Generates a reporter-ready briefing on cultural, religious, or social context for journalists covering unfamiliar communities or events.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:cultural-context-briefThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Produces a concise, reporter-ready briefing note explaining the cultural, religious, or social context a journalist needs before covering a community, practice, or event they are not already familiar with.
Produces a concise, reporter-ready briefing note explaining the cultural, religious, or social context a journalist needs before covering a community, practice, or event they are not already familiar with.
Required: The cultural or religious group, practice, or tradition you are covering; the angle or focus of your story (e.g., a specific ceremony, dispute, policy, celebration). Optional: The country or region where the story is set; the intended audience and publication; any specific terms, images, or customs that have already come up in your reporting; whether the brief needs to flag editorial sensitivities (language, imagery, representation).
600–900 words. Structured with clear subheadings: Overview, Key Terms, Internal Diversity, Relationship with Media Coverage, Language Guide, Practical Dos and Don'ts. Tone is briefing-document professional — direct and factual, not academic. Written for a working journalist, not a scholar. No footnotes. Any contested claims are flagged explicitly.
I'm reporting on the mourning rituals observed by a West African Muslim community during Ramadan, specifically the nights of intense prayer in the final ten days. My story angle is how second-generation immigrants maintain these practices in a northern European city. Audience is a general-interest national newspaper. I need background before I visit the community centre next week.
Cultural Context Brief: Laylat al-Qadr and the Final Ten Days of Ramadan Prepared for: newspaper feature · Audience: general readership · Region: West African Muslim diaspora, northern Europe
Overview
The final ten days of Ramadan hold particular significance in Islamic practice. Muslims believe that Laylat al-Qadr — translated variously as the Night of Power, the Night of Decree, or the Night of Destiny — falls within this period, most commonly observed on the 27th night. It is considered the holiest night of the Islamic year: the night on which the first verses of the Quran were revealed to the Prophet Muhammad. Observant Muslims spend these nights in extended prayer (qiyam al-layl), Quranic recitation, and supplication. Many intensify their fasting practices and some enter a period of spiritual retreat (itikaf) within the mosque, sleeping there for the full ten days.
For the communities you are covering, this is not a public celebration — it is a period of private devotion. Arriving with cameras or recording equipment without prior agreement from community leaders will almost certainly close doors.
Key Terms
Internal Diversity
West African Muslim communities encompass multiple traditions: Tijaniyya, Qadiriyya, and Mouride brotherhoods each have distinct liturgical practices, communal structures, and relationships with religious authority. Observance of Laylat al-Qadr may vary in form between these traditions — the night chosen, the specific prayers recited, whether the gathering is gender-mixed or separated. Do not assume the community you visit is representative of "West African Muslim practice" as a whole. Ask your key contact which tradition the community follows before your visit, and reflect that specificity in your copy.
Second-generation immigrants may also practise differently from their parents: some are more orthodox, some less so, some are navigating between the community's expectations and their own interpretation. Avoid framing this as conflict unless sources describe it that way.
Relationship with Media Coverage
Muslim communities in northern Europe have a well-documented experience of media coverage that emphasises security, extremism, or cultural incompatibility. A reporter arriving to cover a moment of private devotion may be received with suspicion, even if their intentions are respectful. Community gatekeepers — imams, community centre chairs, women's group leaders — will assess whether you can be trusted before allowing access to more candid settings.
It is worth being transparent about your publication and the story angle before your first contact, not after. Communities that have been burned by past coverage will check your previous work.
Language Guide
Practical Dos and Don'ts
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsPrepares travelers for cultural immersion by mapping cultural distance, researching religious context, and teaching social protocols.
Translates academic research into accessible public content: op-eds, blog posts, community reports, policy briefs, podcast/media prep.
Produces a structured research brief for a reporter starting a new story assignment — covering the key questions to answer, the types of sources to seek, documents to obtain, and potential story angles to investigate.