The Vicar of Baghdad
Fighting for Peace in the Middle East
by Andrew White
Flexiback
Price: £8.99
Publisher:Monarch imprint of Lion Hudson
Published:February 2009
ISBN:978-1-854-24876-3
GoodBookStall Review:
Before his ordination, Canon Andrew White qualified as an Operating Department Practitioner specialising in Anesthetics. He was then ordained as an Anglican Minister, and soon became intensely interested in Jewish and Muslim relations. Based in Coventry, Andrew had already visited Iraq in the late 1990’s, invited by Tariq Aziz, Iraq’s Deputy Prime Minister at the time, with a view to relieving the hardships caused by the western sanctions on Iraq.
The early chapters of the book provide a graphic account of Andrew’s involvement in Israeli politics, and in particular the harrowing siege of Bethlehem in 2002. Andrew was looked upon as someone who could be trusted to broker peace. He has a particular talent for being able to communicate and develop relationships with other faiths and became a trusted confidant to several well known high ranking Muslim and Jewish officials.
He was soon back in Iraq after the invasion and reopened St George’s Church in Baghdad, where he has been ‘Vicar’ ever since! Imagine pasturing a church where rockets and shooting have been the norm for so much of the time? To my surprise Andrew maintains that the war was justified to get rid of the evil of Saddam Hussein. However, he pulls no punches in listing the many serious mistakes the coalition has made.
You can’t but be moved by his many first hand reports of the tragic suffering of his congregation, with many having been caught up in the chaotic post war violence including those who have ‘disappeared’. What is even more amazing about this truly remarkable man is that he has been able to achieve so many things since being diagnosed with MS several years ago. Only today I heard an interview with him on Radio Bristol and Andrew said that of the 2000 members of his church, 93 were killed last year! Anybody who has ever been interested or involved in Iraqi matters would find this a must read and it is a truly moving and memorable book.
Reviewed by David Brassington, Family Books, Keynsham, Nr Bristol.
Reviewer: Guest reviewer (12/03/09)
Before his ordination, Canon Andrew White qualified as an Operating Department Practitioner specialising in Anesthetics. He was then ordained as an Anglican Minister, and soon became intensely interested in Jewish and Muslim relations. Based in Coventry, Andrew had already visited Iraq in the late 1990’s, invited by Tariq Aziz, Iraq’s Deputy Prime Minister at the time, with a view to relieving the hardships caused by the western sanctions on Iraq.
The early chapters of the book provide a graphic account of Andrew’s involvement in Israeli politics, and in particular the harrowing siege of Bethlehem in 2002. Andrew was looked upon as someone who could be trusted to broker peace. He has a particular talent for being able to communicate and develop relationships with other faiths and became a trusted confidant to several well known high ranking Muslim and Jewish officials.
He was soon back in Iraq after the invasion and reopened St George’s Church in Baghdad, where he has been ‘Vicar’ ever since! Imagine pasturing a church where rockets and shooting have been the norm for so much of the time? To my surprise Andrew maintains that the war was justified to get rid of the evil of Saddam Hussein. However, he pulls no punches in listing the many serious mistakes the coalition has made.
You can’t but be moved by his many first hand reports of the tragic suffering of his congregation, with many having been caught up in the chaotic post war violence including those who have ‘disappeared’. What is even more amazing about this truly remarkable man is that he has been able to achieve so many things since being diagnosed with MS several years ago. Only today I heard an interview with him on Radio Bristol and Andrew said that of the 2000 members of his church, 93 were killed last year! Anybody who has ever been interested or involved in Iraqi matters would find this a must read and it is a truly moving and memorable book.
Reviewed by David Brassington, Family Books, Keynsham, Nr Bristol.
Reviewer: Guest reviewer (12/03/09)
| Reader review: - Phelim McIntyre TGBS Reviewer Mark Twain said that truth is stranger than fiction because fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; truth isn’t. This quote sums up the experience of Andrew White as recorded in his autobiography. These stories include children’s Bibles stolen on their way to be delivered to Iraq that were delivered in amazing circumstances to the children in Bagdhad by the 2nd in command of the Mahdi army. Yet these “miracles” are contrasted with the horrors of Iraq under Sadam Hussein. There are many more stories told in Andrew’s previous book Iraq: Searching for Hope (Continium) to which this is a natural companion, as well as Sadam’s Secrets by George Sada (Integrity). There are also many more that because of their horror or sensitivity can not be put into print. For those interested in what is going on in Iraq outside of the gaze of the media this book is a wonderful aid. It is also an amazing insight into a humble man who works against amazing odds, including his MS, and who surely deserves the Nobel Peace Prize. I have the priviledge of calling Andrew a friend and would recommend this book to anyone. |








