Julia Neuberger

Julia Neuberger

Chair, Commission on the Future of Volunteering in England

Baroness Julia Neuberger is an ordained rabbi and member of Britian's House of Lords. The "On Faith" panelist also is a trustee of the British Council, Jewish Care, and the Booker Prize Foundation, as well as founding trustee of the Walter and Liesel Schwab Charitable Trust. She has served as Chairman of Camden & Islington Community Health Services NHS Trust and Chief Executive of the King's Fund—a major independent health charity. Currently she chairs the Commission on the Future of Volunteering in England . In the House of Lords, she is a Liberal Democrat member and in early 2006 she was Bloomberg Professor at Harvard University Divinity School . Neuberger writes, speaks, makes trouble, and has published several books, of which the latest is The Moral State We're In (2006). She is working on a book about old age, and thinking about a new book on death and dying, as well as one as a counterblast to Richard Dawkins on why religion is so important in the rather godless United Kingdom. Close.

Julia Neuberger

Chair, Commission on the Future of Volunteering in England

Baroness Julia Neuberger is an ordained rabbi and member of Britian's House of Lords. The "On Faith" panelist also is a trustee of the British Council, Jewish Care, and the Booker Prize Foundation, as well as founding trustee of the Walter and Liesel Schwab Charitable Trust. more »

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God in Details, Which Media Miss

The mass media has a problem with religion, partly because it is
extremely bad at teasing out the details of difference.

Unsubtle in its approach, it sees extremes as the same as moderate views, orthodox as
parallel with liberals, eastern traditions as being polytheistic, and
basically appears to have and demonstrate little understanding.

This is not to say that there are not amongst the media, mass and otherwise,
extremely sensible, well informed journalists who know otherwise and
whose learning is considerable- but their ability to explain in a context
which requires instant simplification is much limited.

For that reason, the mass media makes a poor showing in reflecting and explaining modern religious practice and belief.

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