Gulf News

Opportune time for new kind of journalism

There are millions of victims in the Arab world, bereaved families, refugees and a human toll that cannot be highlighte­d through typical media narration

- By Ramzy Baroud Special to Gulf News

T he Iraq war of 1990-91 gave rise to the 24hour news network with CNN for years taking the lead. In the Arab world, the war also ignited a fierce competitio­n with some Arab countries realising that owning the narrative of the conflict is a significan­t weapon in the war itself. Within a few years, Arab satellite television­s joined the fray, although mostly propagatin­g the interests of specific government­s.

The US military managed the narrative on Iraq through the ‘embedded journalist­s’ who were told that they should either register with and join US military personnel, or risk their safety. With Iraq being a graveyard for many journalist­s, hundreds of reporters obliged. The outcome was devastatin­g as Iraq saw the burial of good journalism as well.

Although many in the alternativ­e media fought nobly to glean facts pertaining to the horrendous war, many in the mainstream media toed the line.

The phrase ‘embedded journalism’ came “to evoke an image of the supposedly independen­t correspond­ent truckling to military mentors who spoon-feed him or her absurdly optimistic informatio­n about the course of the war,” wrote Patrick Cockburn. One of the greatest harms of this type of reporting is that it reduced Iraq to a massive military battle, devoid of culture or any life that existed beyond the movement of soldiers, ‘insurgents’, ‘coalition troops’, strikes and bombings. The image of the Iraqi, the Arab and the Muslim became militarise­d, and stereotype­d.

The news narrative of the Arab world has been defined by others and dictated to Arab journalist­s and audiences. Such a model has not worked in the past, and in the last few years it has become even more pronounced and dangerous.

Reflection of reality

There are millions of victims throughout the Arab world, numerous bereaved families, constant streams of refugees and a human toll that cannot be understood or expressed through typical media narration.The price is too high for this kind of lazy journalism. There is too much at stake for journalism not to be fundamenta­lly redefined by those who are experienci­ng war, to understand the pulse of the region, fathom the culture and speak the language of the people. The Arab people have indeed spoken and for years their words were filled with anger and hope. The haunting cries of Syrians and other Arab peoples will forever define the memories of this generation and the next.

But how much is our journalism today a reflection of this reality?

American author and journalist Ernest Hemingway once wrote, “There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.”

But modern journalism — at least, the way it is communicat­ed in the Arab world at the moment — hardly bleeds. Under the guise of false objectivit­y, it remains detached, removed from its immediate reality and is rarely expressive of the seriousnes­s of this difficult transition of our history.

As for the people, if we do not neglect them altogether, then we turn their misery into fodder in our political feuds. Equally inexcusabl­e is the fact that the most significan­t component of our stories and of history is neglected.

To report on Palestine and Israel, for example, without fully fathoming the historical roots of the tragic story, is to merely be content with providing a superficia­l account of what ‘both sides’ are saying, often favouring the Israeli side and demonising the Palestinia­ns. The Palestine scenario is now repeated everywhere. The narrative on Syria and other conflicts are guided by preconceiv­ed ‘wisdom’.

Journalism is still failing to break the stronghold of the old paradigm that relegates the people and focuses, instead, on the rulers, politician­s, government­s and business elites. The Arab people already have a voice, and an articulate one — one that has been deliberate­ly muted through a massive campaign of misinforma­tion and distortion.

When the media silences the voice of the people, they relegate their rights, demands for freedom, change and democracy.

Our answer should not be to speak on behalf of the people, but to actually listen to them by empowering their voices as they articulate their own aspiration­s and rightful demands.

For journalist­s to be relevant, they must abandon their position of being ‘imbedded’ with army men, conveying the views of the military and aspiring to adhere to the standards of military censors.

Nor should they be dictating the news from above, in the same predictabl­e pattern, without truly listening and delving deeper into the story.

They need to understand that a narrative is lacking if it does not begin and end with the people whose story is not a soundbite, but rooted in a complex reality in which history should be at centre stage. When entire nations are bleeding, it then becomes necessary for journalist­s to heed Hemingway’s advice: “Sit down at a typewriter and bleed.”

Dr Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle East for over 20 years. He is an internatio­nally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of several books and the founder of PalestineC­hronicle.com.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates