Name Farnaz Fassihi Role Journalist | ||
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Books Waiting for An Ordinary Day: The Unraveling of Life in Iraq Profiles |
Farnaz fassihi recounts a frightening near death experience
Farnaz Fassihi (Persian: فرناز فصیحی) is an award winning Iranian-American journalist. She is a Senior Writer for The Wall Street Journal based in New York. After 14 years covering wars and uprisings in the Middle East, she is focused on diplomacy and the United Nations. . Fassihi is the author of Waiting for An Ordinary Day, a memoir of her four years covering the Iraq war and witnessing the unraveling of social life for Iraqi citizens. Fassihi won six national journalism awards for her coverage of the Iranian presidential elections in 2009. She is a 2015 Nieman fellow at Harvard University.
Contents
- Farnaz fassihi recounts a frightening near death experience
- Week in green episode 31 interview with farnaz fassihi
- Life
- Career
- Books
- Others
- Awards
- References
Week in green episode 31 interview with farnaz fassihi
Life
Farnaz Fassihi was born in the United States to Iranian parents and grew up in Tehran and Portland, Oregon. She received an M.S. in journalism from Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism.
Career
Fassihi is a Senior Writer based in New York. She served as a Senior Middle East correspondent based in Beirut, as Deputy Bureau Chief of Middle East and Africa supervising a team of reporters and shaping coverage from elections in Zimbabwe to war in Gaza and the uprisings of the Arab Spring. She covered the Iraq war as the Journal's Baghdad bureau chief from 2003-2006. She was dispatched to Afghanistan to cover the US-led invasion and has covered 5 wars, revolutions and uprisings throughout the region.
She was one of the lead reporters for the Journal's 2011 award-winning investigative project titled "Censorship Inc," a series of enterprise stories examining how western technology has enabled censorship in authoritarian countries.
Fassihi is widely known for penning a famous email in 2004 about the deteriorating situation in Iraq, which was hailed as the first unvarnished account of the war. The email went viral on the internet and was published in newspapers, websites and blogs around the world and became the subject of a Doonesbury cartoon.
Prior to joining the Wall Street Journal, Fassihi worked as an investigative reporter and roving foreign correspondent for The Star-Ledger of Newark, NJ. She covered the Sept.11 attacks on the Word Trade Center, the war in Afghanistan, Second Palestinian intifada and Iraq under Saddam Hussein for the Star-Ledger. She was also a reporter for The Providence Journal in Rhode Island covering local news. She led the paper's award winning coverage of the crash of EgyptAir flight 990, traveling to Cairo to investigate the story.
She worked as a stringer for Western media organizations in Iran including The New York Times.
Books
"Waiting for An Ordinary Day: the Unraveling of life in Iraq"—Fassihi's four years covering the Iraq war and its impact on ordinary Iraqis. Reviewed on the front page of The New York Times Art section.
"Women’s Letters, America from the Revolutionary War to the Present"—Fassihi's famous email from Iraq is included in this anthology of historical letters written by American women.
"What Orwell Didn’t Know, Propaganda and the New Face of American Politics--Fassihi contributed an essay about the Iraq war and US administration's propaganda.
"Eating Mud Crabs in Kandahar:Stories of Food during Wartime by the World's Leading Correspondents"—Fassihi contributed a chapter on sharing meals in Iran with students activists.
Others
Her essays on the subject of journalism, conflict reporting and courage have been published by Harvard University’s Nieman Reports magazine and Columbia Journalism Review.
She has been a guest speaker at numerous panels and journalism classes and a commentator for television and radio news shows on CNN, MSNBC, BBC, WNYC, PBS, Charlie Rose and National Public Radio.