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Mirta Ojito

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Name
  
Mirta Ojito

Role
  
Author

Siblings
  
Mabel Ojito


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Books
  
Finding Manana: A Memoir of a Cuban Exodus, Hunting Season: Immigration and Murder in an All-American Town

Parents
  
Orestes Ojito, Mirta Ojito

Education
  
Columbia University, Miami Dade College, Florida Atlantic University

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Mirta Ojito is a Cuban-born author and journalist. She has written two nonfiction books, Finding Mañana: A Memoir of a Cuban Exodus, a book about her journey to the U.S. as a teenager in the Mariel boatlift, and Hunting Season: Immigration and Murder in an All-American Town." She was part of a group of New York Times reporters who shared the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 2001 for a series of articles about race in America. More recently, she was a member of the Telemundo team that won an Emmy for the coverage of Pope Francis's visit to the Americas.

Contents

Mirta Ojito httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages1345286862Mi

Mirta Ojito at BusBoys and Poets Presenting Her Book "Hunting Season..."


Biography

Mirta Ojito Interview Mirta Ojito Author Of Hunting Season NPR

Born on February 10, 1964 in Cuba, Ojito was raised in the Santos Suárez neighborhood of Havana. Her parents disliked the Communist regime and always told her one day they would leave Cuba. That day came on May 10, 1980, when Ojito and her family left the island aboard a boat named Mañana, as part of the Mariel boatlift, and arrived in Key West the following the day. The family settled in Miami. Ojito finished High School there, attended Miami Dade College and went on to Florida Atlantic University, graduating in 1986. In 1987, she started working for The Miami Herald, where she remained for nine years, alternating between that paper and El Nuevo Herald. She became known, primarily, for her coverage of Cuban detainees in federal penitentiaries and stories about human rights in Cuba. In 1996, she started working in the Metro desk of The New York Times, where she covered immigration, among other beats. In 1998, she returned to Cuba to cover the Pope's visit to the island. A first person story from that trip was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. She left the paper in January 2002 to write her first book and, four years later, started teaching at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, where she became known for her work on immigration. She lectured widely on topics regarding Cuba, immigration and journalism. In 2014, she joined NBC News, as the director of Standards for Telemundo. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.


Mirta Ojito Mirta Ojito Pulitzer Prizewinning Author of Finding Maana To

Mirta Ojito El Yuma April 2013

Mirta Ojito Hunting Season on Immigrants Beacon Broadside A Project of Beacon

Mirta Ojito Pulitzer Prize Winning Journalist Mirta Ojito Joins Telemundo as

Mirta Ojito Phi Theta Kappa News Pulitzer Prizewinning Alumna Mirta Ojito

References

Mirta Ojito Wikipedia