Pulitzer Center Update

This Week: How a Syrian Teenager Views the Conflict

Screen shot from "We Became Fragments".

Screen shot from "We Became Fragments".

A Teenager's View of War and Refuge
Luisa Conlon, Hanna Miller, and Lacy Jane Roberts, with an introduction by Samantha Power

"There is nothing left in this world that I haven't seen," says teenage exile Ibraheem Sarhan. The New York Times Op-Doc “We Became Fragments” follows Ibraheem's journey from the horrors of the Syrian war to his first week of school in Winnipeg, Canada. Drawing on Ibraheem's personal journal, filmmakers Luisa Conlon, Hanna Miller, and Lacy Jane Roberts allow him to narrate his own story. The film was a result of a competition sponsored by the Pulitzer Center, Op-Docs, and Tribeca Film Institute® (TFI) in April last year.

Moaad sits in the rubble of his home in the Kraytar district of Aden, hit so hard during the 2015 battle between government forces and Houthi rebels. Three years after the battle, this neighborhood, like so many in Aden, has never been rebuilt. Image by Marcia Biggs. Yemen, 2018.

Moaad sits in the rubble of his home in the Kraytar district of Aden, hit so hard during the 2015 battle between government forces and Houthi rebels. Three years after the battle, this neighborhood, like so many in Aden, has never been rebuilt. Image by Marcia Biggs. Yemen, 2018.

More Horror in Yemen
Marcia Biggs and Javier Manzano
 
A multipart series by Marcia Biggs and Javier Manzano for PBS NewsHour examines the humanitarian emergency in Yemen, where two million children are malnourished, and others have lost limbs in the bombings.
In random interviews in Tehran's bazaar, Iranians complained about government economic policies but also expressed strong opposition to Trump's interference. Image by Reese Erlich. Iran, 2018.

In random interviews in Tehran's bazaar, Iranians complained about government economic policies but also expressed strong opposition to Trump's interference. Image by Reese Erlich. Iran, 2018.

Reese Erlich
 
Reporting for The Progressive,  Reese Erlich speaks to two dozen ordinary Iranians about American policy and Donald Trump. Even those Iranians sharply critical of their own government deeply distrust the U.S. president.