يحاول ذهب - حر
Jim Meyer
August 10, 2025
|The Observer
Mentor for young journalists in Africa, who 'walked into newsrooms a stranger, and walked out a friend'
-
Jim Meyer normally joked that other human beings had better stories to tell than the stories of their own lives. It was not therefore surprising that he talked little about himself. He encouraged those he met to share their experiences.
"It was a lesson I learnt as a filmmaker focusing on death row prisoners; some committed crimes because they felt neglected by the world," Meyer said in 2010.
Avoiding attention left his friends knowing very little about who Jim Meyer really was. This was the case with a cohort of journalists he met from the east Africa region in 2007 during the rollout of the David Astor Journalism Awards Trust programme, a concept he developed to promote the professional development of promising African journalists. In the end, the journalists would know more about the trust and little about Jim Meyer.
"Jim was a kind and generous soul. Whenever I was in London, he made time for me. He loved the city and always invited me to join him for some of his favourite pleasures: fine dinners, theatre, jazz concerts, or simply wandering around. And he never let me pay for a thing," remembers Rachael Akidi, former BBC head of east Africa.
In his final months, Meyer talked about how he found happiness in sleep due to endless dreams in which he wandered in strange, new places. He spent time doing video conferences - checking on friends, often from east Africa, and sending gifts. He also had a new hobby, watching football, and travelled with friends to watch matches.
هذه القصة من طبعة August 10, 2025 من The Observer.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من The Observer
The Observer
‘Every family has its myths. We were told our forebears mapped Ireland’
On a stroll along the East Lothian coastline, the author of Hamnet talks to Alex O’Connell about her peripatetic early childhood and sifting through family folklore to find the mapmaking ancestors who inspired her new novel
9 mins
May 24, 2026
The Observer
James Murdoch moves into ‘fairer media’ with Vox deal
In signing a $300m deal to buy half of New York-based Vox Media, James Murdoch joins liberal billionaires Laurene Powell Jobs at the Atlantic and John Henry at the Boston Globe in attempting to defend struggling US media operations.
1 mins
May 24, 2026
The Observer
Mindy Kaling
The hardworking multitasker is rewriting the workplace comedy, says Barbara Ellen
4 mins
May 24, 2026
The Observer
Activist ‘feared for her life’ on Gaza flotilla
A UK-based pro-Palestine activist intercepted by Israeli forces on a flotilla heading to Gaza last week has said she feared for her life as she watched colleagues emerge bleeding and wounded from a shipping container.
2 mins
May 24, 2026
The Observer
A tale of two fires: in Milan, nine convicted — at Grenfell, we’re still waiting
In August 2021, a huge fire ripped through the 18-storey Torre del Moro in Milan.
4 mins
May 24, 2026
The Observer
Time will tell, mon ami... Mystery of the newest Poirot
There are clues for fans to solve as the BBC casts Agatha Christie’s enduring Belgian sleuth
3 mins
May 24, 2026
The Observer
This survey of the poor is rich reading
The rise of Reform UK — the self-proclaimed anti-elite people’s party — has certainly forced a recognition of the impact of inequality, if not in quite the way the party intends.
4 mins
May 24, 2026
The Observer
Felicity Lott
From gawky girl to one of Britain’s most feted sopranos, she was known for her wit and modesty
3 mins
May 24, 2026
The Observer
Bartlett sets to transforming 'podslop' into children's TV
Steven Bartlett, the entrepreneur and Diary of a CEO podcast host, is releasing an AI-generated children’s show that repackages lessons from his interviews with celebrities and business leaders for a younger audience.
1 mins
May 24, 2026
The Observer
Did the CIA poison England’s chance of being 1970 World Cup champions?
Gabriel Gatehouse initially dismissed the idea the US had spiked goalkeeper Gordon Banks’s beer as a classic conspiracy theory. After a three-year investigation, he found a story of the political games played off the pitch — and enough evidence to believe it might be true...
7 mins
May 24, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

