EeHH.CO.UK

We Are The Future

IAN BLACK, FORMER GUARDIAN MIDDLE EAST EDITOR, DIES AGED 69

User Rating: 5 / 5

Star ActiveStar ActiveStar ActiveStar ActiveStar Active
 

   

Ian Black, former Guardian Middle East editor, dies aged 69

Ian Black, the Guardian’s former Middle East editor, has died aged 69. He had a rare neurological disease.

Photograph: Linda Nylind/The Guardian
Photograph: Linda Nylind/The Guardian© Provided by The Guardian

Black, who was also a former diplomatic and European editor for the paper, died peacefully on Sunday morning surrounded by his family.

After retiring from the Guardian, he became a visiting senior fellow at the Middle East Centre at the London School of Economics, and continued working as a media commentator on the region.

In August 2021, Black was diagnosed with frontotemporal lobar degeneration – an uncommon neurological condition. He was later told he also showed signs of corticobasal syndrome, an even rarer disorder involving the shrinking of the brain.

Black and his wife, Helen Harris, gave a detailed and moving account of his physical degeneration in an article for the Guardian last October. He wrote: “It is hard to ignore the increasing realisation that as my brain is shrinking, so is my world.” But he said he was enjoying life while he still could.

Black was a widely respected authority on the Middle East and north Africa and authored a number of books, including a history of the Palestine-Israel conflict published in 2017 to mark the centenary of the Balfour declaration.

 

He reported extensively on the Arab spring uprisings and their aftermath, including the conflict in Syria. As part of his role he reported frequently from Israel, Syria, Libya, Egypt and Iran.

Recalling his time as Jerusalem correspondent with one of his successors, Oliver Holmes in 2021, Black said: “You have spent the past three and half years reporting on a one-state reality, whereas I spent my years with the underlying assumption that a two-state solution was possible. And that’s gone.”

In their joint article, Harris wrote: “Ian is reporting from the frontline of his illness with the same clarity and detachment with which he reported for decades from other trouble spots. I find his detachment – and his courage – extraordinary.”

She added: “For many years, I had a handsome foreign correspondent husband who lived in a perpetual hurry, rushing to catch planes and to file his copy to a relentless deadline. He is still handsome and I still love him very much but, in some ways, he has changed beyond recognition.”

Black said he first noticed becoming lost for words during a TV interview in the summer of 2020. As the conditioned worsened he recalled being scared of sounding inarticulate, while maintaining his comprehension and ability to write.

Victoria Brittain, a friend and former colleague on the Guardian foreign desk, said Black and Harris were “overwhelmed by the generosity and warmth from colleagues and others” after the article appeared.

She added: “Ian was a lovely colleague, who was always helpful with information and ideas. Even in the last part of his illness, he remained incredibly graceful, knowledgable and sharp witted.”

Black lived in Golders Green, north London. Brittain said the shelves in his office were decorated with his collection of political memorabilia, including a cartoon statuette of Charles de Gaulle and a set of Russian dolls that included caricatures of Osama bin Laden, Saddam Hussein and Yasser Arafat.

Black is survived by his wife and their two daughters and by his son from a previous marriage. 

Reference: The Guardian: Story by Matthew Weaver

Articles - Latest

Articles - Most Read

Social Media Links Genius

Login

Login

BREAKING NEWS FEEDS -TOP STORIES

All: BreakingNews

Ireland's premier breaking news website providing up to the minute news and sports reports. With e-mail news releases following breaking stories throughout the day. BreakingNews

Who's On Line

We have 103 guests and no members online

We use cookies on our website. Some of them are essential for the operation of the site, while others help us to improve this site and the user experience (tracking cookies). You can decide for yourself whether you want to allow cookies or not. Please note that if you reject them, you may not be able to use all the functionalities of the site.

Ok
X

Right Click

No right click