E4-1DetNaelaKhalil

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ENGLISH 4 LISTENING RELATIONSHIPS NAELA KHALIL FROM : EURONEWS, SEPTEMBER 12 JULY 2008 Naela Khalil is a Palestinian journalist. In Beirut in June she was awarded the Samir Kassir Prize for Freedom of the Press, open to all journalists working around the Mediterranean. It is a European Commission prize created in honour of Lebanese journalist Samir Kassir, assassinated in 2005. euronews spoke to Naela Khalil during a trip she was making to Lebanon. Her first visit was to the offices of An Nahar, the daily newspaper where Samir Kassir worked alongside Gebrane Tueni, the former owner who was also murdered. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 I was born and grew up in Balata refugee camp near Nablus, where I live today. All the way through school I wanted to be either a lawyer or journalist, to be able to support the world’s most ignored people, as I was one of them, the child of a refugee camp.” There are seven boys and four girls in my family, pretty normal…in the refugee camps some families are bigger. Two of my brothers are in Israeli jails, Ahmed’s 22, he’s one of them…and there’s Ahmed Sanagrel , a martyr. He grew up with us, he’s like a brother. Mahmoud’s in prison as well. I know every detail of their lives. Neither of them ever left Nablus, never. This is because there’s an Israeli checkpoint, that would stop them. They were born during the first intifada, and were teenagers for the second. When they were 15 they took part in the second intifada , and this is why Israel took action against them. They were wounded, and one was martyred. The two others are in jail. There’s no other choice. When you are a teenager in a refugee camp and you see your friend die in front of your eyes, you don’t have an alternative. So when I see people younger than me pay the ultimate price, I say to myself that I’m doing nothing. I must do more. These young people give me the strength to get up in the morning and say I must work for these people. So I go to work, I write about people in the towns and villages that no-one hears about. PHOTO : http://blog.lefigaro.fr/iran/2008/06/nayla-khalil-une-reporter-pale.html VIDEO AND SCRIPT: http://www.euronews.net/en/article/12/07/2008/samir-kassir-prizewinner-talks-to-euronews

Transcript of E4-1DetNaelaKhalil

Page 1: E4-1DetNaelaKhalil

ENGLISH 4 LISTENING RELATIONSHIPS

NAELA KHALIL

FROM : EURONEWS, SEPTEMBER 12 JULY 2008

Naela Khalil is a Palestinian journalist. In Beirut in

June she was awarded the Samir Kassir Prize for

Freedom of the Press, open to all journalists working

around the Mediterranean. It is a European

Commission prize created in honour of Lebanese

journalist Samir Kassir, assassinated in 2005.

euronews spoke to Naela Khalil during a trip she was

making to Lebanon. Her first visit was to the offices

of An Nahar, the daily newspaper where Samir

Kassir worked alongside Gebrane Tueni, the former

owner who was also murdered.

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I was born and grew up in Balata refugee camp near Nablus, where I live today. All the way through school I wanted to be either a lawyer or journalist, to be able to support the world’s most ignored people, as I was one of them, the child of a refugee camp.” There are seven boys and four girls in my family, pretty normal…in the refugee camps some families are bigger. Two of my brothers are in Israeli jails, Ahmed’s 22, he’s one of them…and there’s Ahmed Sanagrel , a martyr. He grew up with us, he’s like a brother. Mahmoud’s in prison as well. I know every detail of their lives. Neither of them ever left Nablus, never. This is because there’s an Israeli checkpoint, that would stop them. They were born during the first intifada, and were teenagers for the second. When they were 15 they took part in the second intifada , and this is why Israel took action against them. They were wounded, and one was martyred. The two others are in jail. There’s no other choice. When you are a teenager in a refugee camp and you see your friend die in front of your eyes, you don’t have an alternative. So when I see people younger than me pay the ultimate price, I say to myself that I’m doing nothing. I must do more. These young people give me the strength to get up in the morning and say I must work for these people. So I go to work, I write about people in the towns and villages that no-one hears about.

PHOTO : http://blog.lefigaro.fr/iran/2008/06/nayla-khalil-une-reporter-pale.html VIDEO AND SCRIPT: http://www.euronews.net/en/article/12/07/2008/samir-kassir-prizewinner-talks-to-euronews