Bbc

Sir Terry Waite encourages others to make positive changes

S.Ramirez2 hr ago
'Make your own positive change' - Sir Terry Waite Former Beirut hostage Sir Terry Waite has encouraged others to "act within your own area of influence" to create changes in the world.

Sir Terry, 85, spent nearly five years in captivity after he was taken hostage while working to negotiate the release of several captured Britons in Lebanon.

Sir Terry, of Hartest, near Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, was held in solitary confinement for 1,763 days before he was released on 18 November 1991.

He told BBC Radio Suffolk he was often asked how people could make the world a better place, and always urged them to make their own positive change.

"People say to me, 'The world is in a terrible mess, what can we do?'," he said.

"My response always to that is try and act within your own area of influence... try and do something positive.

"That's the way you can make a difference.

"That's what I always try and do. I don't always succeed by any means, and I'm no saint, but I just do my best."

In the 1980s, as the Archbishop of Canterbury's special envoy, Sir Terry was asked to negotiate the release of several British prisoners in Lebanon from militia group Hezbollah.

It promised he could visit one of the hostages who was very ill and about to die, but it was a trap and they captured him.

He spent the next few years in "very strict solitary confinement" while chained to a wall, with no natural light and no ability to exercise, and was subject to torture and mock executions.

Hezbollah has been back in the news recently after Israel went on the offensive against it within Lebanon following almost a year of cross-border fighting sparked by the war in Gaza.

On Tuesday, Israeli strikes on northern Lebanon killed several people, according to officials.

Sir Terry said his hostage experience led him to pursue life away from a salaried job, and instead he went on to write several books and give lecturers on his experience.

It also led him to set up the charity Hostage International, supporting families of hostages and former hostages themselves.

He also is the president of Emmaus , a homelessness charity, and he was awarded a Knighthood last year for his services to charity.

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