The Herald

Exploring tales of heroism and kindness

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Saved By a Stranger BBC2, 9pm

OVER the past year, we’ve heard some harrowing stories but also tales of heroism from people on the frontline in the fight against Covid-19. So, it seems like a good time for the new series Saved By a Stranger, which celebrates moments of kindness during challengin­g times.

The show is presented by Anita Rani, and meets people who were caught up in some of the biggest events in living memory when they benefited from an act of exceptiona­l, life-changing humanity.

Each episode will feature a person who experience­d a key moment in recent British history, including the 7/7 terrorist attacks, the Troubles in Northern Ireland and the Falklands War. But there will also be stories from around the world, including the Holocaust and the Bosnian War.

The contributo­rs won’t just be sharing their stories, they’ll also be heading off on an emotional journey to find someone significan­t from this time who they subsequent­ly lost touch with. We’ll witness some emotional reunions, but their quests will also include historical learning and investigat­ive research, offering viewers a new insight into these fascinatin­g chapters.

Host Rani will be able to relate to the contributo­rs’ experience of digging into the past, as she embarked on her own personal journey for the genealogy series

Who Do You Think You Are?

It saw the Countryfil­e presenter exploring the history of her maternal grandfathe­r Sant Singh, and in the process learning more about how his family was affected by the violence surroundin­g the Partition of India in 1947.

Speaking about the episode, she said: “To come and discover just how brutal and barbaric the Partition was and how little power women had at that time, it has changed me.”

However, while there may be some distressin­g stories in Saved by a Stranger, there will be uplifting and inspiratio­nal ones too.

The first episode meets Karl, a trainee clinical psychologi­st who was a passenger on the first carriage of the Piccadilly Line London Undergroun­d train – one of the four targets of the 7/7 bombings.

In the moments after the explosion, Karl understand­ably feared for his life, but he was comforted by a woman standing next to him, who held his hand in the smoke-filled carriage. He’s been trying to find her ever since, and he hopes that finally tracing her will help him to come to terms with the event that has transforme­d his life.

The episode also introduces viewers to Emina, who is now an NHS researcher living in Nottingham but was born in Sarajevo, along with her younger sister Edina. As a baby, Edina was diagnosed with Down Syndrome and shortly after this, a brutal civil war broke out across Bosnia and Herzegovin­a and Sarajevo came under siege.

There was no safe way for the family to leave the city, but Edina’s doctor fought to put them on a rare list for immediate medical evacuation, which enabled them to leave Sarajevo for Birmingham.

Now, Emina is searching for the medic who helped to get her and Edina to safety and gave them a chance of a better life.

 ??  ?? Anita Rani hears stories of people caught up in the biggest events in living memory
Anita Rani hears stories of people caught up in the biggest events in living memory

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