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To: OKIEDOC
I understand the she lives permanently in Iraq and speaks Arabic fluently. If this is so then why did she need a translator.?

Source please. Permanent in what status? How long has she lived there? What is her level of fluency? I have read that she speaks "some arabic." Having lived myself in the Middle East, I question whether she was fluent or that she understood the nuance and vernacular of the language. Arabic is very difficult.

280 posted on 03/30/2006 11:39:20 AM PST by kabar
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To: All

Why is she still wearing an allah-bonnet on her head?


282 posted on 03/30/2006 11:42:14 AM PST by monkapotamus
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To: kabar

Jill has lived there since 2001. She was a reporter for the Jordan Times.


327 posted on 03/30/2006 3:06:26 PM PST by TennesseeGirl
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To: kabar
Just a few comments since you seem to have some doubts.

I wondered myself about why she is there and if she truly did speak Arabic fluently.

I have excerpted some of her comments in former writings.

It proves nothing really except that she had sympathy for the locals and not necessarily for the American occupiers.

You will notice however that she had been in Iraq since October of 2003.

1. "Yes, some new things are available now, mobile phones, satellite TV, new cars. But the thing that we lost is more valuable," says Basim Majid, the manager of an electronics store. "We are in the middle of chaos and there is no way back. I hope they use force to spread security."

Bassam Henna, who is unemployed, is discouraged. "Frankly, the time of Saddam was better in general," he says. "Not Saddam himself, with all his faults and all his mistakes, but in general, that time was better than now. If we are missing him, imagine what the situation is like."

2.Interviews with captured insurgents are televised every night at 9 p.m. on state television and has become wildly popular since beginning about three months ago. Prisoners, often with visible bruises and cuts, sit behind a table and confess the gruesome details of their crimes. An anonymous offscreen military or police commander harangues them and lectures them about what jihad really means. One has even taken to reciting patriotic poetry he wrote himself.

3. Mourning Marla
By Jill Carroll, Christian Science Monitor. Posted April 18, 2005.
Californian Marla Ruzicka was the head of an NGO whose blend of tenacity and optimism kept her in Iraq long after almost every other humanitarian aid organization had left.

Marla and her Iraqi driver died Saturday when their car was tragically caught between a suicide car bomber and a US military convoy.

Marla was more than a source for a story, she was one of those quiet cheerleaders that kept me -- and the Iraqis she touched -- going almost from the moment that I arrived here three years ago.

I first met her in Jordan, just before the war. A reporter friend told me that I should get to know this young activist who made a name for herself working for Global Exchange, the US organization that sent field workers to Afghanistan to count civilian casualties.
When she died Marla was traveling to visit some of the many Iraqi families she was working to help. Lately, she had been attempting to aid the relatives of a toddler whose parents were killed after the mini-bus they were traveling in was hit by what was believed to be an American rocket.

4.
Carroll was reporting in Iraq for the Christian Science Monitor. She has also worked as a commentator for news networks such as MSNBC. She has been in Iraq since October 2003. Before covering the Middle East, Carroll was a reporter in Washington, D.C., for the Wall Street Journal and States News Service.

As far as speaking fluently the Arabic language who knows?

I did read some where but will not look up the source that her good friend or sister said she was fluent in the Arabic language.
338 posted on 03/30/2006 5:00:39 PM PST by OKIEDOC (There's nothing like hearing someone say thank you for your help.)
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