WORDS and photographs looking at forgiveness will be on show at a powerful exhibition in Tavistock this week.

'The F Word: Images of Forgiveness,' tells the stories of people who are learning to forgive, reconcile or move on after their lives have been shattered by violence, tragedy and injustice, and will be on display at Tavistock Town Hall from today (Thursday) to Saturday from 10am to 4pm.

The exhibition features the story of Tavistock's Camilla Carr and Jon James among many others, who were held hostage in Chechnya for 14 months after going there to set up a rehabilitation centre for traumatised war children. The event has been initiated by Tavistock Quakers with the support of many other local community groups, to ensure that as many people as possible have an opportunity to see the images and learn from the stories.

The Forgiveness Project is the brainchild of British journalist Marina Cantacuzino and photographer Brian Moody. Tired of revenge and retaliation dominating the headlines, they travelled to places including the USA, South Africa, Northern Ireland, Rwanda, Israel and Palestine and collected stories of 26 people who chose to take the challenging journey towards forgiveness.

These stories include Richard McCann, whose mother was the first victim of the Yorkshire Ripper; Marian Partington, whose sister was murdered by Fred and Rosemary West, and Andrew Rice whose brother was killed in the World Trade Centre bombing.

Patron of The Forgiveness Project, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, describes forgiveness as a journey out of victimhood: 'Forgiveness does not mean condoning what has been done. It means taking what has happened seriously and not minimising it — drawing out the sting in the memory that threatens to poison our entire existence. In these forgiveness stories, there is real healing.'