If you find yourself in the shadows of St Paul’s Cathedral with a few moments to spare, please stroll down Fleet Street and visit St Bride’s Church.

This is where you will find a memorial reminding us about journalists and photographers who are killed while bringing us the latest news from war zones around the world. I hold their unflinching bravery in the highest esteem.

The latest victim who will to join their numbers is British war photographer and film maker Tim Hetherington,who was recently killed during a mortar attack in Libya. More than 2,000 journalists, many of them photojournalists, have been killed in war zones, since 1989. So much has been written about Tim’s brilliance in capturing the lives of those affected by wars since his devastating death, that it has jolted us into considering the dangers which journalists and photographers place themselves in to show us the true horror before their eyes.

I visited St Bride’s in 2007 and felt deeply saddened as I stared at the young faces in front of me, the lives of those who had died in pursuit of this truth. I have added some of those pictures to my flickr feed which can be viewed on the right of this post.

For 500 years St Bride’s has been the spiritual home of the press, printing and journalism;  I imagine it brings great comfort to the media during times of loss, such as now. Mostly, these deaths go unnoticed, we don’t get to hear about it. But Tim’s brilliance, his emotive filming and the high regard in which he is held among his peers is so great that it has made worldwide news.

That’s why at Easter you may like to reflect on the personal sacrifices made by this professional, often greatly maligned, with The Journalists’ Prayer:

Almighty God, strengthen and direct, we pray, the will of all whose work it is to write what many read, and to speak where many listen. May we be bold to confront evil and injustice, understanding and compassionate of human weakness, rejecting alike the half-truth which deceives, and the slated word which corrupts.

May the power which is ours, for good or ill, always be used with honesty and courage, with respect and integrity, so that, when all here has been written, said and done, we may, unashamed, meet Thee face to face. Through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.