When: | Tuesday, November 12th, 2024 — Wednesday, November 13th, 2024 |
Time: | 1:00 pm — 4:00 pm |
Location: | Virtual via YouTube livestream |
Audience: | Alumni, Anyone, Carleton Community, Current Students, Faculty, Media, Professionals, Prospective Students, Staff, Staff and Faculty |
Contact: | Allan Thompson, allan.thompson@carleton.ca |
Dying to Tell the Story
A series of two guest lectures
Featuring Shrouq Al Aila and Gideon Levy
Moderated by Nahlah Ayed
2024 Peter Stursberg Foreign Correspondent’s Lecture Series
Tuesday Nov 12 & Wednesday Nov 13 2024, 1:00pm-3:00pm EST (both days)
Virtually via YouTube livestream (registration encouraged)
For the first time, the 2024 instalment of the annual Peter Stursberg Foreign Correspondent’s Lecture takes the form of a two-part lecture series that examines the gravity of the role of journalism during the Israel-Gaza war.
“Dying to Tell the Story” will feature separate lectures by Palestinian journalist Shrouq Al Aila and Israeli journalist Gideon Levy. Al Aila’s talk will focus on her brutal experience covering the Israeli military campaign in Gaza which took the life of her husband. Levy’s lecture will reflect on the role of Israeli media in shaping the narrative of their nation at war.
Both lectures will be moderated by former foreign correspondent Nahlah Ayed, now host of the daily CBC Radio program Ideas and a long-time partner with Carleton in airing the Stursberg lectures. Due to the near impossibility of travel to and from the region, both lectures will be held virtually. We encourage you to register so that we can keep you up to date with any last-minute changes. By registering in advance, you also have an early opportunity to submit questions to the speakers.
Register now for the 2024 Stursberg Lecture Series
Or keep scrolling to learn more about the speakers and moderator.
Please register so that we can keep you informed of any last minute changes should they occur. By registering, you also get an early opportunity to submit a question to the speaker(s). You may register for one or both lectures.
Shrouq Al Aila (journalist and producer, Ain Media, Palestine)
Tuesday, November 12, 1:00pm-3:00pm EST
Shrouq Al Aila is a Palestinian journalist, producer, and researcher reporting from the Gaza Strip. She has recently been recognized by the Committee to Protect Journalists with one of its International Press Freedom Awards for 2024. Al Aila took charge of Ain Media, an independent production company specializing in professional media services, after her husband Roshdi Sarraj – a co-founder of the company – was killed in the ongoing Israel-Gaza war. She continues to cover the war and its devastating impact on Gaza’s residents despite having been displaced several times in an effort to evade Israeli attacks.
On the morning of October 22, 2023, as the family was about to have breakfast at home, shrapnel from an Israeli missile attack on a nearby house mortally wounded Sarraj and injured Al Aila and their infant daughter.
“We are still here, still alive, and committed to continuing our work to document the situation in Gaza and support local journalists, which is more important than ever,” Al Aila has said.
Gideon Levy (journalist, Haaretz)
Wednesday, November 13, 1:00pm-3:00pm EST
Gideon Levy is an Israeli journalist and author. Levy writes opinion pieces and a weekly column for the newspaper Haaretz that focus on the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories. Levy has won prizes for his articles on human rights in the Israeli-occupied territories and has been harshly critical of how Israeli media have for the most part adopted the government and military narrative for the Gaza war.
“We are in a genocidal reality; the blood of tens of thousands of people has flowed,” Levy wrote recently in one column. “The media tries to sell us that this is a necessity. Through campaigns that demonize and dehumanize the Palestinians, a unified and monstrous chorus of commentators is successfully selling us the idea that we can live for eternity on blood.”
Nahlah Ayed (Host, Ideas, CBC Radio) – moderator
Nahlah Ayed is an award-winning veteran of foreign reporting: first, in the Middle East where she spent nearly a decade covering the region’s many conflicts. And later, while based in London, she covered many of the major stories of our time: Russia’s annexation of Crimea, Europe’s refugee crisis, the Brexit vote and its fallout.
Read Nahlah’s full bio at the CBC Media Centre.