Karen Attiah
Karen Attiah | |
---|---|
Attiah in 2017 as moderator for New America think tank | |
Born | (1986年08月12日) August 12, 1986 (age 38) |
Education | Northwestern University (BA) Columbia University (MIA) |
Occupation | Columnist |
Karen Attiah (born August 12) is an American writer, pundit, and editor. She is Global Opinions editor and columnist for The Washington Post . Along with David Ignatius, Attiah won a 2019 George Polk Award for their writing about the murder of their colleague Jamal Khashoggi. She was also named 2019 Journalist of the Year Award by the National Association of Black Journalists for her coverage of Khashoggi's murder. Her writing focuses on race, gender, culture, human rights and international affairs.
Early life
[edit ]Attiah was born in North Central Texas to a Nigerian-Ghanaian mother and Ghanaian father.[1] Her father was a pulmonologist.[2] After graduation from Northwestern University with a degree in communication studies and a minor in African studies, Attiah won a Fulbright Scholarship to study in Accra, Ghana, and obtained an MA in international affairs in 2012 from Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs.[3] [failed verification ]
Career
[edit ]After graduate school, Attiah freelanced for the Associated Press from Curaçao. In 2014, she joined the Washington Post. She was the founding editor for the Post's Global Opinions section in 2016 and was promoted to the role of Opinions columnist in 2021.[4]
Attiah became the focus of international attention in October 2018 when a columnist she had recruited for the Washington Post's Global Opinions section, Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi, went missing on 2 October 2018 after entering the Saudi embassy in Istanbul.[5] In an interview in Marie Claire , Attiah said her WhatsApp was suddenly flooded with "Jamal's missing" messages, and she felt she knew the worst had happened.[6] On October 5, two days after his disappearance, Attiah let his column space remain blank with the title "A missing voice".[7] Since then she has been interviewed by major news outlets as the primary contact for Khashoggi's last published opinion, and she began writing about his death and advocating for investigation.
In 2019, she received a number of awards for her efforts. She and David Ignatius won a George Polk Award for their reporting on Khashoggi's murder.[3] Attiah was also named 2019 Journalist of the Year Award by the National Association of Black Journalists, recognized for "raising her voice and using the power of her pen to bring attention to and offer ongoing coverage" of Khashoggi's murder.[8] She was named to the 2019 Root 100 list, cited as "an evangelist for racial equity and justice and [...] a champion for columnist Jamal Khashoggi, whose assassination exposed violence against the press."[9] She also received an honorary doctorate from Dickinson College for her work. [10]
Attiah was also awarded the 2018 NABJ Salute to Excellence award for Digital Commentary for "TL;DR with Karen Attiah", which ran from 2017 to 2018. [11] [12] She was also the recipient of the 2021 "Star to Watch" award by Washingtonian Magazine.[13]
In July 2019, Attiah accused Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, of making dog whistling attacks against Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib and Ayanna Pressley, and asserting that it has helped to fuel President Donald Trump's rhetoric.[14] In November 2020, Attiah tweeted inaccurately about pending French legislation, wrongly accusing French President Emmanuel Macron of planning to "give Muslim's kids ID numbers to go to schools."[15] Attiah later deleted her tweet and apologized to her colleagues, though not to Macron.[16]
In March 2024, Attiah was be an adjunct professor at her alma mater, Columbia's School of International and Public Affairs. Attiah is the author of an upcoming book about Khashoggi called Say Your Word, Then Leave.[3]
Meta AI Chatbot
[edit ]In January 2025, Attiah wrote a viral op-ed about Liv, a Meta AI chatbot. Her article, which exposed how the self-proclaimed "Proud Black queer momma" bot perpetuated digital Blackface and the lack of diversity in AI technology, led to Meta taking down the AI chatbot program.[17] [18]
Personal Life
[edit ]Attiah is a dedicated strength trainer and avid martial artist. She is a Muay Thai enthusiast and has competed in a number of exhibition fights. Attiah fought in the 2021 US Muay Thai Open and lost the championship by split decision, but took home the silver medal for the 125-132 division.[19]
References
[edit ]- ^ kyeremeh, Fred (2018年11月24日). "Meet Washington Post Editor Karen Attiah". Ghanaian American Journal. Retrieved 2021年05月27日.
- ^ "Bergen County Native Shares Coronavirus Survival Story". Mahwah, NJ Patch. 2020年04月22日. Retrieved 2020年12月07日.
- ^ a b c ""All I Can Do is Tell My Truth." | Columbia SIPA". www.sipa.columbia.edu. Archived from the original on 2020年11月01日. Retrieved 2020年10月31日.
- ^ "The Washington Post's Karen Attiah named opinion columnist". Washington Post. 2021年06月17日. ISSN 0190-8286 . Retrieved 2024年01月14日.
- ^ Interview about Attiah-Khasshoggi Global Opinion collaboration, Robin Wright's New Yorker collaboration with him, and Sarah Margon's interpretation as Washington director of Human Rights Watch on C-SPAN, 17 October 2018
- ^ 17 October 2018 Article in Marie Claire by Kayla Webley Adler
- ^ Washington Post Opinions tweet on 5 October 2018
- ^ "Ghanaian American Karen Attiah receives top NABJ award". Africa Times. 2019年06月13日. Retrieved 2020年11月22日.
- ^ "Karen Attiah". The Root. 2019. Retrieved 2020年11月24日.
- ^ Sheriff, Sarah. "2019 Commencement Citations". www.dickinson.edu. Retrieved 2024年01月14日.
- ^ "NABJ Names Karen Attiah 2019 Journalist of the Year". 2019年06月24日. Retrieved 2024年01月14日.
- ^ "TL;DR with Karen Attiah - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2024年01月14日.
- ^ "Photos & Video from the 8th Annual Washington Women in Journalism Awards - Washingtonian". 2021年07月01日. Retrieved 2024年01月14日.
- ^ Re, Greg (July 15, 2019). "AOC unloads on Trump after he tells progressive congresswomen to 'go back' to home countries". MSN News.
Make no mistake: Nancy Pelosi's dogwhistling snipes at @AOC, Ilhan Omar, @RashidaTlaib and @RepPressley helped pave the way for this vicious, racist attack from the president.
- ^ McElroy, Damien (23 November 2020). "France claims fake news after 'Muslim IDs for children' plan spreads online". The National.
- ^ "Itinerary of a fake news: how France was accused of failing young Muslims". The Canadian. 2020年11月23日.
- ^ "I talked to Meta's Black AI character. Here's what she told me".
- ^ Morrow, Allison (2025年01月03日). "Meta scrambles to delete its own AI accounts after backlash intensifies | CNN Business". CNN. Retrieved 2025年03月26日.
- ^ "Karen Attiah on Twitter".
External links
[edit ]- Wordpress blog kept by Karen Attiah
- 18-Oct-2018 interview of Attiah in New York Times
- Living people
- 21st-century American women journalists
- American people of Nigerian descent
- American people of Ghanaian descent
- School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University alumni
- Northwestern University alumni
- 21st-century American women writers
- 1986 births
- 21st-century African-American women writers
- 21st-century African-American writers
- African-American women journalists
- 21st-century American journalists