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Keeping the Faith [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 180 pages, aukštis x plotis: 210x140 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-May-2024
  • Leidėjas: Messenger Publications
  • ISBN-10: 1788126785
  • ISBN-13: 9781788126786
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 180 pages, aukštis x plotis: 210x140 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-May-2024
  • Leidėjas: Messenger Publications
  • ISBN-10: 1788126785
  • ISBN-13: 9781788126786
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
In this book the award-winning Belfast journalist and author reflects on a long career of reporting on many of the main events in Northern Ireland over the past sixty years and also on the aftermath of conflicts in many parts of the developing world including Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Vietnam and Rwanda.

In this book the award-winning Belfast journalist and author reflects on a long career of reporting on the main events in Northern Ireland over the past sixty years and on the aftermath of conflicts in the developing world including Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Vietnam and Rwanda. He covered the worst of the Troubles from the beginning in 1968-69 and reported on some of the most disturbing atrocities such as Bloody Sunday, the Kingsmills Massacre and the no-warning IRA explosion at the Enniskillen Cenotaph on Remembrance Sunday. He has seen religion at its worst and its best, and he observes how the Christian faith has sustained so many people in times of great suffering and distress, and how the mis- practice of this faith has led to division, misunderstanding and hostility.The author also reflects on his experience of reporting on well-known figures in Northern Ireland ranging from Gordon and Joan Wilson, whose daughter Marie died in the Enniskillen Cenotaph bomb to the Reverend Ian Paisley. He also writes about the courageous and often unheralded bridge-builders including the Reverend Dr Ray Davey, the World War II veteran and a Presbyterian minister who founded Corrymeela the Christian inter-church centre, and who was light years ahead of his church and his society in seeing the urgent need for reconciliation. The author offers telling insights into well-known individuals in a society with no easy answers to challenging problems, and asks why the Christian message has been so badly represented by all the main churches. He questions the role of journalists over decades when balanced reporting was so important but at times very difficult, and suggests that truth has never been more in danger than it is today. His journey of faith through the unholy alliance between religion and politics does not make for easy reading but he still retains his personal faith in the best of human nature which can shine through inspiringly even in the worst of times.

Recenzijos

a book with a message of hope for all. McCrearys  has been a life well and truly lived, and it is a life worth reading about, and above all, learning from. * The Irish Catholic * This book is a tribute to the human spirit. * The Irish News * a ray of light from an often dark landscape...this book is [ Alf McCrearys] best in a range of works spanning over 40 years * The Belfast Newsletter * I strongly recommend anyone with an interest in Ireland and that is surely everyone in Britain to read this book. It can be read at a sitting. I hope as many as possible will do so. * Methodist Recorder * Take, and read or perhaps I might say, read, mark, learn, and inwardly ingest. * Church of Ireland Gazette * During his long and distinguished career with the Belfast Telegraph [ Alf McCreary]





has reported on many of the grim and blood-stained chapters of that provinces





unhappy history. He writes movingly of...terrible events that tested his faith. * Conversations journal * Presents many considered insights...sure to stimulate deep reflection. * Search journal * 'Alf McCreary is to be commended for writing this insightful memoir which I wholeheartedly recommend and wish that it be read widely.'





  * John Cooney, former Religious Correspondent of the Irish Times *

Alf McCreary is an award-winning author and journalist who is based in Belfast. He was formerly a senior writer for the Belfast Telegraph and won several major UK and Northern Ireland Press Awards for his reporting of the Troubles. After 14 years as Head of Information at Queens University, he returned to full-time writing. He was Religion Correspondent of the Belfast Telegraph for 20 years and continues to write as a freelance for a wide range of publications.