Richard Engel's Emotional Return To The Palestine Hotel: "This Is Where My Colleagues Were Killed"

Huffington Post   |  Rachel Sklar   |   March 19, 2008 08:28 PM


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Tonight, NBC News posted a video online by Baghdad correspondent Richard Engel sharing some reflections of the last five years in Iraq on this anniversary of the commencement of the Iraq war. In the video, Engel is shown returning to the Palestine Hotel where he had lived in the first few months of 2003 amongst the many foreign journalists who called the hotel home. He was living there in April 2003 when a U.S. tank suddenly fired on the hotel, killing two journalists and wounding three others.

"I remember coming up here, and seeing the blood, hearing other journalists screaming....everyone got covered in blood," said Engel, who returned to the actual room of the cameramen who were killed, and looked at the bed, remembering the blood on it; he had wanted to see his old room, but the floor had been damaged in a bombing 2 and a half years ago (or, at the mid-point between the Palestine Hotel attack and today).

Engel's emotion is apparent in the video, particularly at the end where he sits in the room and talks about his time in Baghdad, showing a range of emotion as he puts his thoughts into words. "I didn't expect it would be so emotional to be back here...but five years later, so much has changed - for me, for this country, for this room....five years ago, it was clear something big was happening," he says, saying that it feels like another turning point may have been reached — maybe. "Am I going to be here in another two, or three, or five years, still reporting about the war in Iraq?"

He also recalls how, five years ago, the world couldn't get enough details of the war, but now "the world has moved on. People don't want to hear about Iraq anymore." Even so, says Engel, he plans to stay in the region, and on the: "I still think this story is the story of my generation — it is the defining historical event."

Says Engel: "I thought the war would make me harder and it would make me tougher - and initially it did," says Engel. "But then after a certain point, it starts to hurt." He also talks about he personal toll the experience has taken on his family and personal life, but says he thinks he's ended up okay: "It's been five years and I've been lucky. I've been very lucky for 5 years."

It's moving and surprisingly personal, from a guy who's seen a lot. Watch it below:

Related:
In Iraq, Journalist Richard Engel Sticks to the Story
[WaPo]


 
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He's hot. I'll watch the show.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:02 PM on 03/21/2008

This is nothing more than a Promo for a show that will air on NBC.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:08 PM on 03/20/2008

Is this really news worthy or is it just a story about a story about a promotion for a journalist?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:41 PM on 03/20/2008

Of course it's news worthy you tool.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 03/20/2008

You are entitled to your opinion of course.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:05 PM on 03/20/2008

It's very sad to watch this video. Why didn't some of the journalists and camera operators get out of the way or off the porch if you saw a tank pointing and shooting your way?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 PM on 03/20/2008

Thank you Mr. Engel for staying with a story that is often overshadowed by the tedious details of everyday life--"Girls Gone Wild", a ranting pastor, the scary, phony red phone, the Clinton's "kitchen sink" strategy, etc.----when the true story is the wars in which our current administration still has no plans from which to exit. The wars are our life. And if we haven't felt it yet, we will. So many pundits and pollsters tell us that we have moved on from the war, but have we? I know that while the media likes the "game" of politics, me and my friends view our politics through the lens of the war---who voted for it, who spoke out against it when it wasn't popular, who wants to keep us there and who wants to bring us home. And who has the courage to remind us that those in Afghanistan are still there because we went off course and into Baghdad. Many discount Senator's Obama's stance against the war as "just a speech" and some say that he "needs to move on from that point", but I say...stay on message. Today is the day that we must say no more to "dumb wars" and no more to caring more about ourselves than others. We want better and we want Mr. Engel to find a new story to cover---one of repair in Iraq, relief for those suffering in Darfur, one of leaders talking to each other and one of an America that talks about our shared hopes and dreams, while not dismissing the hurts we have inflicted on one another. We want human stories and human leaders. And yes, we want a better a country and a better world. And no, we haven't forgotten that there are some out there intent on killing us, but can you tell me a time when that wasn't the case? Bring them home and start anew.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 AM on 03/20/2008
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