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Opinion

The coverage of the Nicola Bulley case is a tragic reminder of the power of gossip

Judaism contains many rules on 'bad speech', it's a shame the British press don't follow them

February 21, 2023 11:29
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PRESTON, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 19: A police car blocks a road near the River Wyre in St Michael's on Wyre as a 'Missing' sign for Nicola Bulley adorns a telegraph pole in the foreground on February 19, 2023 in Preston, England. Police have been continuing to look for the missing woman, Nicola Bulley, 45, who disappeared while walking her dog along the banks of the River Wyre on Saturday, Jan 27. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)
3 min read

Right now, the world could really do with learning a thing or two from the Jews. A few weeks ago, Nicola Bulley disappeared without a trace while walking her dog along the riverside. This week her body was tragically found.

It is difficult to figure out which part is causing the family more pain: Bulley’s untimely death or the disturbing responses from the public, fuelled by the media.

Nicola’s story has attracted thousands of conspiracy theories and speculations about her private life. These have been implicitly encouraged by intense media scrutiny and paparazzi intrusion. If the thought of a missing young mother alone doesn’t make you cry, the way we, as a society, are allowing the case to be treated will. And I say ‘we’ because I mean ‘we’. All of us contribute to our social narrative about tolerating gossip.

Gossip isn’t a new invention but thanks to social media it can now spiral in seconds and cause more collateral damage than ever before. Communication has become a different, more powerful, wide-reaching medium. We need an updated cultural approach to the way we speak about other people. Because the old one isn’t any longer fit for purpose.

In Jewish thinking, many are familiar with the sin of lashon hara. Literally meaning ‘bad talk’, lashon hara refers to all true negative speech about other people. (If it is not true, it counts as lying rather than lashon hara.) But fewer realise that there are enough intricate laws about lashon hara to fill a book. These laws include whether a gesture counts as gossip (such as rolling your eyes) and criteria for when bad talk is actually necessary (such as warning a colleague about a dishonest business partner).

Pages are filled with hypothetical examples of when ‘Reuven’ speaks to ‘Shimon’ about ‘Levy’ and whether these conversations reach the threshold of negative speech or whether they are permitted.

You could say that the painstaking details about what constitutes gossip is over-regulated nitpicking and losing sight of the bigger picture. But let’s look at an alternative.