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In London Church, Memorials For World's Journalists Killed On Job

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  • In London Church, Memorials For World's Journalists Killed On Job

    IN LONDON CHURCH, MEMORIALS FOR WORLD'S JOURNALISTS KILLED ON JOB
    by Lachlan Carmichael

    Agence France Presse -- English
    February 28, 2007 Wednesday 8:26 AM GMT

    In a tranquil church just yards from the London hubbub, lie tributes
    to journalists killed as far afield as Vietnam, Somalia, the Balkans,
    Afghanistan and Iraq.

    Welcome to the "journalists' altar" at St Bride's Church, just off
    Fleet Street -- for generations synonymous with the mighty British
    press.

    Their names are engraved on the church's wood panelling, penned on
    their photographs or written on cards stacked at what began as the
    "hostage altar" 20 years ago when journalists were being abducted
    in Lebanon.

    One card is from a widow who in January marked a 30th wedding
    anniversary that did not take place because her husband was killed in
    Iraq. A single red rose lies beside the card and her husband's photo.

    "For members of the media, whatever their faith background, this is
    their spiritual home. We will do whatever we can for them in difficulty
    and crisis," said Canon David Meara, the church's rector.

    The church, which has been a sanctuary for journalists and printers
    for centuries, overcame hardship itself after a World War II bomb
    destroyed all but the steeple and outer walls.

    It was rebuilt with key funds from the newspaper industry.

    The wife of CBS news cameraman Paul Anthony Douglas who was killed
    in Iraq last year finds comfort in a place that is "dedicated to
    journalists who have lost their lives" and lets her leave tributes
    like the anniversary card.

    Although there is a church by her home in Bedford, Linda Douglas
    often makes the 50-mile train trip south to London to visit the church.

    "It's a strange thing because I'm not religious. But over the last
    month I've really been drawn back to St. Bride's... I feel actually
    he's around in that church," Douglas said.

    "It's quite poignant in there when you go to that altar and you see
    all those faces who were just doing their jobs," she said.

    "It's a lovely church," she added.

    It has marble floors and retains the distinct white stone
    "wedding-cake" steeple from the design by Sir Christopher Wren which
    was built after the Great Fire of 1666 destroyed the sixth church on
    the site.

    The current one is just a few minutes walk from Wren's masterpiece,
    St. Paul's Cathedral, and is the eighth to have been built on the
    site. The first was founded in the sixth century, possibly by St.

    Bride, or Bridget of Kildare.

    Difficult to notice, St Bride's is tucked away in a close just
    off Fleet Street, once the heart and soul of the British newspaper
    industry that began in 18th century in a neighborhood already long
    known as a printing centre.

    And although Britain's leading newspapers have relocated to other
    points in London, St Bride's verger David Smith said the church's
    "links with the news business are just as strong as ever."

    Among the more prosaic but landmark events in life, journalists
    and their families still make the trip to the church for weddings,
    baptisms and funerals as well as regular Sunday worship.

    The church stands apart from others because, Meara said, it is both
    tied to a specific profession and offers solace to families, friends
    and colleagues of those who are killed, wounded or imprisoned doing
    their job.

    "It brings home to you what a violent world we live and how vulnerable
    journalists are," according to Meara, summing up reactions from
    international visitors to the place of worship.

    Amid the stacks of cards at the altar, there is a copy of a statement
    from the Paris-based World Association of Newspapers (WAN) sounding
    an alarm at the growing numbers of journalists being killed.

    "Journalism today is more dangerous than ever, more than 500
    journalists have been killed in the past decade, often for simply
    doing their jobs," according to WAN's Timothy Balding.

    "These murders are a direct attack not only on individuals but
    on society as a whole. Yet few of the killers are ever brought to
    justice," his statement read.

    Though journalists have long been caught in the cross-fire, it was
    rare for them to be hunted down, Meara said. "Now that seems to have
    changed. Journalists now seem to be targeted."

    Some of the journalists remembered here were indeed targeted, such as
    Russian Anna Politkovskaya, murdered in Moscow in October last year,
    and Hrant Dink, the ethnic Armenian who was slain in Istanbul on
    January 19 this year.

    They also include American Daniel Pearl, who was beheaded after he was
    kidnapped on January 23, 2002 by Islamist extremists while reporting
    in Pakistan.

    Members of Pearl's family, who are Jewish, later the same year attended
    a memorial service for him at St. Bride's held by Meara and Mark Winer,
    the rabbi at the West London Synagogue of British Jews.

    In a happier event, journalist John McCarthy and Anglican clergyman
    Terry Waite attended a thanskgiving service here after their kidnappers
    in Lebanon freed them in 1991.

    "It will always have that special place in my memory," said Jill
    Morrell, who campaigned for the release of McCarthy who was her
    boyfriend at the time.

    "It was difficult at that time to get people to be interested in that
    (hostage) issue and to believe that they were still alive. St.

    Bride's was one place where they did both -- the only place really."
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