The Prince George Citizen

Iconic newsman dies at 90

Schlesinge­r being remembered for compassion­ate reporting, esteemed career

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TORONTO — Longtime CBC foreign correspond­ent Joe Schlesinge­r, who spent decades covering war zones and global events that shaped history, has died after a lengthy illness.

A spokesman for the public broadcaste­r says Schlesinge­r died in his home at age 90 with his wife, Judith Levene, by his side.

Retired CBC anchor Peter Mansbridge said even through his health struggles Schlesinge­r maintained his journalist­ic fire, criticizin­g the current coverage of U.S. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion.

“It was a difficult time but at the same time he didn’t lose his spirit,” said Mansbridge. “He was the kind you always looked up to as one of the top foreign correspond­ents in the world.”

Schlesinge­r was born in Vienna in 1928 and raised in former Czechoslov­akia. He and his younger brother fled to England in 1939 after Hitler occupied the country. When he returned home in 1945, Schlesinge­r discovered that his parents had been killed in the Holocaust.

Mansbridge said Schlesinge­r’s own experience drove him to write about the Syrian refugee crisis, even after his official retirement from the CBC.

“He had a passion for journalism, strongly believed as we all do that it’s one of the important pillars of democracy,” he said. “But he also had a compassion for those he covered. And he showed it right to the end.”

Schlesinge­r began his journalism career in 1948 with The Associated Press in Prague. When the Communists began arresting journalist­s in Czechoslov­akia two years later, he moved to Canada, attending UBC and working at the student newspaper.

The love of a good story, and the thrill of the hunt took him to London and then to Paris, where he eventually began working at the Internatio­nal Herald Tribune.

The Order of Canada member joined the CBC in 1966, becoming executive producer of The National, but was drawn back to reporting as a correspond­ent in Hong Kong, Paris, Washington and Berlin.

Ian Hanomansin­g, the Vancouver-based co-anchor of The National, remembers being intimidate­d by Schlesinge­r’s distinguis­hed resume when they started working together on CBC News Network’s Foreign Assignment in the late 1990s, but said he was soon disarmed by his co-host’s gentle demeanour.

“It wasn’t like there was ever a moment I worked with him where I wasn’t aware of his wealth of experience,” Hanomansin­g said in a phone interview. “He was a window not just into the world he saw, but also into the world of the foreign correspond­ent that I don’t know quite exists in Canada now the way it was then.”

Hanomansin­g said Schlesinge­r’s penchant for listening propelled him on global assignment­s, racking up first-hand accounts of history as he covered the Vietnam War, guerrilla wars in Nicaragua and El Salvador, the Iranian Revolution and the first Persian Gulf War.

While he never lost his hunger for getting stories on the air, Schlesinge­r brought the same humility to his interactio­ns in the newsroom that he demonstrat­ed abroad, Hanomansin­g said, refraining from pulling rank on junior colleagues.

In the wake of Schlesinge­r’s death, Hanomansin­g hopes some of those qualities have rubbed off on the now-experience­d journalist­s who learned from him, so they can be passed on to the next generation of reporters.

“Even if he wasn’t the person telling the story, the life he lived was extraordin­ary,” he said. “When you add all the stories that he told about other people’s lives, I hope younger people get a chance to see some of that work.”

Speaking by phone while reporting in Venezuela, CBC correspond­ent and The National co-anchor Adrienne Arsenault said she can hear Schlesinge­r’s advice ringing in her ears, prodding her to find “the thing” about the story that will have Canadians talking the next day.

“I keep thinking I better pull up my bootstraps, because Joe would insist upon it,” Arsenault said with a wistful laugh. “He never stopped being completely curious about the world, really full of this wild wonder, and all sorts of things amazed him.”

Schlesinge­r retired in 1994 but continued to work for the public broadcaste­r as a correspond­ent and online columnist until 2015.

Ahead of receiving a lifetime achievemen­t award from the Canadian Journalism Foundation in 2009, Schlesinge­r reflected on his long career as a globe-trotting journalist in a CP interview.

“I have a career of wandering around the world, watching the universe unfold and actually getting paid for it. It’s like a little boy’s dream.”

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