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Francesca Borri

    Francesca Borri, after studying international relations, focused on the Middle East, specializing in human rights in Israel and Palestine. She bravely decided to document the Syrian civil war as a freelance journalist, and her reports from the region have garnered international acclaim, translated into numerous languages. Even after years of active work in Syria and Iraq, she continues to bear witness to the lives of people in these conflict-ridden areas. Her work is characterized by a deep insight into complex social and political issues, emphasizing the human dimension of conflicts.

    Syrian Dust
    • Syrian Dust

      • 224 pages
      • 8 hours of reading
      4.4(81)Add rating

      On August 21, 2003, a chemical weapons attack in Damascus brings global attention to the Syrian war, yet many journalists depart disappointed when Obama opts not to intervene. They leave behind an estimated 200,000 victims and over half of Syria's 22 million people displaced, marking the worst humanitarian crisis since WWII, according to the UN. Francesca Borri, a thirty-year-old freelance reporter, decides to stay and cover the battle of Aleppo. She discovers that reporting on war means hiding with women and children, scavenging for warmth from discarded items, and confronting the grim reality of death and destruction. It involves meeting officials more concerned with appearances than the suffering of the people. Borri must explain the situation in Aleppo to journalists who have only visited as tourists. She risks her life due to rivalries with fellow reporters and grapples with the haunting memories of simpler times—driving at night, the light in a childhood café, and the faces of loved ones. This account immerses readers in the raw, unfiltered experience of the Syrian war, revealing the profound human cost amidst chaos and despair.

      Syrian Dust