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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Nora Younis

Interviewed May 20, 2024

So I kept doing the blogging for a while. And then I traveled to the U.S. for a fellowship. And then I came back to Egypt. And right after I came back, The Washington Post was opening an office in Cairo to cover the region. It was the year of 2007. But we had to part. And actually, we parted because of April 6th. So my boss was on vacation. And I wrote to her, and I told her, “I want to go to Mahala to cover the April 6th strike from there. But I have to be on an official assignment, because, most likely, I´ll be arrested, and I´ll need The Post to cover me. And she said, “No, you stay in Cairo and nothing will happen. And if something happen, we´ll take it from the wires.” So she refused. And I was completely furious.

So I started– I called up few friends. And all the reporters were calling me to ask, “Where should we send our cameras? It´s a nationwide strike.” And you know if you are a newspaper or a T.V. Station, you have a certain number of cameras, and you want to know where it´s the best– you don´t want to miss a shot. So I realized that the mainstream media cannot cover this. So I called up few friends. We bought some telephone lines. And we set up this hotline to receive pictures. We set up a blog and telephone lines to receive information from people if national strike succeeded or not. And people started calling us and telling us, like, what is the school attendance percentage? Did people go to work today or not? In different places.

And so we´re getting so many reports from the people. And we were updating the blog all over the day. And it was very successful. So my boss going back. She was furious, and she fired me. Right after that, I got an offer from Al-masry Al-youm [The Egyptian Today newspaper, established in 2004]. They wanted to start a multimedia unit. And they had seen my activist video. Because I was doing a lot of videos on the workers strike, like the tax collectors strike, and the Mahala workers strike. So they had seen my videos and they liked them. Al-masry Al-youm is a daily independent newspaper.

I think it started in 2004. And it was the second best circulating paper before the revolution. And the best circulating daily papers was Al-Ahram, the government paper, because of subscriptions. But now, after the revolution, Al-masry Al-youm became the number one– the best selling paper, actually, the most selling in the streets now. They offered me the position to start the multimedia unit for the website. And I got in; I start thinking, “Where should we start?” And I hired an editor. And we got one computer, one Apple computer, and some pocket cameras, like cell phone cameras. And we started training the reporters. We started training the reporters of Al-masry Al-youm.

So they started shooting all the way. And we would do the central editing and post the videos online. And then there was an English edition of the website. It started after this was a few months. And then we started also subtitling the videos, and doing the multimedia and bilingual. So we did this. And it became just bigger and bigger and bigger. We hired more people. We trained much more reporters. We started training the reporters who are outside Cairo. And then we started training the photographers to make videos, as well. And then we started buying better cameras and more computers and more editors, and blah, blah, blah. And now we are producing our first long documentary film.

But it´s much more difficult now, because I am the boss. So now I have to tell younger, more enthusiast journalists, I have to tell them what to do. And it´s very difficult for me. Because in the times they want to be activists, or they want to you know do their own thing, they want to drop the cameras and go do something. I understand how they feel. And I still have to make them work.