Nov. 24, 2006
COMMENTARY: BBC Reporter Brings Light to a Blighted Country
By Dan K. Thomasson
Scripps Howard News Service
She is a young reporter and every morning she awakens with the resolve
to
provide necessary information about and to her fellow countrymen in an
increasingly troubled land. But to accomplish this she must first go
through
a ritual few of us could sustain for long.
She never leaves her home at the same time and she never takes the same
route to work. She keeps watch on the street each day for several
minutes
before being picked up by her driver to make certain she is not under
surveillance. She follows the same routine when her workday is done.
She is
widely known, yet those who listen to her broadcasts daily, including
her
neighbors, would not recognize her on the street -- at least not as the
famed correspondent she has become.
She has no social life and the strain of having no relief from the
tensions
of her chosen profession has begun to show in her eyes, which, by the
way,
are deep set in a face that could only be described as extremely
attractive.
She should be enjoying her fame and the young men her prettiness would
draw
like flies in any other society.
That is the life of Shadha al-Jubori, a correspondent for the British
Broadcasting Company's Arabic news service in Baghdad, whose
perseverance
and excellence under extreme difficulties recently brought her to
America as
one of two foreign journalists to receive a Knight International
Journalism
Award at the annual banquet of the International Center for
Journalists. Her
fellow recipient was Drago Hedl, a crusading editor from Croatia with a
distinguished history of battling for peace and justice in his
homeland.
Other honorees included Associated Press correspondent Bagila
Bukharbayeva
of Kazakhstan, who won the Paul Klebnikov Prize for Courage in
Journalism,
and CBS news anchor and correspondent Bob Schieffer, who was the first
recipient of the ICFJ's Founders' Award.
But it was Ms. al-Jubori, whose daily struggle to make some sense out
of the
utter chaos around her in her hometown, who clearly provided the most
poignant moments of the evening, a perfect model of what journalism at
its
best is all about -- the struggle to keep one's community, region and
world
supplied with information that can help them survive. Every day she
must lie
about who she really is (she uses the last name Muhammed in her
neighborhood
and only her sister knows she is the famous voice on radio) just to
stay
alive. She is a modern woman who at times must pretend she conforms in
a
culture that is often repressive to females.
"I must protect my life," she says in heavily accented English. And
then
with perfect, precious understatement, adds, "This job is not easy."
This is a profession or craft or whatever that spends countless hours
and
millions of dollars annually on awards for those who practice it.
"Award-winning" as prefix to the word "reporter" has become just as
common
as a byline and often cheapens what we do. In the satirical TV sitcom
"WKRP
in Cincinnati," the newscaster, Les Nesmond, was always introduced as
winner
of the Buckeye News Award. It was a lovely piece of writing that hit
the
mark in poking fun. Perhaps part of the problem the newspaper industry
is
experiencing today stems from it's inclination to print not what its
patrons
need in a fashion they have time to read and digest, but to publish for
prize judges.
One major East Coast newspaper spent so much energy winning Pulitzer
Prizes
with longwinded exposes at the expense of the kind of news its
community
needed that it lost much of its audience and its circulation has
dropped by
half.
But extreme self-indulgence isn't the case with the award given Ms.
al-Jubori and the honorees. Here are men and women struggling under the
most
difficult conditions to shine the brightest light possible on ignorance
and
intolerance and injustice for the benefit of their countrymen. Ms.
al-Jubori
is a highly intelligent, young Iraqi woman who is willing to sacrifice
much
of her youth to perform a public service. It is exactly what we should
be
recognizing as achievement of the highest merit.
She is an extension of all those countless correspondents throughout
history
who have been willing to bring the message to the masses under
difficult,
often life threatening circumstances. A considerable number of them
have
been killed in Iraq, where this award-winning reporter carries on every
day
in behalf of those living in a blighted land. She makes us all proud,
and in
this week of Thanksgiving we should all give thanks for her.
Dan K. Thomasson is former editor of the Scripps Howard News Service.