When I stumbled upon the
news Monday (on social media) that Gwen Ifill had died, something clutched my
heart, and my eyes filled with tears. Although I’ve withdrawn from news
programs because the substance and the standards have deteriorated so much, I
could still count on PBS NewsHour if I wanted intelligent coverage. And Ifill
was a good chunk of that intelligence.
I’d thought it a little odd
last week when her co-anchor Judy Woodruff had started one of the broadcasts by
saying, “Gwen Ifill is away; we hope to have her back soon.” Usually you hear
that someone’s away on assignment, or vacation. This wasn’t that, and so it
transpired. Ifill died Monday, age 61, from complications arising from
endometrial cancer.
She’d been working almost
right up until the end, because she was both a consummate journalistic
professional, and because she loved covering politics. My least favorite
subject.
Since her death, various
configurations of friends and colleagues have gathered on PBS to talk about
what a gift Ifill was to their profession and to their lives, how she enriched
the existence of everyone around her. Here are some of my key take-aways.
David Brooks, of the New York Times, wrote this
appreciation of her. Ifill was a PK, the daughter of a minister. Brooks
writes that she, “told me
that if she didn’t go to church on Sunday she felt a little flatter for the
whole week. A spirit as deep and ebullient as hers needed nourishment and care,
and when it came out it came out in her smile, which was totalistic and
unrestrained.”
On NewsHour on Monday, one of her former colleagues said, “You could
read a book by the light of Gwen’s smile.” He was right, as you can see from
this photo that I stuck on my office door:
Since I did that, two of my
colleagues have stopped by to thank me—they’d worked at WETA, where Ifill’s
programs were produced. They hadn’t worked with her directly, but she’d still
touched their lives. I repeated the “read a book” quote, and they both agreed.
In each conversation, our throats were tighter than normal.
A couple of nights ago
Charlie Rose interviewed Michele Norris, a friend of Ifill’s for more than 30
years. Her throat tightened, too, as she discussed the difficult days and weeks
Ifill endured; very few people—colleagues or viewers—even knew she was ill,
much less dying. Norris said something that stopped me in my tracks:
“She chose joy,” she said.
Even at the end, she chose joy.
I’m sorry I never got to
hear her laugh. Everyone says that laugh was something amazing. I’m also sorry
I never got to hear her sing. Everyone says her singing was something to
behold, as well. Based on her speaking voice and the wattage of that smile, I
believe both statements.
And here's something else: the very act of me taping an Internet photo of her to my door gave me a connection with two people I'd only nodded and smiled to in the kitchen or the loo for the past ten months. A human connection of recognizing the gifts of kindness and steadfastness this woman gave to everyone around her.
And here's something else: the very act of me taping an Internet photo of her to my door gave me a connection with two people I'd only nodded and smiled to in the kitchen or the loo for the past ten months. A human connection of recognizing the gifts of kindness and steadfastness this woman gave to everyone around her.
We are all poorer for the
loss of Gwen Ifill.