Hanna Rosin
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
After the break, Marwan was right to be hopeful once, even though he wasn't working with all that much. What does it look like to push through this time around with even less? Claudine, Marwan's been working on water in Gaza for like 30 years. So he knows how to operate with very few resources, very little autonomy.
After the break, Marwan was right to be hopeful once, even though he wasn't working with all that much. What does it look like to push through this time around with even less? Claudine, Marwan's been working on water in Gaza for like 30 years. So he knows how to operate with very few resources, very little autonomy.
But still, I bet in the early days, like during the Oslo Accords in the 90s, the spirit of his work was probably really different. Did you talk to Marwan about this? Like, was there a younger Marwan who had a lot of energy and enthusiasm and was very excited about Gazans building Gaza? Yeah.
But still, I bet in the early days, like during the Oslo Accords in the 90s, the spirit of his work was probably really different. Did you talk to Marwan about this? Like, was there a younger Marwan who had a lot of energy and enthusiasm and was very excited about Gazans building Gaza? Yeah.
But still, I bet in the early days, like during the Oslo Accords in the 90s, the spirit of his work was probably really different. Did you talk to Marwan about this? Like, was there a younger Marwan who had a lot of energy and enthusiasm and was very excited about Gazans building Gaza? Yeah.
That's an exciting thing. You get to do the thing that you care about most, bringing water to people for your own people in your own country. That's a very powerful experience.
That's an exciting thing. You get to do the thing that you care about most, bringing water to people for your own people in your own country. That's a very powerful experience.
That's an exciting thing. You get to do the thing that you care about most, bringing water to people for your own people in your own country. That's a very powerful experience.
What is it about him that just, did you get any insight into that? Like, what is it about him that just is able to keep focused on the task in these impossible situations?
What is it about him that just, did you get any insight into that? Like, what is it about him that just is able to keep focused on the task in these impossible situations?
What is it about him that just, did you get any insight into that? Like, what is it about him that just is able to keep focused on the task in these impossible situations?
Claudine, thank you so much for coming on today.
Claudine, thank you so much for coming on today.
Claudine, thank you so much for coming on today.
This episode of Radio Atlantic was produced by Jocelyn Frank. It was edited by Andrea Valdez, engineered by Erica Huang, and fact-checked by Sam Fentress. Claudina Bade is the executive producer of Atlantic Audio and Andrea Valdez is our managing editor. I'm Hannah Rosen. Thank you for listening.
This episode of Radio Atlantic was produced by Jocelyn Frank. It was edited by Andrea Valdez, engineered by Erica Huang, and fact-checked by Sam Fentress. Claudina Bade is the executive producer of Atlantic Audio and Andrea Valdez is our managing editor. I'm Hannah Rosen. Thank you for listening.
This episode of Radio Atlantic was produced by Jocelyn Frank. It was edited by Andrea Valdez, engineered by Erica Huang, and fact-checked by Sam Fentress. Claudina Bade is the executive producer of Atlantic Audio and Andrea Valdez is our managing editor. I'm Hannah Rosen. Thank you for listening.
The South rewrote the history of the Civil War slowly. What we now know as the Lost Cause myth built steam over time, with lectures, magazine stories, and then statues and monuments, until eventually it became for some Southerners the official narrative of the war. Eventually, meaning like many decades later.
The South rewrote the history of the Civil War slowly. What we now know as the Lost Cause myth built steam over time, with lectures, magazine stories, and then statues and monuments, until eventually it became for some Southerners the official narrative of the war. Eventually, meaning like many decades later.
The South rewrote the history of the Civil War slowly. What we now know as the Lost Cause myth built steam over time, with lectures, magazine stories, and then statues and monuments, until eventually it became for some Southerners the official narrative of the war. Eventually, meaning like many decades later.