“The commitment to fairness and balance and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions has been our gold standard.” โ John F. Burns
As Iโve gotten older I pay closer attention to the obituary section of the New York Times. It frequently teaches me and brings back unusual memories that surprise me. Today it was my memory of years of reading the writings of John Burns brought back to life as I read his obituary.
Burns retired over ten years ago. I now remember thinking at the time just what a loss that would be for the paper. Reading Alan Cowellโs obituary of John F. Burns this morning, I felt that absence acutely.
For years, Burns was my first readโa “fireman” of the foreign desk who didnโt just report on the heat; he translated the embers.
Burns belonged to an era of journalism that felt more like a literary calling than a content cycle. He was a man who could find the “sweep of history” in the “telling detail of the present.”
Who else would think to frame the harrowing siege of Sarajevo through the haunting notes of a cellist playing Albinoniโs Adagio amidst the rubble? He understood that to explain a war, you must first explain the soul of the city being broken by it.
His career was a map of the 20th and 21st centuriesโ most jagged edgesโfrom the “wasteland of blasted mosques” in Bosnia to the “harrowing regime” of the Taliban in 1990s Afghanistan.
Yet, for all his Pulitzers and his debonair appearances in a Burberry raincoat on Red Square, there was a refreshing, stubborn humility to his craft.
He famously tilted against the “missionary complex” of modern reporting. He didn’t want to save the world; he wanted to see itโclearly, fairly, and without the blinding influence of ideology.
There is something deeply moving about his partnership with his wife, Jane Scott-Long which wasnโt familiar to me. While John was the “full force of talent” at the keyboard, Jane was the architect of safety, turning run-down Baghdad houses into fortified sanctuaries with “military-style blast walls” and, perhaps most essentially, a state-of-the-art coffee machine. They were a team that survived the “chaos of war” by creating a small, civilized center within it.
In his later years after she passed, Burns became more reclusive, a quiet departure for a man once known as a “raconteur with panache.” Itโs a transition that mirrors the profession itself. He flourished in a pre-internet era, where time-zone differentials allowed for “considered writing.” Today, the “blue pencil” of the editor has been replaced by the instant, unvetted roar of the social feed.
His final story for the Times was about the reburial of King Richard III. It was a fitting end: a story about the “sweep of the centuries” propelling the news of the day.
As I reflect back on his work and my years of reading it, I realize that what I miss isn’t just the news he delivered. I miss the way he delivered itโwith the patience of a historian and the heart of a poet. He kept the paper straight, and in doing so, he helped us keep our bearings in a world that so often feels lost. Especially today.
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