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  1. Thomas Malcolm Muggeridge (24 March 1903 – 14 November 1990) was an English journalist and satirist. His father, H. T. Muggeridge, was a socialist politician and one of the early Labour Party Members of Parliament (for Romford, in Essex). Malcolm's brother Eric was one of the founders of Plan International.

  2. Thomas Malcolm Muggeridge (Croydon, Surrey, 24 de março de 1903 – Robertsbridge, 14 de novembro de 1990) foi um jornalista, escritor, satirista, soldado-espião e um acadêmico cristão britânico.

  3. Malcolm Muggeridge (born March 24, 1903, Croydon, Surrey, Eng.—died Nov. 24, 1990, Hastings, East Sussex) was a British journalist and social critic. A lecturer in Cairo in the late 1920s, he worked for newspapers in the 1930s before serving in British intelligence during World War II.

  4. 24 de abr. de 2023 · Like C.S. Lewis, he is remembered for defending the Christian faith, but perhaps in a quirkier way. Muggeridge’s penchant for swimming against the stream has important lessons for today. Sometimes he trailblazed—this year marks 90 years since he reported Soviet atrocities in Ukraine.

  5. Profiles in Faith: Malcolm Muggeridge. Click here to open a Print - Friendly PDF. Thomas Malcolm Muggeridge was born in 1903, named by his father Henry after Thomas Carlyle. A lover of words, Malcolm was to become one of the great literary figures of British public life in the twentieth century.

  6. 15 de nov. de 1990 · Malcolm Muggeridge, a prolific British journalist and caustic social critic, died yesterday in a nursing home in Sussex, England. He was 87 years old. His lawyer, Vernor Miles, said Mr....

  7. Thomas Malcolm Muggeridge was an English journalist, author, media personality, and satirist. During World War II, he was a soldier and a spy. In the aftermath of the war, as a hugely influential London journalist, he converted to Christianity and helped bring Mother Teresa to popular attention in the West.

  8. March 2003 marked the centennial of the British writer, television personality, and moral and religious gadfly Thomas Malcolm Muggeridge. The “Thomas,” which Muggeridge never used, was after Thomas Carlyle.

  9. Malcolm insisted that he always loved truthrien nest beau que le vrai—but he decided that “truth itself . . . is in decidedly bad taste.” Thus a tremendous appeal was exercised on him by the great Christian outsiders — Pascal, Bunyan, Blake, Kierkegaard, Dostoevsky, Simone Weil.

  10. 17 de dez. de 1990 · British author and social critic Malcolm Muggeridge, who once said he “never greatly cared for the world or felt particularly at home in it,” died November 14 at age 87, three years after...