Anthony Shadid
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Currently viewing the tag: "Anthony Shadid"

Grant Interview with Anthony Shadid

In In the Media, Interviews

TH: In your essay, which is featured in Granta 116: Ten Years Later, you take us back to a time when Baghdad College was still a place of cultural exchange for students from across the Middle East within an American-run institution. What part do you think 9/11 and the events that followed have had to play in causing the [...]

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Intervention Could Make Things Worse

In In the Media, Interviews, Video

New York Times’ Anthony Shadid on Rebellions in Libya and the Middle East. You can see the full article over at Democracy Now.

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Freed from captivity in Libya, Anthony recounts ordeal

In In the Media, Interviews, Video

Freed from Captivity in Libya, Anthony Shadid of the New York Times Recounts Ordeal under Gaddafi’s Forces. This interview was recorded for Democracy Now.

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Anthony Shadid: PBS Interview

In In the Media, Interviews, Video
"Analysis now of the situation on the ground from Anthony Shadid — an Oklahoma-born, Arabic speaking, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter for THE WASHINGTON POST. Shadid has written a moving new book, NIGHT DRAWS NEAR, about everyday Iraqi life – and death."
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Anthony Shadid: Focus on Lebanon

In In the Media, Interviews, Video
Shadid discusses the political impasse in Lebanon and provides an overview of the historical disenfranchisement of Shias in Lebanon; their alienation from politics and economic deprivation, and the need to promote a process by which the various groups in Lebanon are accorded their natural rights.
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In Thuluyah, reverberations of a U.S. raid

In Articles, Journalism, Pulitzer Entries 2010, Pulitzer Prize
THULUYAH, IRAQ -- Recitation of the Koran, mournful but consoling, played from a scratchy cassette as the men gathered in the funeral tent for condolences. They sipped bitter Arabic coffee, only enough to leave an aftertaste. As they smoked cigarettes, an American helicopter rumbled overhead, its rotors sounding the familiar drumbeat of war.
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‘People woke up, and they were gone’

In Articles, Journalism, Pulitzer Entries 2010, Pulitzer Prize

SUWAYRAH, IRAQ — The U.S. military called it shock and awe, and it began on March 21, 2003 — 8:09 p.m., to be exact. It concluded here with a sigh. No one quite remembers when the Americans withdrew from Forward Operating Base Summers.

“One morning they left, and they never came back,” said Osama Majid, [...]

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In Anbar, U.S.-Allied Tribal Chiefs Feel Deep Sense of Abandonment

In Articles, Journalism, Pulitzer Entries 2010, Pulitzer Prize

RAMADI, Iraq — There was once a swagger to the scotch-swilling, insurgent-fighting Raed Sabah. He was known as Sheik Raed to his sycophants. Tribesmen who relied on his largess called him the same. So did his fighters, who joined the Americans and helped crush the insurgency in Anbar province.

Sabah still likes his scotch — [...]

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Worries About Kurdish-Arab Conflict Move to Fore in Iraq

In Articles, Journalism, Pulitzer Entries 2010, Pulitzer Prize
QARAQOSH, Iraq -- Louis Khno is a city councilman whose city is beyond his control. In his barricaded streets are militiamen -- in baseball caps and jeans, wielding Kalashnikov rifles, with the safeties switched off. They answer to someone else. Leaders of his police force give their loyalty to their ethnic brethren -- be they Kurd or Arab. Clergy in the town pledge themselves to the former. Khno and his colleagues to the latter.
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In the City of Cement

In Articles, Journalism, Pulitzer Entries 2010, Pulitzer Prize
There is a hint of an older Baghdad in old Baghdad. You might call it more of a taunt. It's there at the statue of the portly poet Marouf al-Rusafi, pockmarked by bullets, who gives his name to an untamed square. Around him revolves a city, storied but shabby, that American soldiers have finally, ostensibly, left.
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  • The Books

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    House of Stone

    An unforgettable memoir of the world’s most volatile landscape and the universal yearning for home.
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    Night Draws Near

    A riveting account of ordinary people caught between the struggles of nations.
    10000slidenonetransparent

    Legacy of the Prophet

    A first-person account of the transformation in the style and message of Islamic politics at the beginning of the twenty-first century.
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  • A note from Nada Bakri

    "I do not approve of and will not be a part of any public discussion of Anthony's passing. It does nothing but sadden Anthony's children to have to endure repeated public discussion of the circumstances of their father's death."
    –Nada Bakri, wife of the late Anthony Shadid
  • Twtitter Tributes

    anna_lamadda: #lacasadipietra di #anthonyshadid è un libro DA LEGGERE. Un ottimo consiglio di @robertosaviano
    93 months ago
    beatnikjourno: Yes. RT @jessradio Remembering #MarieColvin and #AnthonyShadid today on #InternationalPressFreedomDay. Two great journalists we lost.
    94 months ago
    2imen: RT @abumuqawama: RT @Waleed_Hazbun: In memory, #AnthonyShadid last lecture at #AUB http://t.co/qkqKp0UG
    94 months ago
    v____: RT @abumuqawama: RT @Waleed_Hazbun: In memory, #AnthonyShadid last lecture at #AUB http://t.co/qkqKp0UG
    94 months ago
    ShadiElkarra: RT @camanpour: Deeply honored to receive the #AnthonyShadid award for journalism at Tuesday April 16 @AAIUSA Kahlil Gibran Spirit of Humanity Awards in DC.
    94 months ago
    ojsutton: RT @camanpour: Deeply honored to receive the #AnthonyShadid award for journalism at Tuesday April 16 @AAIUSA Kahlil Gibran Spirit of Humanity Awards in DC.
    94 months ago
  • Reviews

    • “…wise, compassionate storytelling” : Review from Annia Ciezadlo
    • House of Stone Review from Dave Eggers
    • “I was captivated, instantly”: Dave Cullen
    • Reviews for House of Stone
  • News

    • Interrogating the NY Times’ Anthony Shadid
    • Anthony Shadid’s Interview on NPR’s Fresh Air
    • Anthony Shadid on Qatar
    • Across Divide in Iraq, a Sunni Courts Shiites
    • In Assad’s Syria, There Is No Imagination
  • Pulitzer Entries

    • In Thuluyah, reverberations of a U.S. raid
    • ‘People woke up, and they were gone’
    • In Anbar, U.S.-Allied Tribal Chiefs Feel Deep Sense of Abandonment
    • Worries About Kurdish-Arab Conflict Move to Fore in Iraq
    • In the City of Cement
    • A Quite but Undeniable Cultural Legacy
    • A Journey Into the Iraq of Recollection
    • No One Values the Victims Anymore
    • New Paths to Power Emerge in Iraq
    • In Iraq, the Day After