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The foreign correspondent who survived war, sexism and hate in Iraq

December 6, 2012 11:04
Ilene Prusher faced danger on a daily basis in Baghdad

ByJenni Frazer, Jenni Frazer

4 min read

Ilene Prusher has come up with an interesting description of what it means to be a woman foreign correspondent, particularly in a war zone. They are, she offers, “a third gender”, not male, certainly not subservient female, and often regarded with exasperation and suspicion by male interviewees, particularly in the Arab world.

Prusher may well be on to something, and she has a vast body of experience on which to draw. Now, the Jerusalem-based journalist, who has worked for the Christian Science Monitor in Afghanistan, Iraq and Turkey, as well as her immediate neighbourhood of Israel, has written a beautifully realised account of a third-gender woman, in her first novel, Baghdad Fixer.

A fixer, to the uninitiated, is the person without whom no foreign correspondent can function. He — and in the Arab world it is always a he — is a local person whose value to the journalist is both his command of a western language and his knowledge of the local conditions on the ground.

The fixer will tell you when it is too dangerous to go somewhere — but will also arrange for you to get an interview with someone you might not have got by yourself. Sometimes, the fixer is a driver as well, taking the correspondent to places they might not have found otherwise.