Paul Watson (journalist)

Paul Richard Watson
Born (1959-07-13) 13 July 1959
Weston, Ontario, Canada
Education Master's degree in international affairs from Columbia University[1]
Occupation Journalist
Spouse(s) Shum Sai Hung[2]
Children One

Paul Richard Watson (born July 13, 1959) is a Canadian photojournalist, Pulitzer Prize-winner and author of three books: Where War Lives, Magnum Revolution: 65 Years of Fighting for Freedom, and Ice Ghosts: The Epic Hunt for the Lost Franklin Expedition (2017). His official website is arcticstarcreativity.com

Biography

Watson was born in Weston, Ontario. He was awarded the 1994 Pulitzer Prize for Spot News Photography for his photograph, taken in 1993 while covering the civil war in Somalia for the Toronto Star newspaper. The photograph depicted US Army 160th SOAR, Super 64 crew chief Staff Sgt. William Cleveland's[3] body being dragged by Somalis through the streets of Mogadishu.[4]

His reporting and photography spans almost three decades and includes conflicts in more than a dozen countries on several continents. Among those are: Eritrea, Somalia, southern Sudan, Angola, Mozambique, South Africa, Romania, Serbia and Kosovo, as well as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kashmir, Iraq and Syria.

While at the Toronto Star, Watson earned four Canadian National Newspaper Awards for photography and stories on the child sex trade in Asia, anarchy in Somalia following the 1991 overthrow dictator Mohammed Siad Barre, and the torture and murder of a Somali teen by Canadian soldiers after a U.S.-led force intervened to end a famine in 1992.

He received the Drummer General’s Award in 2007 for his book Where War Lives, based on his experiences as a war journalist. The Globe and Mail of Toronto named it one of the "year’s 100 most notable books".[5]

His second book, Magnum Revolution: 65 Years of Fighting for Freedom, showcases the legendary agency's photographers' images of, and personal insights into uprisings spanning almost seven decades. It was co-written with The New Yorker′s Jon Lee Anderson and published by Prestel in Europe, the U.S. and Canada in 2012.

Watson was featured in director Martyn Burke's 2012 documentary Under Fire: Journalists in Combat, which was shortlisted for an Academy Award. The film won a prestigious Peabody Award in 2013.

His work is on permanent display at the Newseum, in Washington, D.C., in the journalism museum's Pulitzer Prize Photographs Gallery.

He is also the subject of the Kennedy Award-winning play by Dan O'Brien entitled The Body of an American, staged to rave reviews in London in 2014. The Guardian called it "a play that tightens its grip as it probes where war lives, and discovers we each carry it inside ourselves." The play won the 2014 Horton Foote Prize for excellence in American theater. It was also awarded the PEN USA award for drama in 2013. After a successful run at Philadelphia's Wilma Theater in early 2015, the play is set to be staged off-Broadway in New York by Primary Stages at the Cherry Lane Theatre on Commerce Street from February to March 2016.[6]

The collaboration led to O'Brien's critically acclaimed book of poetry War Reporter, published in the U.S. and Europe in 2013. Slate magazine included the poetry collection in its staff picks for the best books of 2013, praising it as "powerful, inventive, and utterly original in the way it plumbs the numbing horror of being a witness to war." The book won the Fenton Aldeburgh prize for best first poetry collection in 2013.

An opera based on conversations between Watson and O'Brien, and written by Jonathan Berger, premiered to critical acclaim at Stanford University in 2013. Its New York premier, at the Prototype Festival in early 2014, was also well reviewed.

Paul Watson holds a Master's Degree from Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs in New York. He was the South Asia bureau chief for the Los Angeles Times, where his coverage area included Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, and Iraq. He was Southeast Asia bureau chief, based in Jakarta, when he left the Los Angeles Times to return to The Toronto Star in July, 2009. He also served as Balkans bureau chief for the LA Times during his decade as a foreign correspondent with the newspaper.

In 2015, Watson resigned from the Toronto Star, where he was a multi-media reporter, covering the Arctic and Aboriginal beat. He also did foreign assignments in Afghanistan, Syria, Russia and India in his second stint at The Toronto Star, which was then Canada's largest circulation daily newspaper. His resignation followed the The Star's decision to kill an investigative story into the then Conservative government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper to use the historic 2014 discovery of the wreck of Sir John Franklin's flagship, HMS Erebus, for political propaganda. The story was then published by BuzzFeed and won a National Magazine Award for investigative reporting along with a Digital Publishing Award for long-form storytelling.

Watson was the only journalist aboard CCGS Sir Wilfrid Laurier, a Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker, the lead vessel in the 2014 Victoria Strait Expedition, when archeologists aboard found Erebus in eastern Queen Maud Gulf, in the same area where Inuit had said for generations a large ship went down.

Watson tells the epic story of the hunt for the lost Franklin Expedition in his new book Ice Ghosts, to be published by W.W. Norton internationally, and by McClelland and Stewart in Canada, in 2017.

Ancestry

Awards

References

  1. Paul Watson, Where War Lives, (Toronto: McLelland & Stewart, 2007), Jacket
  2. Paul Watson, Where War Lives, (Toronto: McLelland & Stewart, 2007), p.190
  3. Watson, Paul (2007). Where War Lives. McClelland & Stewart Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7710-8822-3.
  4. "The haunting of Paul Watson". 2007-08-19. Retrieved 2008-11-01.
  5. "Where War Lives". Paul Watson. Retrieved 2008-11-01.
  6. http://primarystages.org/shows/upcoming-season
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