Today’s A Good Day: Jill Carroll Is Free

I got into NYC late last night and just checked my news aggregator. What a great surprise. Best wishes to the Carroll family and a thank you to the men who ultimately decided to do the right thing and set her free.
Now, someone find them and hold them accountable for murdering Allan Enwiyah, Jill’s translator.
2 CommentsFree Jill Carroll Now!
Jill, a reporter for the Christian Science Monitor, was abducted more than two months ago in Iraq just after her translator was murdered in cold blood. Please take a moment and post a link to this video in an effort to raise awareness across the blogosphere.
If you’re a blogger in the middle-east, your help is most appreciated.
My heart has been and will continue to be with Jill’s family and friends until this nightmare is over.
(via Mental Mayhem)
1 CommentFree Jill Carroll
The editor-in-chief of Al-Ghad, Ayman Al-Safadi, the man responsible for hiring Jill Carroll years ago, wrote a moving piece in yesterday’s paper. Natasha Tynes provides a translation:
5 CommentsFreedom for Jill Carroll
By Ayman Al-Safadi
She sought to educate her people about the truth of what’s going in the Arab world, which she loved before setting foot in it. She put her life at risk by struggling to convey the voices of Iraqis to American public opinion, which was showered with wrong information about the developments in Iraq. She was rewarded with kidnapping. Jill did not hide in Baghdad’s Green Zone. In her coverage of Iraq, she did not rely on statements made by American and Iraqi officials. She wanted her reports for the reliable Christian Science monitor to reflect the pulse of the Iraqi street. Jill wanted to tell of the suffering of Iraqis and to reflect their ambitions. Her respect for the truth took her to the most dangerous parts of Baghdad. She ended up in al-Anbar, hostage to kidnappers with unknown identity and objectives.
I met Jill in the United States years go when she applied to work for the Jordan Times, the paper for which I was editor-in-chief. She seemed ambitious, excited and anxious to develop her knowledge of the Arab world and its issues. I decided to hire her immediately as Arabs greatly need professional and informed American journalists interested in conveying their point of view to the American reader. Investing in a neutral and professional American journalist is an investment in the needed effort to correct the image of Arabs that is being ruined by either ill-intent or ignorance.
Jill worked in Jordan before she moved to Iraq after the occupation of Baghdad. Her knowledge of the Arab world deepened and her journalistic reports provided an objective and complete coverage of what is happening in Iraq. Jill was the voice of truth. But this voice has been silent for days. What the kidnappers reaped was silencing a pen that was on the side of truth and objectivity and that expressed the ordeal and issues of Iraqis.
The fate of Jill has been unknown. And no one knows who and why she was kidnapped, for she is the one who stood by the Iraqis. What is evident is that Iraq has lost an honest voice biased in favor of the Iraqis’ right to a safe and prosperous life. Anyone who can help free Jill Carroll bears a moral responsibility to do their best to release her from captivity. Nothing justifies hurting an innocent human being who deserves only appreciation from the Iraqis for a role performed with the utmost dedication, honesty and integrity. No cause justifies breaking a pen that inks the truth.
Thoughts And Prayers
I was catching up with my good friend Jonathan Daniel last week–he just returned from an African, Middle Eastern, Asian solo hike–and he managed to bring the war in Iraq much closer to home.
The plight of abducted journalist Jill Carroll has been covered extensively by Xeni Jardin on Boing Boing over the past few weeks. I never made the connection before, but apparently Jonathan and I are only separated by a few degrees from Jill, as we grew up with former Montclair, NJ resident Dan Murphy, Jill’s colleague at The Christian Science Monitor.

Jill’s captors have made demands for her release. Please help keep this story active.
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