been there to
inform the society
through reason, rather
than omission.