Ryszard Kapuscinski, who died in January of this year at age 74, was widely regarded as one of the great journalists and literary travelers of the modern era. Born in Pinsk, Poland (now part of Belarus) in 1942, he spent many decades working for the Polish Press Agency as its sole foreign correspondent. In this capacity he covered more than two dozen revolutions and coups, and produced such reportorial classics as
The Emperor,
Shah of Shahs, and
Imperium. His was an art of poetry and precision, and it always seemed blissfully free of ideological blinders.
Now, however, comes a potential fly in the ointment. According to an
article in the
Guardian (which is piggybacking in turn on
this dispatch), Kapuscinski may have paid a price for his vaunted independence: "
Newsweek Poland put the late writer, reckoned to be the greatest east European journalist of his generation, on the cover of this week's issue, unveiling details of his communist-era secret police file and claiming that his global travels in the 1960s and 70s were due to a bargain he struck with the communist regime to collaborate with the secret police."
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