Alive! (newspaper)

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Alive! is a free monthly publication in the style of a newspaper which has been produced since its first edition in 1996 by Alive Group, an organisation with an address at the Dominican Order St Mary's Priory, Tallaght in Dublin, Republic of Ireland. The editor is a Catholic priest, Fr Brian McKevitt, who refers to the publication as a 'newszine'.[1] It is printed by Datascope, an independent publishing company in Enniscorthy and contains an appeal in each issue for donations totalling €160,000 annually to remain in circulation.[2]

Alive!
The Alive! front page for July/August 2009
TypeMonthly newspaper
PublisherAlive Group
EditorFr. Brian McKevitt OP
Associate editorTom English
Founded1996 (1996)
Political alignmentConservative Catholic/Right-Wing
LanguageEnglish
HeadquartersSt Mary's Priory, Tallaght, Dublin 24
Circulation240,000
OCLC number500551304
Websitealive.ie

Political stance and editorial opinion

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Since September 2008, the front page has contained the following disclaimer text: "The content of the newspaper Alive! and the views expressed in it are those of the editor and contributors, and do not necessarily represent the views of the Irish Dominican Province".[citation needed]

The publication opposed the Nice Treaty and the Lisbon Treaty on all four occasions on which they were submitted to the Irish people, a position which drew criticism from Irish politicians such as Senator Paschal Donohoe on the grounds that its position could be erroneously interpreted by many Catholics as representing the official views of the Catholic hierarchy.[citation needed] TD Thomas Byrne criticised the publication, claiming that he was "bombarded" with its "anti-EU" views while attending Mass.[3] Individual politicians and the Oireachtas sub-committee on Europe asked the Catholic Church and Seán Cardinal Brady to ban it from being distributed in churches. Senator Labhrás Ó Murchú stated that it was "completely wrong" to suggest that Cardinal Brady should ban the publication from churches simply because it espoused views opposing the Lisbon treaty.[4] Senator Ivana Bacik defended the criticism of the publication stating that it espoused extreme views that most moderate Catholics opposed and that it was the "equivalent of the paramilitary wing of the Catholic Church".[5]

Editor McKevitt was listed at number 67 in the Ireland's Most Influential 100 list published by Village magazine in 2009.[6]

Format

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A regular article entitled "Dumbag writes...!" features letters, purportedly from a devil named Dumbag, which highlight what the newspaper believes to be the folly of non-Catholic viewpoints. This feature is inspired by The Screwtape Letters by the Anglican writer, C.S. Lewis. The newspaper also features a column by Fr. Owen Gorman, an interview with a public personage about the role of religion in that person's life, a column dealing with perceived media bias against religion and Christianity and a Window on History article on a historical topic of relevance to the Catholic Church (such as the Penal Laws or the Protestant Reformation).

Contributors

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Contributors to the newspaper's Monthly Musings include Irish poet and academic Dr. Ciarán Ó Coigligh, Bishop Kevin Doran and barrister, journalist and broadcaster Kieron Wood, Gerard Murphy, Peter Perrum, Tom English and former University College Dublin's Students' Union president Katie Ascough.

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In June 2015 Dina Goldstein threatened to sue the magazine for using images from her "Fallen Princesses" works without her permission.[7] One image appeared on the cover and others throughout the magazine.[7] Ms Goldstein said that the magazine has not contacted her for permission to use the images.[7] She said that she could not disagree more with the sentiments in the article which used the images, that she had left a message with the magazine's office and contacted an attorney to make a formal complaint.[7]

References

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  1. ^ Wood, Kieron (6 May 2007), "Trust believes in Irish Catholic", The Sunday Business Post, archived from the original on 12 August 2007
  2. ^ Lowey, Tiernan (22 July 2001), "Catholic newspaper is Alive", The Sunday Business Post, archived from the original on 12 August 2007
  3. ^ Cooney, John (6 November 2008), "Brady urged to ban priest's 'anti-EU' paper from Church", Irish Independent
  4. ^ "Order of Business". Seanad Éireann Debate Vol. 192 No. 2 p.9. Office of the Houses of the Oireachtas. Retrieved 6 January 2014.
  5. ^ Walsh, Jimmy (13 November 2008), "Bacik critical of Catholic Church publication 'Alive'", The Irish Times
  6. ^ Ireland's Most Influential 100 Archived 10 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Village Magazine, 4 November 2009. Retrieved 1 November 2011.
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