July 18, 2009

Journalists weigh in on Cronkite

From the Committee to Protect Journalists:

when CPJ sought to visit apartheid South Africa, it was a letter from Cronkite to the South African Embassy that secured visas for our delegation. Our representatives, including Nadel and then-board member Aryeh Neier (who helped found Human Rights Watch), tried to persuade South African officials to ease the country's practice of imprisoning journalists and taking other highly repressive steps such as "banning" them from public life.

Minister of Law and Order Louis La Grange was unabashed about procedures that clearly lacked due process and indignant that they were being challenged. Yet later in the meeting, La Grange's tone softened: He told our delegation that he had once met Cronkite. "Should I give Walter your regards?" asked Neier. "No, he wouldn't remember me," said La Grange. "But I certainly remember him."

For Neier, the interaction was a lesson in the power of the U.S. media and one of its leading figures. A government official who was so powerful in South Africa that he proudly took credit for approving journalist detentions was in awe of Walter Cronkite.

There's another anecdote there which tells of the time during the Falklands War when three journalists were captured by the Argentinians and were subjects of a protest letter signed by Cronkite; one of those journalists was Simon Winchester, who has gone on to write several best-selling books (Krakatoa, The Professor and the Madman).

Posted by Linkmeister at July 18, 2009 12:46 PM | TrackBack
Comments

It's really great hearing about Cronkite through the years, from when he manned a machine gun as a journalist covering the effort to take Hitler's Berlin, to this.

He was a journalist, most of all. That's a rare thing to find in today's broadcast media.

I've missed him for many years prior to his death.

Posted by: Kevin Hayden at July 18, 2009 03:17 PM

I just love Walter Cronkite.

Posted by: cassie-b at July 19, 2009 05:38 AM