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The Necessary Thing To Do

A career built in the shadow of 9/11, by Jeva Lange '15

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After graduating from Bennington in 2005, award-winning journalist Luke Mogelson 鈥05 made his way to Afghanistan, where he became one of the only U.S. media correspondents living in Kabul. With work published in The Paris Review and The New Yorker, as well as having penned a number of New York Times Magazine cover stories, Mogelson returned to Bennington in March to speak with his colleague, Afghan interpreter Habib Zahori, at an event in the Bennington Translates series.

Before Jakarta, before Afghanistan, before the refugee boat or the river in Syria, before Mexico City or The New York Times or The New Yorker, there was a radio in Canfield House at 51成人猎奇 that, you might say, started it all.

It was Luke Mogelson鈥檚 first day of college: September 11, 2001. Classes on campus were cancelled after news broke of the World Trade Center attacks. Instead of attending Reading the Middle Ages, Mogelson gathered with his housemates around a radio in the house鈥檚 common room. As was the case for many Americans, what he heard changed his life forever.

For the next four years, Mogelson kept himself relatively uninvolved in affairs of the outside world, spending his summers working on fishing boats up in Alaska. College existed as a kind of bubble in which to escape reality and Mogelson lost himself in his studies: fiction became a way out, or a way not to engage at all.

But when Mogelson graduated in 2005, he faced the real world again. And in it, looming bigger than anything else, was Afghanistan.

鈥淚 was interested in Afghanistan ever since we went to war there,鈥 Mogelson told Bennington over Skype. 鈥淭he thing about the war in Afghanistan was, for the first nine years, not very much was happening. Even for people who were interested in it, there wasn鈥檛 a whole lot to do or even to read about. The war there really started in 2010, with the Surge. While I was in Bennington, and for a few years afterward, all the attention was on Iraq.鈥

Mogelson decided to drop out of New York University鈥檚 MFA program and enlist in the National Guard as a medic.

鈥淚 initially supported the war and felt obligated to participate for that reason,鈥 Mogelson said. 鈥淥r at least to enlist in the military and make myself available.鈥

But three years later Mogelson still hadn鈥檛 been deployed and was honorably discharged鈥攕till no closer to the Middle East.

It was The New York Times Magazine that eventually vouched for Mogelson鈥檚 visa to Afghanistan and paid for his plane ticket. Mogelson had always been a writer, and a good one at that (Marguerite Feitlowitz recalled his student paper on Madame Bovery as one of the most brilliant she鈥檇 ever seen produced by an undergraduate). But upon arriving in Kabul, he realized that one single story wasn鈥檛 going to cut it. Mogelson鈥檚 New York Times Magazine assignment became a three-year stay, during which he established a name for himself as one of the few on-the-ground reporters in Afghanistan willing to report from the most dangerous regions and neighborhoods.

Since that first trip to Afghanistan, Mogelson has written multiple cover stories for The New York Times Magazine, including 鈥淎 Beast in the Heart of Every Fighting Man,鈥 an investigation of the alleged murders of three Afghan civilians by U.S. soldiers. For another cover story, Mogelson went undercover to travel with refugees 200 miles in a boat bound for Christmas Island鈥攁nd nearly died in the process (鈥淭he Impossible Refugee Boat Lift to Christmas Island鈥). He has covered the local Afghan police as well as 鈥淭he Scariest Little Corner of the World鈥 where Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan meet in a place called Zavanj.

Every assignment is chasing people鈥檚 misery

In 2012, Mogelson used Kickstarter to raise $13,310 from 183 backers in order to launch the website Razistan, a publication focusing on photo essays and short videos to 鈥渂ring into vivid relief the war in Afghanistan, the country, and its people.鈥 Contributors included Sandra Calligaro, Terese Cristiansson, Lorenzo Tugnoli, Mikhail Galustov, and John Wendle.

鈥淲e all live here in regular houses and in regular neighborhoods, not in compounds and bases,鈥 Mogelson told The New Yorker in a 2012 article, 鈥淩azistan: New Views of Afghanistan.鈥 鈥淲e feel that this part of the place鈥攖he civilian part鈥攈as been underrepresented. Most of our contributors want to treat Afghanistan as the endlessly fascinating country that it is, not simply as a war zone.鈥

Although Razistan has since gone defunct, it was once one of the only ways for Americans to get information about the region鈥攃overage of Afghanistan in 2012 barely made up 2% of U.S. news stories. 鈥淭he war isn鈥檛 over. Help us tell the story,鈥 the Razistan Kickstarter letter implored.

Today, Mogelson continues to work to bring the forgotten, or ignored, parts of the world to an American audience. His stories have recently taken him to West Africa, to cover the Ebola epidemic, and Mosul, which he wrote about for The New Yorker.

His stories have recently taken him to West Africa, to cover the Ebola epidemic, and Mosul, which he wrote about for The New Yorker

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I鈥檒l ever give up doing journalism,鈥 Mogelson said. 鈥淏ut there are definitely major ethical dilemmas you confront constantly when you do foreign reporting, especially combat reporting.

鈥淓very assignment is chasing people鈥檚 misery,鈥 he added during his Q&A at Bennington鈥檚 translation event. 鈥淣eeding bad things to happen to make a powerful story鈥攜ou don鈥檛 need that in fiction, which is a huge relief.鈥

Mogelson described visiting a river in Syria every day to look for the bodies of innocent, executed citizens. He recognized the necessity of telling the story to a larger audience, but then hesitated.

鈥淚鈥檓 not sure it is justified by the project,鈥 Mogelson said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not even convinced that it is the necessary thing to do.鈥

Later, Mogelson clarified: 鈥淭he idea is that you鈥檙e highlighting and exposing what鈥檚 happening to these people to audiences that might be able to influence policy or help them, but鈥斺 over the phone, he sighed. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e on the ground, doing the reporting, it can feel...you can lose track of those abstract justifications.鈥

Mogelson鈥檚 fictional story, 鈥淧eacetime,鈥 was published in The New Yorker in April. His reporting on Mosul is forthcoming.

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