Claire Bertschinger
Last updated: 31 January 2010
"In her was vested the power of life and death", that's how Bob Geldof memorably described the impossible situation in which Peter Baker's guest in this week's "All Things Considered" once found herself.
Claire Bertschinger was the Red Cross nurse featured in Michael Buerk's iconic report from the food distribution camp of famine ravaged Ethiopia in 1984. It was that media moment which was eventually to give the world Band Aid and then Live Aid but which also launched a young nurse on a twenty year spiritual journey. Her book 'Moving Mountains' reflects upon her frontline existence and the struggle to make sense of life as she cared for the sick, injured and dying in many poverty stricken and war torn countries such as Uganda, Sierra Leone, Lebanon and Afghanistan.
Now, Director of Nursing at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and a Trustee for the African Children's Educational Trust, Claire Bertschinger was recently made a Dame in the New Year's Honours List. In this candid interview she talks about her struggle with dyslexia, the questions raised by the impact of working in Ethiopia at the height of the famine and how she found hope and meaning through Buddhism.
This edition of All Things Considered is broadcast on Sunday 31 January at 8.30am and repeated on Wednesday 4 February at 6.30 pm.
Related info & links:
'Moving Mountains' by Claire Bertschinger, published by Doubleday.
ISBN 0385 65801X.
Children's Educational Trust
The International Committee of the Red Cross
Soka Gakkai International
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