An Indian heroine and Iceland's epics
Jo Jolly reports on meeting someone who made her reconsider the "rules" of journalism - a baby rescued in Muzaffarnagar; Rosie Goldsmith swims in Reykjavik's yearly flood of books
A tale of love, bravery and generosity from Uttar Pradesh: Jo Jolly reports on meeting someone who made her reconsider the "rules" of impartiality journalism - a tiny baby rescued from communal violence in Muzaffarnagar. The woman who took this child in had little to gain - yet protected first her, and then the journalist who came to hear her story, from menacing crowds. On the other side of the world, there's no shortage of dramatic stories in Reykjavik, either: in fact, as Rosie Goldsmith hears, Iceland has one of the world's most literary cultures. From its centuries-old epics, still popular today, to the modern yearly flood of lavish Christmas hardbacks which most households begin to order from an autumn catalogue, books are the stuff of life.
Presenter: Pascale Harter
Producer: Polly Hope
Picture credit: JO JOLLY/大象传媒
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- Tue 15 Oct 2013 18:50GMT大象传媒 World Service Online