大象传媒

Explore the 大象传媒
This page has been archived and is no longer updated. Find out more about page archiving.

24 September 2014
Press Office
Search the 大象传媒 and Web
Search 大象传媒 Press Office

大象传媒 Homepage

Contact Us

Press
Packs

Who Do You Think You Are?
Ian Hislop

Who Do You Think You Are?



Ian Hislop


Self-confessed patriot Ian Hislop lives in Kent, the verdant 'garden of England', but he has lived a nomadic existence.


"'England, with all thy faults, I love thee still' - I've always felt that," he says.


"My father was Scottish, my mother was English, but came from Jersey, I was born in Wales but left after five months.


"As a child I lived in Nigeria, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Hong Kong and was then sent to prep school in the south of England!"


Delving into his past Hislop discovers that both his grandfathers fought valiantly for King and country - over a wide range of wars.


His father's father fought in the First World War, while his grandfather on his mother's side saw service in the Boer War.


"Someone like me spends their life asking the question 'Why?' about everything," he muses. "But men like my grandfathers - 'Theirs not to reason why, theirs just to do or die' - they just did it. Seeing that resolution, discipline and courage is quite extraordinary."


But it is the Second World War which Hislop examines first.


His mother was celebrating her 11th birthday when the Nazi occupation of Jersey began.


"She didn't talk about it much, but now I'm fascinated to know what it was like to have been in the only part of Britain occupied by the Germans.


"Whenever I'm confronted by people of that generation I'm always impressed by what they did and hopeful that I would have behaved in the same way. But part of me worries that I wouldn't."


Visiting the First World War trenches and sites of the conflicts of the Boer War, Hislop is fascinated by his history.


"I assumed that genealogy was a bit of an anorak's hobby," he admits, "and that people who knew who their great-grandfathers were to seven generations were a bit dull.


"But it has been incredibly interesting to find out the sort of people my relatives were and the things they did."


< previous section next section >
Printable version top^


The 大象传媒 is not responsible for the content of external internet sites



About the 大象传媒 | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy