Contents
- Home
- News
- Embryology vote leaves lobbyists out in the cold
- Commission finds asylum a muddle
- Caféchurch gets fresh boost
- Burmese clerics tell of relief struggle in cyclone aftermath
- Makgoba condemns violence
- Kidnappers happy with Carey video
- Put your hands together
- Anyone’s game
- CT writer lauded by Lambeth
- Liverpool’s green dribble
- Robinson ‘around Lambeth’s edges’
- Central Africans declare Kunonga excommunicate
- 66 per cent like church
- Men of the people
- Don’t drain us, say Churches
- News in Brief
- California ruling against gay marriage overturned
- Foreign news in brief
- ‘Caring’ teen dies after fall
- Award for Iraq documentary
- “Shared moral sense”
- Artist plans a St Paul’s epic
- Minister rejects RE proposal
- Shake-up in clergy training
- New guidelines aim to end the bullying of disabled children
- Camerons’ child meets school criteria
- It’s close
- Thousands of Chinese volunteers flock to help at scene of earthquake
- Church can nurture seeds of peace, says McAleese
- Question of the week
- Comment
- Letters
- Real Life
- Features
- Faith
- Humour and crossword
- Pastimes
- Books
- Arts
- Media
- Gazette
back to News |
previous story
|
next story
|
Award for Iraq documentary
by Ed Beavan
THE Premier Award from the Sandford St Martin Trust, which organises the “Oscars” of religious broadcasting, has gone to The Boys from Baghdad High (BBC2). It followed four classmates from different religious backgrounds in Baghdad during the 2006/07 academic year. The Revd Peter Owen Jones’s series Extreme Pilgrim took the Radio Times Readers’ Award for the programme in which he imitated the desert life of St Antony of Egypt. Channel 4’s Once Upon a Time in Iran was the runner-up for the Premier Award. It followed Shia pilgrims from Tehran to Iraq. Songs of Praise from St Magnus Cathedral in Orkney, and The Retreat won merit awards. |
back to News |
back to top |
previous story
|
next story
|

.gif)

