Talk Nation Radio for October 14, 2009
Dahr Jamail Lecture at ECSU on Reinventing Journalism in a Time of War
If you or someone you know is facing deployment or redeployment to Iraq or Afghanistan, and you want to know what the US Military can and cannot do, and what your rights are, contact the GI Rights Hotline at 877-447-4487
Special Thanks to Eastern Connecticut State University in Willimantic, CT where this program was taped and also to: Prof. Helma De Vries, Political Science Dept., who coordinated the event, and the campus human rights group, as well as sponsor, Promoting Enduring Peace, PEP, a Connecticut based peace group. Video of this event here taped by ECSU audio visual dept.
Produced by Dori Smith
TRT:29:51
Recorded September 21, 2009
Download at Pacifica's Audioport here and at Archive.org or Radio4all.net
Dahr Jamail spoke at Eastern Connecticut State University, [ECSU] in Willimantic, Connecticut before a crowd of several hundred students, professors, and members of the general public. The event September 21, 2009, marked the UN's International Day of Peace and was sponsored by Promoting Enduring Peace and campus groups. Link to video here.
You can learn more about Dahr Jamail's recent book, 'The Will to Resist, Soldiers who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan' at his web site dahr.org or at the publisher, Haymarket Books. Dahr Jamail's previous book was, 'Beyond the Green Zone, Dispatches from an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq'.
U.S. Military Resister's specials, this represents part one of a lecture on the media, independent journalism, and Dahr Jamail's book on US soldiers resisting deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan for a variety of reasons. Connecticut residents are working on a variety of projects relating to Dahr Jamail's work including the creation of a library project to offer Dahr's work as a collection for school and public libraries. [See this page, Connecticut Independent Reporting Award To Journalist Dahr Jamail - 2009, Connecticut September 20, 2009, for more information.]
In addition we are working on a bill to try to force the US Military to stop jailing US military resisters, and stop taking away their rights and their health and educational benefits for saying they cannot or will not redeploy to Iraq or Afghanistan. In many cases, as Dahr Jamail points out, they have been wounded in combat already and face PTSD or even TBI, traumatic brain injury.
Contact Dori Smith at talknationradio@gmail.com for further information on how to help.
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Monday, October 12, 2009
The US President, the Peace Prize, and War in the Middle East, Francis A. Boyle and Norway Post's Rolleiv Solholm
Talk Nation Radio special 1 hour discussion on politics, human rights, and the environment.
Produced by Dori Smith
TRT: 59:09
Download at Pacifica's Audioport here or at Radio4all.net and Archive.org
International Law and politics expert Francis A. Boyle, and Rolleiv Solholm, Chief Editor at The Norway Post, discuss prospects for peace in Palestine and assess the significance of President Barack Obama's Nobel Peace Prize. The small but symbolic Norwegian military presence in Afghanistan is described from a Norwegian journalist's perspective, and from the perspective of an international legal expert with experience in the Balkans and the Middle East. Norway has some 700 troops serving in Afghanistan.
First, Professor Francis A. Boyle, has served as counsel to the Provisional Government of the State of Palestine, and is counsel to Bosnia and Herzegovina and also represents two associations of citizens within Bosnia and has been instrumental in developing the indictment against Slobodan Milosevic for committing genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
He is attorney of record fo the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria and has represented national and international bodies including the Blackfoot Nation of (Canada), the Nation of Hawaii, and the Lakota Nation, as well as numerous individual death penalty and human rights cases.
Professor Boyle's eleventh book is Breaking All the Rules: Palestine, Iraq, Iran and the Case for Impeachment was recently published by Clarity Press. Professor Boyle also combines scholarly work on the law, and legal representation for nations and peoples with work for human rights organizations like Amnesty International and peace groups like the American Friends Service Committee. He drafted the Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989, signed into law by George W. Bush, and served as Legal Advisor in 1991 to the Palestinian Delegation to the Middle East Peace Negotiations.
Produced by Dori Smith
TRT: 59:09
Download at Pacifica's Audioport here or at Radio4all.net and Archive.org
International Law and politics expert Francis A. Boyle, and Rolleiv Solholm, Chief Editor at The Norway Post, discuss prospects for peace in Palestine and assess the significance of President Barack Obama's Nobel Peace Prize. The small but symbolic Norwegian military presence in Afghanistan is described from a Norwegian journalist's perspective, and from the perspective of an international legal expert with experience in the Balkans and the Middle East. Norway has some 700 troops serving in Afghanistan.
First, Professor Francis A. Boyle, has served as counsel to the Provisional Government of the State of Palestine, and is counsel to Bosnia and Herzegovina and also represents two associations of citizens within Bosnia and has been instrumental in developing the indictment against Slobodan Milosevic for committing genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
He is attorney of record fo the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria and has represented national and international bodies including the Blackfoot Nation of (Canada), the Nation of Hawaii, and the Lakota Nation, as well as numerous individual death penalty and human rights cases.
Professor Boyle's eleventh book is Breaking All the Rules: Palestine, Iraq, Iran and the Case for Impeachment was recently published by Clarity Press. Professor Boyle also combines scholarly work on the law, and legal representation for nations and peoples with work for human rights organizations like Amnesty International and peace groups like the American Friends Service Committee. He drafted the Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989, signed into law by George W. Bush, and served as Legal Advisor in 1991 to the Palestinian Delegation to the Middle East Peace Negotiations.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Letter To President Obama, Use Peace Prize Cash to Help Palestinian Children October 10th, 2009
Letter To President Obama, Use Peace Prize Cash to Help Palestinian Children
October 10th, 2009
To: The President of the United States:
From: journalist Dori Smith
Re: The Nobel Prize for Peace and the 10 million kronor (1.4 million dollar) cash prize. Please consider donating some of it to help Palestinian children who were victims of the Gaza War and who still need medical treatment for their wounds.
Dear Mr. President:
I was touched by the tone and humility expressed in your statement upon receipt of the Nobel Peace Prize. You mentioned your children and the home life you treasure. That was a fitting context for your statement about waging world peace. Many of us were encouraged by your call to end nuclear weapons.
The Nobel Committee is convinced that you have changed the global climate in support of negotiated solutions in general to intractable conflicts. This would indeed be an opening for peace, a way forward in solving a wide variety of problems including climate change. So I hope with all of my heart that you can walk through this opening you have created in order to help broker peace between Israelis and Palestinians, Iraqis and Afghanis, offering hope as well to the people of Iran, Pakistan, Burma, Sudan, Darfur, Somalia, Columbia, and other countries.
Populations in these countries have moved from desperate to critical stages in terms of their short and long term survival. Americans too are suffering as their loved ones are deployed into combat in the Middle East or other region. We all need peace.
You mentioned other recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize in your statement and I suppose you already have a favorite. Mine is IPPNW, a physicians group based in Massachusetts. At his acceptance speech December 10th, 1985, Dr. Bernard Lown told the Nobel Committee: “We physicians who shepherd human life from birth to death have a moral imperative to resist with all our being the drift toward the brink. The threatened inhabitants on this fragile planet must speak out for those yet unborn for prosperity has no lobby with politicians”.
Dr. Lown’s fellow recipient at IPPNW, the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, noted in his speech on the same day: “As adults we are obliged to avert transformation of the Earth from a flourishing planet into a heap of smoking ruins. Our duty is to hand it over to our successors in a better state than it was inherited by us. Therefore, it is not for fame, but for the happiness and for the future of all mothers and children that we- the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War- have worked, are working and will work”.
This physician’s organization working on behalf of the survival of everyone on the planet, focusing on their equal rights, makes a great deal of sense to me. Our mutual security is our mutual survival.
Given that you are committed to presenting the $1.4 million in US dollars that comes with your award to charitable organizations I hope you will consider donating some or all of it to IPPNW. Their efforts to prevent nuclear war and its horrific consequences are to be commended and rewarded. Beyond that idea, however, is another one that occurred to me immediately after I heard that you had won.
I’d like to humbly ask that you ear mark this money for Palestinian war victims, especially the children. Perhaps IPPNW would agree to serve their needs in conjunction with other organizations working in the region.
Palestinians, especially kids, have suffered without medical care in the wake of the Gaza War in late 2008 and early 2009. These innocent victims are not able to benefit from the world’s offerings to humanitarian aid organizations because much of the aid is curtailed by Israel’s blockade of Gaza.
I realize that there are many wonderful aid organizations in the world but I’ve recently seen a slide show presented by Ridgely Fuller, a social worker from Massachusetts who traveled to Gaza earlier this year. She is creating a CD/DVD of her slide show to present to members of Congress. I’ve agreed to help her in this effort.
One of her photos is of a three year old girl injured by white phosphorus fired by Israeli troops. I will make certain that you receive it somehow. The child is still without proper medical care.
Ridgely’s photo reminded me of the portrait of Phan Th? Kim PhĂșc as she ran away from the Napalm dropped on her village by US forces. The picture won a Pulitzer Prize for AP photographer Nick Ut. And for many of us, the burning shame and pain we felt at seeing this photo remains. I as seven years old at the time, but knew in my heart that no one, no nation, and no military should use such horrific weapons that hurt children like that.
In cases where these horrific weapons are used, all of us must take a stand that we should help prevent their further use.
If you were to offer Palestinians aid from your Nobel Peace Prize, you would send a strong message of hope to children affected by war in the entire region that they are what matter, not politics or money, just that they never be made to feel such terrible pain.
Thank you very much for accepting my letter and congratulations on your award. May peace on all continents be the reward we share in our lifetimes as the result.
Sincerely,
Dori Smith
Producer, Talk Nation Radio
Syndicated with Pacifica Network
October 10th, 2009
To: The President of the United States:
From: journalist Dori Smith
Re: The Nobel Prize for Peace and the 10 million kronor (1.4 million dollar) cash prize. Please consider donating some of it to help Palestinian children who were victims of the Gaza War and who still need medical treatment for their wounds.
Dear Mr. President:
I was touched by the tone and humility expressed in your statement upon receipt of the Nobel Peace Prize. You mentioned your children and the home life you treasure. That was a fitting context for your statement about waging world peace. Many of us were encouraged by your call to end nuclear weapons.
The Nobel Committee is convinced that you have changed the global climate in support of negotiated solutions in general to intractable conflicts. This would indeed be an opening for peace, a way forward in solving a wide variety of problems including climate change. So I hope with all of my heart that you can walk through this opening you have created in order to help broker peace between Israelis and Palestinians, Iraqis and Afghanis, offering hope as well to the people of Iran, Pakistan, Burma, Sudan, Darfur, Somalia, Columbia, and other countries.
Populations in these countries have moved from desperate to critical stages in terms of their short and long term survival. Americans too are suffering as their loved ones are deployed into combat in the Middle East or other region. We all need peace.
You mentioned other recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize in your statement and I suppose you already have a favorite. Mine is IPPNW, a physicians group based in Massachusetts. At his acceptance speech December 10th, 1985, Dr. Bernard Lown told the Nobel Committee: “We physicians who shepherd human life from birth to death have a moral imperative to resist with all our being the drift toward the brink. The threatened inhabitants on this fragile planet must speak out for those yet unborn for prosperity has no lobby with politicians”.
Dr. Lown’s fellow recipient at IPPNW, the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, noted in his speech on the same day: “As adults we are obliged to avert transformation of the Earth from a flourishing planet into a heap of smoking ruins. Our duty is to hand it over to our successors in a better state than it was inherited by us. Therefore, it is not for fame, but for the happiness and for the future of all mothers and children that we- the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War- have worked, are working and will work”.
This physician’s organization working on behalf of the survival of everyone on the planet, focusing on their equal rights, makes a great deal of sense to me. Our mutual security is our mutual survival.
Given that you are committed to presenting the $1.4 million in US dollars that comes with your award to charitable organizations I hope you will consider donating some or all of it to IPPNW. Their efforts to prevent nuclear war and its horrific consequences are to be commended and rewarded. Beyond that idea, however, is another one that occurred to me immediately after I heard that you had won.
I’d like to humbly ask that you ear mark this money for Palestinian war victims, especially the children. Perhaps IPPNW would agree to serve their needs in conjunction with other organizations working in the region.
Palestinians, especially kids, have suffered without medical care in the wake of the Gaza War in late 2008 and early 2009. These innocent victims are not able to benefit from the world’s offerings to humanitarian aid organizations because much of the aid is curtailed by Israel’s blockade of Gaza.
I realize that there are many wonderful aid organizations in the world but I’ve recently seen a slide show presented by Ridgely Fuller, a social worker from Massachusetts who traveled to Gaza earlier this year. She is creating a CD/DVD of her slide show to present to members of Congress. I’ve agreed to help her in this effort.
One of her photos is of a three year old girl injured by white phosphorus fired by Israeli troops. I will make certain that you receive it somehow. The child is still without proper medical care.
Ridgely’s photo reminded me of the portrait of Phan Th? Kim PhĂșc as she ran away from the Napalm dropped on her village by US forces. The picture won a Pulitzer Prize for AP photographer Nick Ut. And for many of us, the burning shame and pain we felt at seeing this photo remains. I as seven years old at the time, but knew in my heart that no one, no nation, and no military should use such horrific weapons that hurt children like that.
In cases where these horrific weapons are used, all of us must take a stand that we should help prevent their further use.
If you were to offer Palestinians aid from your Nobel Peace Prize, you would send a strong message of hope to children affected by war in the entire region that they are what matter, not politics or money, just that they never be made to feel such terrible pain.
Thank you very much for accepting my letter and congratulations on your award. May peace on all continents be the reward we share in our lifetimes as the result.
Sincerely,
Dori Smith
Producer, Talk Nation Radio
Syndicated with Pacifica Network
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Jeff Bartos of IVAW CT and Denisa Jashari, Trinity College Anti War Coalition
Talk Nation Radio for October 8, 2009
Jeff Bartos of IVAW CT and Denisa Jashari, Trinity College Anti War Coalition
US Veteran Jeff Bartos, IVAW CT describes G20 arrest, and state and national anti war activities. IVAW CT co founder Chris Grohs, who has worked as a media activist at WHUS FM 91.7 Radio for the People, at the University of Connecticut, in Storrs, Connecticut, discusses need to increase membership. These friends from high school who both deployed to Iraq are now working as activists trying to help end the US occupation and wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Contact: connecticut@ivaw.org The national organization, Iraq Veterans Against the War is here.
Trinity College Senior Denisa Jashari discusses her organizing efforts and urges people to attend the Oct 17th Peace March in Boston. Plus how to help Veterans who Resist War, or who are in crisis in your communities. The GI rights hot line at 1-877-447-4487.
TRT: 29:45
Download at Pacifica's Audioport here and at Archive.org and Radio4all.net
Clip: On September 20th in Hartford Connecticut's Bushnell Park, Connecticut IVAW member Chris Grohs talked about his group's efforts as he introduced journalist Dahr Jamail, author of the 2009 book, The Will to Resist, Soldiers who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan: We will be hearing more of what Dahr Jamail had to say in Hartford, Storrs, Willimantic, and New Britain Connecticut, in upcoming shows.
You can learn more about Dahr Jamail's book, The Will to Resist, and an award he received from Connecticut Independent Media, at Willtoresistwar.blogspot.com
Jeff Bartos of IVAW CT and Denisa Jashari, Trinity College Anti War Coalition
US Veteran Jeff Bartos, IVAW CT describes G20 arrest, and state and national anti war activities. IVAW CT co founder Chris Grohs, who has worked as a media activist at WHUS FM 91.7 Radio for the People, at the University of Connecticut, in Storrs, Connecticut, discusses need to increase membership. These friends from high school who both deployed to Iraq are now working as activists trying to help end the US occupation and wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Contact: connecticut@ivaw.org The national organization, Iraq Veterans Against the War is here.
Trinity College Senior Denisa Jashari discusses her organizing efforts and urges people to attend the Oct 17th Peace March in Boston. Plus how to help Veterans who Resist War, or who are in crisis in your communities. The GI rights hot line at 1-877-447-4487.
TRT: 29:45
Download at Pacifica's Audioport here and at Archive.org and Radio4all.net
Clip: On September 20th in Hartford Connecticut's Bushnell Park, Connecticut IVAW member Chris Grohs talked about his group's efforts as he introduced journalist Dahr Jamail, author of the 2009 book, The Will to Resist, Soldiers who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan: We will be hearing more of what Dahr Jamail had to say in Hartford, Storrs, Willimantic, and New Britain Connecticut, in upcoming shows.
You can learn more about Dahr Jamail's book, The Will to Resist, and an award he received from Connecticut Independent Media, at Willtoresistwar.blogspot.com
Monday, October 5, 2009
Connecticut Independent Reporting Award To Journalist Dahr Jamail - 2009
Connecticut September 20, 2009
Journalist Dahr Jamail Biography here. Dahr covered Iraq for nine months, and conducted his first radio interview with WHUS at the University of Connecticut in Storrs, Connecticut. We thought it fitting that we honor him in our own small way after so many have honored him worldwide.
After starting out on a self funded trip to Iraq to 'get the real story' Dahr Jamail became a war correspondent and independent journalist with top credentials. He currently writes for the Inter Press Service, Le Monde Diplomatique, and many other outlets. His stories have also been published with The Nation, The Sunday Herald in Scotland, Al-Jazeera, the Guardian, Foreign Policy in Focus, and the Independent to name just a few. Dahr’s dispatches and hard news stories have been translated into French, Polish, German, Dutch, Spanish, Japanese, Portuguese, Chinese, Arabic and Turkish. On radio as well as television, Dahr reports for Democracy Now!, has appeared on the BBC and NPR, and numerous other stations around the globe. Dahr is also special correspondent for Flashpoints.
Dahr’s reporting has earned him numerous awards, including the prestigious 2008 Martha Gellhorn Award for Journalism, The Lannan Foundation Writing Residency Fellowship, the James Aronson Award for Social Justice Journalism, the Joe A. Callaway Award for Civic Courage, and four Project Censored awards.
The WHUS Radio community and independent media from Storrs and other parts of the state, proudly adds our award to theirs.
WHUS Radio FM 91.7 staff and volunteers from L to R, Thomas Danahy, David Haseltine, Public Affairs Director, Dori Smith, Talk Nation Radio, first produced at WHUS, now syndicated with Pacifica Network, John Murphy, WHUS General Manager, Dahr Jamail, (Beyond the Green Zone, Dispatches from an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq, and The Will to Resist, Soldiers who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan, and Richard Sherman, Architect and radio producer, former WHUS Radio program, From A Distant Shore.
The award was also presented by Ben Shaiken, WHUS Operations Manager, Joseph G. Smith, Talk Nation Radio, and more listed below who join us in expressing our deep appreciation to Dahr Jamail, for his hard news and analysis offered to state audiences from Iraq, and then in 2006 from Lebanon, and eventually from a wide variety of places. 2003 - 2009!
We cerebrated Dahr's international success at an event sponsored by WHUS Radio and UCONN's student newspaper The Daily Campus as well as the UCONN Free Press, included in the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center library Alternative Press Collection.
The awards committee also announces the creation of the Dahr Jamail Independent Reporting Collection Fund. We have begun organizing the body of Dahr Jamail's writing, his books, articles, radio and TV interviews, and photographs, from 2003 through 2009, and these will be installed as The Dahr Jamail Collection at Connecticut libraries.
Please write to talknationradio@gmail.com if you wish to join us in celebrating the contributions Dahr Jamail has made to our understanding of the Iraq War and the reality of U.S. foreign and military policies. We can arrange to receive your donation and add your name to the list below.
Dahr Jamail was first heard on WHUS Radio shortly after he went to Iraq in 2003. He reported as an independent, without becoming embedded with the U.S. Military.
Back in 2003 the station was at Rosebrooks, the 'farmhouse' as it was affectionately called. We phoned Iraq at all sorts of times of day and night, reaching Dahr as he covered the chaotic first year of war. He would describe events on the ground and tie them in with political developments both in Iraq and at home in America. And so we marked many landmarks with Dahr Jamail on the phone with us.
Dahr was the first reporter to offer us a sense of the scale of the damage done to Iraq's infrastructure and to civilian homes. Nasir Fadlawi, 48 years old and the manager elect of Qasim’s compound in which 135 families live (750 people).
He spoke with many Iraqis, and with physicians trying to help wounded civilians in hospitals that were short on supplies to begin with. Many like, Al Qa'im Hospital, were damaged by US bombing. Looters then stole even the antiquated equipment on hand to deal with casualties of the bombing. This was the level of care in Iraq during 2003 and things did not improve over the years 2004 through 2008 and 2009. ...An old operating table at Al-Kerkh Hospital in Baghdad. [Photos by Dahr Jamail and Sabah Ali, owned by Dahr Jamail.]
Reconstruction efforts were in disarray and then we learned from Dahr Jamail how Iraqi Ministries looted US funds intended for reconstruction and government agencies. We will list some of Dahr's reports to WHUS here soon. Meanwhile, you can go to his web site to learn more about his reporting, his books, and his many contributions to films and other educational events www.dahr.org
The following people join us in honoring Dahr Jamail as the Connecticut Independent Media Award Committee and friends! Thanks Dahr!
David Morse, Journalist and Author, guest host of Talk Nation Radio.
Christopher Duray, Editor in Chief, The Daily Campus, University of Connecticut
Jason Ortiz, President , American Civil Liberties University, UCONN.
Dave Bauer, The Bauer Hour, WESU 88.1 Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT
John Schwenk, WRTC 89.3 FM Hartford, Wrench in the Works, Willimantic, CT
Scott Harris, Between the Lines, WPKN 88.5 Bridgeport, 88.7 Montauk, Westerly, RI
Miriam Kurland,'Wrench in the Works, Willimantic, CT, Mike DeRosa, WWUH, FM.91.3 New Focus, University of Hartford, West Hartford, Kenneth Dowst, New World Notes, FM 91.3 WWUH, University of Hartford, W. Hartford, Kevin Lamkins, RadioActive, FM.91.3 WWUH, University of Hartford, W. Hartford, Rob Tyrka, The Hartford Independent Media Collective, and SoapBox, WWUH FM 91.3, University of Hartford, W. Hartford, CT, John Holder, The Hartford Independent Media Collective Dr. Helma De Vries, Political Science Dept., Eastern Connecticut State University, Dr. Charlie W. Prewitt, Peace and Human Rights Studies, Eastern Connecticut State University Jamshid A. Marvasti M.D, We Refuse to Be Enemies, Manchester, CT, Daniel Piper, Connecticut United for Peace Marissa Blaszko, Connecticut Students Against the War, Media Activist
James W. Russell, ECSU, University Professor of Sociology, Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Social Work, Stanley Heller, Producer, The Struggle TV.
Your name here...
Journalist Dahr Jamail Biography here. Dahr covered Iraq for nine months, and conducted his first radio interview with WHUS at the University of Connecticut in Storrs, Connecticut. We thought it fitting that we honor him in our own small way after so many have honored him worldwide.
After starting out on a self funded trip to Iraq to 'get the real story' Dahr Jamail became a war correspondent and independent journalist with top credentials. He currently writes for the Inter Press Service, Le Monde Diplomatique, and many other outlets. His stories have also been published with The Nation, The Sunday Herald in Scotland, Al-Jazeera, the Guardian, Foreign Policy in Focus, and the Independent to name just a few. Dahr’s dispatches and hard news stories have been translated into French, Polish, German, Dutch, Spanish, Japanese, Portuguese, Chinese, Arabic and Turkish. On radio as well as television, Dahr reports for Democracy Now!, has appeared on the BBC and NPR, and numerous other stations around the globe. Dahr is also special correspondent for Flashpoints.
Dahr’s reporting has earned him numerous awards, including the prestigious 2008 Martha Gellhorn Award for Journalism, The Lannan Foundation Writing Residency Fellowship, the James Aronson Award for Social Justice Journalism, the Joe A. Callaway Award for Civic Courage, and four Project Censored awards.
The WHUS Radio community and independent media from Storrs and other parts of the state, proudly adds our award to theirs.
WHUS Radio FM 91.7 staff and volunteers from L to R, Thomas Danahy, David Haseltine, Public Affairs Director, Dori Smith, Talk Nation Radio, first produced at WHUS, now syndicated with Pacifica Network, John Murphy, WHUS General Manager, Dahr Jamail, (Beyond the Green Zone, Dispatches from an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq, and The Will to Resist, Soldiers who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan, and Richard Sherman, Architect and radio producer, former WHUS Radio program, From A Distant Shore.
The award was also presented by Ben Shaiken, WHUS Operations Manager, Joseph G. Smith, Talk Nation Radio, and more listed below who join us in expressing our deep appreciation to Dahr Jamail, for his hard news and analysis offered to state audiences from Iraq, and then in 2006 from Lebanon, and eventually from a wide variety of places. 2003 - 2009!
We cerebrated Dahr's international success at an event sponsored by WHUS Radio and UCONN's student newspaper The Daily Campus as well as the UCONN Free Press, included in the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center library Alternative Press Collection.
The awards committee also announces the creation of the Dahr Jamail Independent Reporting Collection Fund. We have begun organizing the body of Dahr Jamail's writing, his books, articles, radio and TV interviews, and photographs, from 2003 through 2009, and these will be installed as The Dahr Jamail Collection at Connecticut libraries.
Please write to talknationradio@gmail.com if you wish to join us in celebrating the contributions Dahr Jamail has made to our understanding of the Iraq War and the reality of U.S. foreign and military policies. We can arrange to receive your donation and add your name to the list below.
Dahr Jamail was first heard on WHUS Radio shortly after he went to Iraq in 2003. He reported as an independent, without becoming embedded with the U.S. Military.
Back in 2003 the station was at Rosebrooks, the 'farmhouse' as it was affectionately called. We phoned Iraq at all sorts of times of day and night, reaching Dahr as he covered the chaotic first year of war. He would describe events on the ground and tie them in with political developments both in Iraq and at home in America. And so we marked many landmarks with Dahr Jamail on the phone with us.
Dahr was the first reporter to offer us a sense of the scale of the damage done to Iraq's infrastructure and to civilian homes. Nasir Fadlawi, 48 years old and the manager elect of Qasim’s compound in which 135 families live (750 people).
He spoke with many Iraqis, and with physicians trying to help wounded civilians in hospitals that were short on supplies to begin with. Many like, Al Qa'im Hospital, were damaged by US bombing. Looters then stole even the antiquated equipment on hand to deal with casualties of the bombing. This was the level of care in Iraq during 2003 and things did not improve over the years 2004 through 2008 and 2009. ...An old operating table at Al-Kerkh Hospital in Baghdad. [Photos by Dahr Jamail and Sabah Ali, owned by Dahr Jamail.]
Reconstruction efforts were in disarray and then we learned from Dahr Jamail how Iraqi Ministries looted US funds intended for reconstruction and government agencies. We will list some of Dahr's reports to WHUS here soon. Meanwhile, you can go to his web site to learn more about his reporting, his books, and his many contributions to films and other educational events www.dahr.org
The following people join us in honoring Dahr Jamail as the Connecticut Independent Media Award Committee and friends! Thanks Dahr!
David Morse, Journalist and Author, guest host of Talk Nation Radio.
Christopher Duray, Editor in Chief, The Daily Campus, University of Connecticut
Jason Ortiz, President , American Civil Liberties University, UCONN.
Dave Bauer, The Bauer Hour, WESU 88.1 Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT
John Schwenk, WRTC 89.3 FM Hartford, Wrench in the Works, Willimantic, CT
Scott Harris, Between the Lines, WPKN 88.5 Bridgeport, 88.7 Montauk, Westerly, RI
Miriam Kurland,'Wrench in the Works, Willimantic, CT, Mike DeRosa, WWUH, FM.91.3 New Focus, University of Hartford, West Hartford, Kenneth Dowst, New World Notes, FM 91.3 WWUH, University of Hartford, W. Hartford, Kevin Lamkins, RadioActive, FM.91.3 WWUH, University of Hartford, W. Hartford, Rob Tyrka, The Hartford Independent Media Collective, and SoapBox, WWUH FM 91.3, University of Hartford, W. Hartford, CT, John Holder, The Hartford Independent Media Collective Dr. Helma De Vries, Political Science Dept., Eastern Connecticut State University, Dr. Charlie W. Prewitt, Peace and Human Rights Studies, Eastern Connecticut State University Jamshid A. Marvasti M.D, We Refuse to Be Enemies, Manchester, CT, Daniel Piper, Connecticut United for Peace Marissa Blaszko, Connecticut Students Against the War, Media Activist
James W. Russell, ECSU, University Professor of Sociology, Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Social Work, Stanley Heller, Producer, The Struggle TV.
Your name here...
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