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Trauma Journalism

Published in the (Sri) Lanka Standard on Jan. 8, 2012:
“Today marks the third death anniversary of Lasantha Wickrematunge a human rights journalist from Sri Lanka who fought fearlessly for the freedom of the press and relentlessly pursued what he believed was right. On January 8, 2009 he was brutally murdered by the Sri Lankan authorities for his journalism. … As we remember Lasantha and his work and other journalists and activists around the world who have paid the supreme price in the line of duty, I call upon the international community to urge Sri Lanka’s government to hold a proper independent investigation into Lasantha’s murder … .”
Statement by Sonali Samarasinghe, journalist and widow of Sri Lankan editor Lasantha Wickrematunge Read More 
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Trauma Journalism

Several years ago, when I first embarked on this journey to write about trauma journalism, I contacted literary agents to determine their interest. Perhaps my enthusiasm for the subject blinded me to the harsh realities of the publishing industry. Though as a longtime freelance writer, I was certainly no stranger to rejection. But I was struck by the blunt response of one East Coast agent who stated: “I suspect that there’s little concern by John Q. Public for the emotional and psychological impact of traumatic news events on journalists.” Undeterred, I continued working on my book, discovering events, such as the recent Arab spring, that demonstrated people (and governments) do care about the safety and welfare of journalists in harm's way. Read More 
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Trauma Journalism

Comparing his actions to the clinical role of surgeon and noting that he is able to treat his reporting on tragedy, such as the genocide in Darfur and other atrocities across Africa, “with a certain amount of professional distance,” Nicholas Kristof, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and columnist for the New York Times, states: "In a career of reporting I’ve heard a lot of really wrenching stories about murder and rape and everything else. And at this point, I’m not really proud of it. I’m even a little embarrassed about it. I can listen pretty dispassionately to the most inhuman stories, and they, most of the time, don’t really bother me." Read More 
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Trauma Journalism

Investigative reporter Ruth Teichroeb has spent much of her journalistic career covering social issues involving vulnerable people: "It’s just a totally different landscape when dealing with someone who’s traumatized. They don’t know the rules, and what’s so essential in these interviews is to give the person choices about a whole host of things—from logistics like where the interview is going to be done and who’s going to be there, all the way to what’s going to appear in print. Time is crucial. I think it’s insulting to a victim to go in and take their story and leave and put it in the newspaper without having that relationship—without them being able to say this is OK and this is not." Read More 
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Trauma Journalism

Former BBC war correspondent Kate Adie speaks of being emotionally engaged in the craft of reporting. She is passionate about the role of journalists serving as witnesses, informing others about world events. That sense of conviction may also make one a better journalist, according to Adie, who wrote in her autobiography, THE KINDNESS OF STRANGERS: “Caring about what you see may well be the key to good reporting, for it means you look closer, and you look to find out why. The much-bruited idea that we are all damaged by grim experience is countered surely by the idea that we are all changed by experience, but not necessarily for the worse.” Read More 
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