CTV and CFMT Correspondant Rubina
Ahmed has seized an opportunity and is now in Islamabad
covering the issues making news in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
She has agreed to share her perspective as a journalist
and as South Asian from Toronto. We look forward to more
her and wish her the best!
PART
ONE: ADRENALINE
As
soon as you get off the plane in Islamabad, there is this
nagging feeling in your stomach to turn and race back to
the plane, strap yourself to your seat and go back home.
I was just here a few months ago and the feeling is still
here.
But
this time I can't just leave, I'm here for a purpose. My
mission is to try to intrepret or at least make some sense
of this situation that has been unfolding all over the world.
I'm here to help Canadians understand what Pakistan's position
is, its dilemma and its mood in the truest most unbiased
sense. Above all, I am here to become a better journalist.
I
came here soaring on what I could say was the biggest adrenaline
rush of my life. I was uneasily waiting for this brand new
experience. A new experience in a place that really isn't
that foreign to me; I've been here many times. That knotted
twisted feeling in my stomach finally went away yesterday.
The rush is over and now it's time for me to address my
job. Time to start finding out what's going on here. One
feeling that IS sticking with me is that this is going to
be one of the most memorable experiences of my life.
Before
I left, my National Assignment Editor really struck a chord
in me saying, "Rubina, you are going to learn more in 3
or 4 months in Pakistan then you could learn in 10 years
in Canada." After three short days in the thick of this
deluge of information I can see that he was right. There
are journalists here from all over the world, news agencies
that I have only heard and seen on TV. Now they're right
in front of me. Every where I look I see world-renowned
people working hard. They're in their element, trying to
get the best story possible. What an inspiration for me.
I'm one of them, not an observer or a student of their work,
but actually one of them!
Here
at the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad the entire place has
been turned into a massive news room. Fully functional,
with editing suits, satellite rooms and top brass producers
hungry to tell the world about what is going on.
That
feeling of wanting to go home is still here, but that call
of adventure and that feeling of incredible experiences
on the horizon keep me here.
Rubina
Ahmed in Islamabad...talk to you soon.
Part
One: Adrenaline
Part Two: Special Tea and a Protest
Part Three: Thoughts from the Flight Home
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