- Edward Behr (journalist)
Edward Samuel Behr (May 7, 1926,
Paris -May 27 ,2007 , Paris) was aforeign correspondent and warjournalist , who worked for many years forNewsweek .News reports of his death incorrectly confused him with
Edward Behr (food writer) who has the same name. [ [http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070527/ap_en_ot/obit_behr Prolific British writer Behr dies at 81] ]Biography
His parents were of Russian descent, and he had a bilingual education at the
Lycée Janson de Sailly andSt Paul's School ,London . He enlisted in the Indian Army on leaving school, serving in Intelligence in theNorth-West Frontier from 1944 to 1948 and rising to acting brigade major in the Royal Garhwal Rifles at the age of 22. He then took a degree in History atMagdalene College, Cambridge .Edward Behr is survived by his wife, Christian.
Career
His early career as a reporter was with
Reuters in London and Paris. He then became press officer withJean Monnet at theEuropean Coal and Steel Community inLuxembourg from 1954 to 1956. Later he joinedTime-Life as Paris correspondent, and in the late 1950s and early 1960s often covered the fighting in the Congo, the civil war inLebanon as well as the Indo-Chinese border clashes of 1962. He wrote about the unrest inUlster , the fighting inAngola and the Moroccan attack onIfni , the Spanish enclave in West Africa.Behr was often in
Algeria , and in 1961 published "The Algerian Problem". The book had the virtue of being written by a French-speaking outsider with some understanding of, and sympathy for, the positions of both the French and the Algerians. Written when the war was far from over, and going back a century or more over the background, it was considered a fair assessment of a problem which many Frenchmen reckoned no foreigner could possibly understand. The book was said to be compulsory reading at theState Department .Returning to
India forTime magazine , Behr served as bureau chief in New Delhi, travelled inIndo-China , then moved to the mass-circulation American magazineSaturday Evening Post as roving correspondent. In 1965 he went toNewsweek , the weekly news magazine owned by theWashington Post Company.Operating from
Hong Kong as Asia bureau chief, Behr wrote onChina 'sCultural Revolution , secured an interview withMao and reported fromVietnam . The year 1968 turned out to be a hectic one for Behr: he was inSaigon during theTet offensive , inParis for the student riots and inPrague when it was occupied by the Russians.Behr turned gradually from a career in war reporting to writing books and making television documentaries, including award-winning programmes on India,
Ireland and the Kennedy family. A notable production was "The American Way of Death", Behr's look at America's undertaking industry.Later came a documentary for
BBC1 onEmperor Hirohito , and the three-part "Red Dynasty" for BBC2 on the murders inTiananmen Square and the developments in communist China that led up to the massacre.In his book "
Hirohito : Behind the Myth" Behr went into the debate about what the emperor knew about war preparations, about therape of Nanking , theBataan death march , the Burma railway andChangi prison . Behr's case was that Hirohito knew as long ago as 1931 - when his troops took control ofManchuria in the putsch that became known as theMukden Incident - what his military chiefs were doing; that he encouraged it; and that he was fully aware of their preparations for the Second World War.In his book on the
Ceausescu s Behr said that the couple established a dictatorship more Byzantine than Marxist-Leninist. The title, "Kiss the Hand You Cannot Bite", was a Romanian proverb.Behr's biography of
Pu Yi , "The Last Emperor" (1987) - Pu Yi survived the Cultural Revolution and ended his life as a gardener - was made into a film byBernardo Bertolucci and won Behr the Gutenberg Prize.In 1978 his memoirs - "Bearings: A Foreign Correspondent's Life Behind the Lines" - were published in the United States. For Britain the book was memorably retitled "Anyone Here Been Raped and Speaks English?" [ [http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/05/30/news/obits.php Associated Press via "International Herald Tribune", "Edward Behr, 81, foreign correspondent and writer, dies" May 30, 2007] ]
In a thriller, "Getting Even" (1981), Behr used his foreign correspondent experience. He was the author (with Sydney Liu) of "The Thirty-Sixth Way: A Personal Account of Imprisonment and Escape from Red China" (1969), wrote a book on the musical Les Misèrables and collaborated on another about the making of
Miss Saigon .He also wrote "Thank Heaven for Little Girls: The True Story of
Maurice Chevalier 's Life and Times" (1993). He contributed regularly to American, French and British periodicals.References
External links
* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-6665152,00.html "Guardian" obituary]
* [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/news/2007/05/29/db2901.xml "Telegraph" obituary]
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