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British journalist and writer (1955–2023) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peter Millar (22 February 1955 – 21 January 2023) was a Northern Irish journalist, critic and author, primarily known for his reporting of the later days of the Cold War and fall of the Berlin Wall.
Peter Millar | |
---|---|
Born | Bangor, County Down, Northern Ireland | 22 February 1955
Died | 21 January 2023 67) | (aged
Occupation | Author, journalist |
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | University of Oxford |
Notable works | Tomorrow Belongs to Me 1989: The Berlin Wall, My Part in its Downfall All Gone to Look for America |
Website | |
petermillar |
Millar was born in Bangor, Co Down and educated at Bangor Central Primary School and Bangor Grammar School, then Magdalen College, Oxford, where he read French and Russian.
"I had committed the mistake of assuming that politics and logic would fuel the progress of history, instead of more potent factors: emotion and accident"[1] |
– Millar recounting in his book 1989: The Berlin Wall, My Part in its Downfall the reasons he saw for the fall of the Berlin Wall. |
Millar was hired by Reuters in 1976 and worked in London and Brussels before being sent from Fleet Street to East Berlin by the news agency, where in the early 1980s he was the only non-German correspondent. Millar also reported on the Solidarity movement in Poland before moving to Warsaw and then Moscow. He joined The Daily Telegraph before in 1985 moving to the Sunday Telegraph, whose editor Peregrine Worsthorne agreed to Millar's suggestion to give him the role of Central Europe Correspondent: "I persuaded him to let me style myself Central Europe Correspondent, thereby not just inventing a job but revitalising a term – Central Europe – that had been current for centuries but dormant since the onset of the Cold War and the continent's split down an ideological fault line".[2] In 1989, in the run-up to the final stages of The Cold War, Millar moved to The Sunday Times. He was arrested[3] in East Berlin during demonstrations during Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's visit for East Germany's 40th anniversary parades, and was interrogated by the Stasi before being expelled[4] from East Germany. Two weeks later Millar returned to Berlin, however, to witness and report on the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the collapse of communism across Eastern Europe. One passage Millar wrote for a Sunday Times article, about events as they unfolded in Prague,
A hands-across-Prague protest designed as a human chain became instead a merry dance, a living tableau from a Breughel painting, as laughing, skipping people in warm mufflers and long scarves formed an endless twisting snake through the trees, through the snowy park, up to the floodlit spires, the castle itself and the archbishop's palace, then helter-skelter slithered giggling down steep, slippery, narrow cobbled streets and holding hands with an exaggerated formality, like a pastiche mazurka, passed across the fifteenth-century Charles Bridge, watched by all the statues of all the saints, and on to Wenceslas Square"[5]
was subsequently quoted in its entirety in Martin Gilbert's A History of the Twentieth Century.[6]
Millar died from a stroke on 21 January 2023, at the age of 67.[7]
Millar translated several German language books into English, including the White Masai series by Corinne Hofmann and Deal With the Devil by Martin Suter. He was also the translator of several online books published by Lübbe AG of Cologne, Germany, including Apokalypsis by Mario Giordano.
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