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House of Stone – Frontline Club http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com Championing Independent Journalism Tue, 29 Mar 2016 13:02:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 “Poetry on a deadline” – remembering Anthony Shadid http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/poetry_on_a_deadline/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/poetry_on_a_deadline/#respond Wed, 05 Sep 2012 10:54:02 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/dev/poetry_on_a_deadline/ By Merryn Johnson

A gathering at the Frontline Club was held in remembrance for Anthony Shadid, two-time Pulitzer Prize-winner, who died in February this year while crossing the border out of Syria.

The room was filled with family, friends and colleagues, including his wife, Nada Bakri; Jonathan Rugman, foreign affairs correspondent at Channel 4 News who was with Anthony in Syria; Kareem Fahim from The New York Times; and Katia Jarjoura, friend and filmmaker who documented the rebuilding of his family’s house in southern Lebanon. The evening was chaired by Granta editor, John Freeman.

The trials and tribulations of Anthony’s project to rebuild his family home are captured in Jarjoura‘s filming and in his posthumously published book, House of Stone, a book that moves beyond the story of a house, encompassing family, history and the hopes for a Middle East about which he was passionate.

“I was fascinated to see a war reporter – even though Anthony never wanted to be called a ‘war reporter’ – who could spend hours watching the colours of the stone change through the light, or the wind through the trees, or picking up olives, or just listening to the people around him – I never thought that such a person could exist.” — Katia Jarjoura

Such patience, warmth and listening was evident in his reporting, and Kareem Fahim expanded on Anthonys role in developing a new language in journalism – or ‘poetry on a deadline’, as John Freeman called it – and in redefining the relationship between the US and the Middle East.

“He was an incredible mentor, incredibly gracious, and he had a reputation as one of the good guys. I wasn’t prepared for how generous he was, how passionate he was about what he did or how disciplined he was as a journalist – he had an incredible number of gifts and he wore them all very lightly.” — Kareem Fahim

Fahim also spoke about how special the “Arab Spring” was to Anthony, how for him it was vindicating because he had so much love for the region and higher hopes for the people he was reporting on. And such was his insight and grasp, that what strikes him most now, is how much people miss his voice. He wasn’t an analyst but he illuminated things that others missed.

“One evening I walked into a room in northern Syria and there, sitting like a pasha on the floor wreathed in cigarette smoke, and engaged in conversation was Anthony Shadid. He had a pile of notebooks in front of him, which were bulging with his handwriting. And those were the stories he was going to write for The New York Times, which he never got to write.” — Jonathan Rugman

Yet, said Rugman, “he looked like a man in his element, because he’d got the story he wanted to tell, the story of remarkably ordinary people doing the most extraordinary things”. To him is left the memory of a Levantine dreamer, a man who believed in a better Middle East and was looking for it. Anthony’s approach to journalism and the stories he tried to tell is expanded in this conversation with Jillian Schwedler, Professor of Political Science at University of Massachusetts.

Rugman summed up Anthony with an extract from House of Stone about Dr Kkairalla, in whom he saw his reflection:

Simply put, he was the kind of man I wanted to be, but worried I would never become – gentle and kind, principled, ever curious. Choices didn’t seem to disturb him; in the fullest of lives, the way forward was easier to discern. I felt shy around him. I was too eager to impress, too reluctant to offend. I suppose I admired him too much.  

His wife and fellow reporter, Nada Bakri, said: “To me, this is Anthony. He was really fascinated by Dr Kkairalla because he saw in him all the things he wanted to be.”

The evening paid tribute to a man who loved to listen and to tell stories, no matter who was telling them. Oliver August from The Economist, who reported from Iraq alongside Anthony, remembered his inability to dislike anyone, even Ahmad Chalabi.

“Anthony liked people: to sit with them and talk with them. It was his thing. He really liked people and their stories.” — Nada Bakri

Watch the event here:

 

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Remembering Anthony Shadid http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/remembering_anthony_shadid/ http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/remembering_anthony_shadid/#respond Tue, 04 Sep 2012 18:00:00 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/dev/remembering_anthony_shadid/ Anthony Shadid spent most of his professional career covering the Middle East, first for the The Associated Press; then The Boston Globe; then The Washington Post and finally The New York Times for which he was working when he died in February this year while crossing the border out of Syria. At this special event we will be joined by friends and colleagues of Anthony Shadid to remember the life and work of this most esteemed journalist.

Followed by a drinks reception.

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Anthony Shadid spent most of his professional career covering the Middle East, first for the Associated Press; then The Boston Globe, The Washington Post and finally The New York Times – for which he was working when he died in February this year while crossing the border out of Syria. At this special event we will be joined by friends and colleagues of Anthony Shadid to remember the life and work of this most esteemed journalist.

Followed by a drinks reception.

His knowledge of the region and his ability to translate the stories of the people to a global audience has seen him recognised as one of the most gifted journalists of his generation. He won the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting twice; first in 2004 for his coverage of the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the occupation that followed. Second, for his coverage of Iraq as the United States began its withdrawal.

In March last year Shadid was captured by Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s forces in Libya with three other New York Times reporters and held for six days. On his release he did not return to the US, but to the house his great-grandfather had built and he had embarked on restoring in southern Lebanon. His most recent book House of Stone: A Memoir of Home, Family, and a Lost Middle East recounts this journey of restoration entwined with the story of his family’s flight from Lebanon and resettlement in America.

With contributions from:

New York Times reporter and wife of Anthony Shadid, Nada Bakri.

Jonathan Rugman, foreign affairs correspondent at Channel 4 News.

Kareem Fahim, Middle East reporter for The New York Times.

Katia Jarjoura, journalist and filmmaker.

Chaired by John Freeman, editor of Granta.

 

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Remembering Anthony Shadid http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/remembering-anthony-shadid/ Fri, 03 Aug 2012 09:52:10 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/dev/?p=10863

Anthony Shadid spent most of his professional career covering the Middle East, first for the Associated Press; then The Boston Globe, The Washington Post and finally The New York Times – for which he was working when he died in February this year while crossing the border out of Syria. At this special event we will be joined by friends and colleagues of Anthony Shadid to remember the life and work of this most esteemed journalist.

Followed by a drinks reception.

His knowledge of the region and his ability to translate the stories of the people to a global audience has seen him recognised as one of the most gifted journalists of his generation. He won the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting twice; first in 2004 for his coverage of the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the occupation that followed. Second, for his coverage of Iraq as the United States began its withdrawal.

In March last year Shadid was captured by Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s forces in Libya with three other New York Times reporters and held for six days. On his release he did not return to the US, but to the house his great-grandfather had built and he had embarked on restoring in southern Lebanon. His most recent book House of Stone: A Memoir of Home, Family, and a Lost Middle East recounts this journey of restoration entwined with the story of his family’s flight from Lebanon and resettlement in America.

With contributions from:

New York Times reporter and wife of Anthony Shadid, Nada Bakri.

Jonathan Rugman, foreign affairs correspondent at Channel 4 News.

Kareem Fahim, Middle East reporter for The New York Times.

Katia Jarjoura, journalist and filmmaker.

Chaired by John Freeman, editor of Granta.

 

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