The Vicar of Baghdad

The Times, 22 May 2008

Canon Andrew White’s family home is not exactly a rambling rectory, but with its peaceful village setting, immaculately tended garden and homely clutter, it is, by most people’s definition, idyllic and utterly conventional.

The problem for Canon White is that he is not a conventional man.

When, as he is occasionally given to do, he opines to his wife, a former lawyer, that perhaps he should be a normal parish priest, her response is always the same. “They couldn’t cope with you and you couldn’t cope with them,” she tells him.

Canon White is the so-called Vicar of Baghdad. Though nominally he resides in rural Hampshire, his church, St George’s, is situated 3,000 miles away, amid the razor wire and bombed-out buildings of Iraq’s capital. He spends an average three days a month with his wife and two young sons in the UK; the rest of the time, he is at his home away from home, a Portakabin inside Baghdad’s heavily fortified green zone – the six square miles that houses all foreign, military and diplomatic staff in what remains the world’s most dangerous city.

Read More

The Foundation for Relief and Reconciliation in the Middle East

Documentary: The Vicar of Baghdad

Leave a Reply

Valid XHTML | Valid CSS | Alternatives to Empire Copyright © 2010 | Powered by WordPress