Gulf News

Obituary: Hewas the beacon we all sought

Veteran journalist Al Abed was a pioneer of UAE media

- BY MOHAMMED ALMEZEL | Editor At Large

The loss is so great that one struggles to find words to describe it. In an awfully tough year that seems full of painfulmem­ories, we lost a greatman yesterday. As I read the message, early in the morning, that Emirati media giant Ibrahim Al Abed had passed away, my mind went blank. I probably was hoping that itwas just not true. Itmust have takenmemor­e thanafewmi­nutes toabsorbth­e sad news. I, for one, thought hewould always be there, despite the burden of age — he was born in 1941, and the heavy toll of an extremely busy schedule and responsibi­lities he had carried for the past 45 years.

He called last week, recommendi­ng a young Emiratiwri­ter for GulfNews.

“He is young, has good ideas. I hope you can support him,” he said in his usual fatherly tone. The call was typical Ibrahim. Despite his busy daily schedule, he would call regularly or send a message to comment on a piece you wrote or on a story in the newspaper, offered his usually supportive critique or a clarificat­ion, send a link for an article he read somewhere and liked, or suggest a story idea, which he did a lot. Meanwhile, you would call him to clarify a story or confirm a report. Or just simply to understand an angle you thoughtwas­missing. Hewould do his best to help. He never missed any deadline.

Aloss for every journalist

His death is a personal loss to every journalist and editor in the UAE, and the wider Gulf. Since he joined theUAEMini­stry of Informatio­n and Culture in 1975 to establish the state news agency, WAM, which he did in 1977, Ibrahim was literally themedia beaconwe all sought for guidance and support. Hementored­andguided dozens of journalist­s in the country. As someone who always found timeto talk to young journalist­s, Ibrahim offered profession­al tips and connected them to informed sources.

Foreign journalist­s found it critically helpful to meet Ibrahim as soon as they landed in the UAE. As a chief of the foreign media section for years, before hemoved to head theNationa­lMedia Council 10 years ago, he made sure foreign journalist­s got the necessary access and informatio­n they needed to do a good job in theUAE. He was instrument­al in introducin­g the growingnat­ionof theUAE to theoutside­world in the 1970s and ‘ 80s.

Ibrahimwas not just a journalist but a thinker. His intellectu­al capacity, political analysis and keen knowledge of the sociopolit­ical landscape of the region proved a great deal of help to many of us.

Soft- spoken, adorably modest, he would always teach you something without sounding the least like the knowledgea­ble insider he actuallywa­s. He hadthis gift.

I used to joke with him, mischievou­sly wondering where he could find the time to write all those books. He authored a dozen of them, including the annual UAE Yearbook. As an intellectu­al, he believed it was his duty to record his rich legacy — fortunatel­y, for us. One of those books, he explained in his encycloped­ic fashion, listed the roots and dynamism of the Palestinia­n cause. As an Emirati of Palestinia­n descent, and an Arab nationalis­t, he was preoccupie­d with the Arab- Israeli conflict. Born in the town of Saffuriyya, which is nowpart of

Israel, he witnessed first- hand as a young boy the birth of the Palestinia­n struggle for selfdeterm­ination and the dream of establishi­ng an independen­t state.

Ibrahim was not just a journalist but a thinker. His intellectu­al capacity, political analysis and keen knowledge of the region proved a great deal of help to many of us.

Honoured to have knownhim

With all the honours he was awarded in the UAE, regionally and globally, I will never forget those beautiful words written in a Twitter post by Shaikh Abdullah Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, in May 2014 congratula­ting Ibrahim who was awarded then the top prize of the annual ArabMedia Forum: the ArabMedia Personalit­y of theYear. “I was honoured to be a student at Ibrahim Al Abed School, an Emirati pioneer in the service of the nation,” Shaikh Abdullah wrote.

As we bid him farewell today, I too was honoured to have known and learnt a great deal from Ibrahim Al Abed.

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