The Making of a Journalist

[Music]

hi

my name is sonal mirotra kapoor i’m a

reporter and anchor in

india i’ve been in the mad world of

television journalism for over 10 years

now

and i’m here in front of you today to

tell you

what goes into the making of a

journalist here

in the country and mostly what happens

behind the scenes now to understand that

let’s take you back in time

let’s take you to the december of 2012.

it was that time in the country when the

streets of the national capital were

flooded with people

angry people men and women young and

old seething with anger with the brutal

gang rape

of a young girl in the national capital

there were protests breaking out

everywhere outside rashtrapati bhavan

outside india gate i was at that time

as a city reporter reporting from sapta

jung hospital

reporting on her medical updates and

talking to her family

i remember the doctors

telling me that they were shocked at

how she was still alive because not an

inch of interstein was left inside of

her

i remember talking to her brother who

later on became a good friend of mine

and at that time just throwing words in

middle of his sobs

just venting out to me saying how did

this happen

didi had just gone to watch a movie with

a friend

how did this happen how did she land up

here

now the reporter in me wanted all the

whereabouts all the details

where did she go what movie did she

watch whom did she go with

and the details they stunned

me she had gone to watch

life of pie at a multiplex in south

delhi with a male friend of hers

why that was shocking is because i was

watching life of pie

at the same theater the same night the

same

show with a male friend of mine

the only difference perhaps was that my

male friend happened to have a car he

could drop me back home in

else i would have taken a public

transport as well

in that minute i realized how close i

was

to becoming the story i was reporting

upon

she was my age she was

just like me perhaps not wanting to

conform

to the ways of the society or limit

herself to a home just wanting to live

in the weeks that followed the gang rape

and the unfortunate incident i covered

various aspects of the story

i remember being at india gate when

i can still hear as if it’s happening

right in front of me right now on how

people were screaming when lottie charge

was taking place

i remember recording a piece with my

camera person when a tear gas shelling

fell right in between us

there was commotion there were screams

people were falling on top of each other

i lost contact with my camera person

somebody stole my phone

i was vomiting i had fiery eyes

typical reactions by the way of a tear

gas shelling

my shoe was broken and in that

moment i don’t remember for how long i

walked to just get some help

and to give you an idea it was not just

that one day this was happening

every day in delhi one day it was tear

gas shelling the other day it was water

cannons

cold water cannons being fired at

protesters

at media as well in the

diliki sadly you know how cold it gets

in delhi in december

but most of all from that december

i remember being at singapore at the

mount elizabeth hospital

just her family and i at that point when

the doctors walked in and said that

she didn’t have much long to live

i had the opportunity to

meet her to see her 15 minutes

before she died and

that’s an image that has stayed with me

till this day

that is an image when i saw her

where everything around me just stood

still for a minute

and i had no thought nothing in my mind

it was just her and i

in many ways i think it was my epiphany

it was that moment where time stood

still and i met my purpose

unfortunately for me it was when another

girl was losing her life but when these

moments of

epiphany happens it’s not like your life

changes

completely well let me put it this way

when i came back i was the same person

i was still reporting my work was still

quite hard

i as a city reporter you’re on call 24 7

the mental and the physical toil of

things really gets to you you

hardly paid anything it was all the same

life was the same but something had

changed something had altered inside me

i had a new perspective perhaps a new

calling

perhaps a new way of looking at things

fun fact that night

before everything started the night when

i was watching life of pi

unknowingly with nirvya in the same

theater

i had told myself i’m gonna quit and i’m

gonna go

and put in my papers and go back home

take that walk of shame go back to my

parents

to a small city in up and tell them i

couldn’t make it could make it as a

reporter the city life was just too hard

guess what happened right after guess

where we are right now that one reddit

call that i got the next morning

5 30 a.m from the newsroom assignment

desk

for those of you who don’t understand

they’re like these newsroom warriors who

keep a hawks eye on every alert and

every

development that takes place they gave

me a call at 5 30 in the morning and the

only detail i had at that point was that

there had been a

rape that had taken place in south delhi

that they needed a reporter to go on

that rape is now the story of

a lot of people’s life story of a lot of

transformed lives as well

and over the years i’ve had lots of

these calls actually

from the same newsroom assignment desk i

remember one call

where i was asked to rush to a

village in haryana where the cops had

decided

that women would no longer be allowed to

wear jeans

this mostly included young girls as well

i got a call i had to rush

i did that immediately somewhere halfway

in my travel trying to coordinate

details

i realized that i was going to

go to a village which had banned jeans

for women

talk to them about it spend a day with

them

wearing exactly that

frankly in 11 years of journalism i’ve

had several

such encounters as a woman journalist

i’ve had several stories where i’ve

reported on women not being allowed to

wear what they want say what they feel

love who they love at times

women who’ve not even had a chance at

life

which brings me to a story in rajasthan

i went to one of the remotest village in

rajasthan

a village which had the worst female

feticide ratio in the country

when i reached there my instinct was to

talk to other women right they would

understand what’s going on they’ll have

an insight

maybe i can highlight their voice

to my horror i sat there

in the middle of the village on a chart

by with women young and old

and they

had no inhibitions in telling me that

according to them

women were a burden a girl child was a

burden

one of them turned around and said kura

meaning they’re just garbage

a lot of them even then went to great

details to even

explicitly tell me how they handled the

girl child

problem in the village

i’m not gonna give you the details to

spare you on that one but

they basically if a girl child was born

they had their

own ways of getting rid of it they would

simply go to the mother

and say the child was still born the

mother knew the reality the villagers

knew the reality

and the mother also knew that she would

have to continue to do this till the

time she bore a boy

at moments like these i’ve reflected

upon my own life

i am after all a only child only girl

child of a

small conservative family back in up but

at least

i had a chance to live at least i had

free will to make my own decisions

something which a lot of women even till

date do not have

something which i especially know two

girls two teenage girls

born about 250 kilometers from my birth

place in up

a place called badayou certainly did not

have

this is the story of two girls who were

allegedly

raped murdered then hung to a tree in

full public spectacle

in the village

and this case had followed

a lot of anger on the ground

when i reached there there were riot

police

all over the place the angry the family

was very angry the

highway was blocked they were sitting

with the bodies over there saying we’re

not going to cremate till the time

justice is met

there was a lot of international press

on this because they had gone to relieve

themselves because there were no toilets

in that village and that’s when the

incident had taken place

well it was so complicated and when i

got there there were so many

views and counter views that to get to

the

heart of the issue i decided to go back

to reporting rules 101

you first speak to the family of the

bereaved

identified them i went there i saw their

humble home

i saw the father

but i couldn’t take my first step i

remember just standing there thinking

how do you how do you ask a daughter

or how do you ask a father in fact

how their two daughters died in such a

public way

how do you enter the house in moaning

with a camera and mic in your hand how

do you even start a conversation like

that

i remember being stuck there not being

able to take

that one step but over the years i’ve

taken such hard steps a lot of times

but mostly been

thankful about the fact that i get to

tell their story

all these stories have changed me living

their lives

living the lives i’m in fact reporting

upon has transformed me

for several assignments we’ve had

no proper food or lodging to depend upon

in the case of badayou no toilets for 15

days

but at least we were able to bring out

the story

take the tough decision knowing that it

was for the larger good

i think upon these stories all these

years down the line and i think that

i thought my life was tough i thought

i wanted to throw all this away and go

back

home thinking it was too much to take

and to be frank with you over the years

i’ve had several such opportunities i’ve

had several such moments i’ve met some

fantastic people as well

i’ve met a lot of people from

prime ministers to chief ministers

to homeless people to drug addicts to

criminals i’ve had

lunch with the most powerful woman in

the country

and the same day skip dinner to hear the

story of a girl who was thrown into

trafficking at the age of 13.

i still remember how she showed me her

scars

the scratch in her voice when she told

me

how she was used and abused

sold and resold

forced into marriage with a guy much

older to her

she beared the children never got

control of them

and there she was still telling me her

story

stuff like that changes you i was also a

young girl she was

the girl sitting in front of me going

having gone through abuse was just about

my age

but anyways so is life these things

happen especially

when you are a

reporter and frankly

looking back at it i know you all have

churnings in your stomach right now but

i at least had the freedom to talk

the freedom to tell that story the

freedom to reflect upon it

a voice and if you’re watching this

trust me so do you what are you doing

with that voice

in these moments of ffme or in these

moments

when i have been broken as well

and i’ll not lie to you i’ve had my

moments i’ve had my moments when i’ve

been numb

i’ve had my moments when i’ve had silent

cries

two panic attacks all hidden behind

the makeup and the smiles when i sit on

primetime television and i greet

the nation

but i still get sleep at night i still

get sleep

thinking that that spot at prime time

television

has its impact thinking

that we’ve managed to change if not all

some lives

at least start a conversation with the

reporting that we did

we changed the life of that girl

that girl who was thrown into

trafficking today has a respectable job

she has hired lawyers to bring back the

custody and to win back the custody of

her two kids

governments have been forced to build

toilets in villages which have never had

one for generations

ngos are now working in the most remote

corners of the countries

building up and bettering the sex ratio

in the country

and most of all we have a new sexual

harassment law in the country

one of the best in the world and i have

not been a silent spectator i’ve been an

agent of change

sometimes a loud one so my message to

you is this

when that moment of epiphany hits you

live it embrace it enjoy it

because your life is about to change and

with you

the life of so many others thank you

[音乐]

嗨,

我的名字是 sonal mirotra kapoor,我是一名

记者和

印度的主播,我已经在电视新闻的疯狂世界中

工作了 10 多年

,今天我在你面前

告诉你

发生了什么 进入这个国家成为一名

记者

,主要是幕后发生的事情

,现在要了解,

让我们带你回到过去,

让我们带你回到 2012 年 12 月。

那是

在国家首都街头的那个时候 人满为患

愤怒的人们 男女老少

愤怒地

在国家首都对一名年轻女孩进行残酷轮奸 在印度

门外的 rashtrapati bhavan 外到处爆发抗议

我当时

是一名城市记者报道 从 sapta

jung 医院

报告她的医疗更新并

与她的家人交谈

我记得医生

告诉我,他们

对她还活着感到震惊,因为没有

留下一英寸的 interstein

我记得在她的内心深处,我和她的兄弟交谈过,他

后来成为了我的好朋友

,当时他只是在他啜泣的时候说几句话,

只是对我发泄说

这是怎么发生的,

迪迪刚刚去看电影

了 朋友

这是怎么发生的,她现在是怎么降落在

这里

的,我的记者想要所有的

下落,所有的细节

,她去了哪里,她看了什么电影,她和

谁一起去了

,他们让我震惊的细节,

她去看了

生活 派

和她的一个男性朋友在南德里的一家影城

看派 为什么这令人震惊是因为我

在同一天晚上在同一个剧院看派的生活

和我的一个男性朋友在同一场演出

唯一的区别可能是我的

男性朋友 碰巧有一辆车,他

可以把我送回家,

否则我也会乘坐公共

交通工具

在那一刻我意识到我

离成为我报道的故事有多近

她是我的年龄她可能

和我一样 不想

顺应社会的方式或将

自己限制在一个家中只是想

在轮奸和不幸事件之后的几周内生活

我涵盖

了故事的各个方面

我记得当

我还能 听到就好像

现在就在我面前发生了

当洛蒂充电发生时人们如何尖叫

摔倒在彼此之上

我与我的摄影师失去了联系

有人偷了我的手机

我正在呕吐 我的眼睛火热

典型的反应是催泪

瓦斯轰炸

我的鞋子被打破了,

那一刻我不记得有多久了 我

步行只是为了寻求帮助

并给你一个想法这不仅仅是

有一天在德里每天都在发生这种情况

有一天是催泪

瓦斯轰炸前几天是

高压水枪

冷wa 大炮

在媒体和

迪利基向抗议者开火 遗憾的是,你知道 12 月德里的天气有多冷,

但最重要的是,从那年 12 月开始,

我记得在新加坡

伊丽莎白山医院

只有她的家人和我当时

医生走进来说

她活不了多久

我有

机会见到她,

在她去世前 15 分钟见到她,

那是我

一直到今天

的形象 她

,我周围的一切都

静止了一分钟

,我什么都没想

我是在另一个

女孩失去生命的时候,但是当这些

顿悟的时刻发生时,你的生活

并没有完全改变,让我这样说,

当我回来的时候,我还是那个人

得很重,

我作为一名城市记者,你随时待命 24

7 精神和身体上的

劳累真的让你

心烦意乱,你几乎没有付出任何代价,一切都是一样的

生活是一样的,但有些

事情发生了变化,我的内心发生了一些变化

我 有一个新的视角也许是一个新的

呼唤

也许是一种看待事物的新方式

有趣的事实

在一切开始前的那个晚上当

我在

不知不觉中与 nirvya 在同一个

剧院观看 pi 的生活时

我告诉自己我要退出我

我会

去把我的文件放进去然后回家

带着羞耻的走回到我

父母

那里去一个小城市告诉他们我

做不到作为

记者城市生活太糟糕了 很难

猜在猜到我们现在在哪里之后发生了什么

,我第二天早上

5 点 30 分从新闻编辑室分配

台接到了一个 reddit 电话,

对于那些不明白的人来说,

他们就像这些保持鹰派的新闻编辑室战士

关注每一个警报

他们

在早上 5 点 30 分给我打了电话,

我当时唯一知道的细节是

在南德里发生了一起强奸案

,他们需要一名记者来

继续强奸 现在

是很多人生活的故事,也是很多

改变生活的故事

,这些年来,我接到了很多

这样的电话,实际上

来自同一个新闻编辑室的分配台。我

记得有一个电话

,我被要求赶到

哈里亚纳邦的村庄,警察

决定不再允许女性

穿牛仔裤,

其中主要包括年轻女孩

打算

去一个禁止女性穿牛仔裤的村庄

和他们谈论它与他们一起度过一天

坦率地说,在 11 年的新闻工作中,我遇到

过几次

这样的遭遇,作为一名女记者,

我已经断绝 我曾

报道过不允许女性

穿她们想穿的衣服

的故事

拉贾斯坦邦

最偏远的村庄中,

当我到达那里时,我的直觉是

与其他女性交谈,她们会

理解正在发生的事情,她们

会有洞察力,

也许我可以突出她们的

声音 我惊恐地

坐在村子中央的一张图表

上,和老少皆宜的

女人在一起,她们毫不拘束地告诉我,在她们看来,女人是一种负担,女孩是一种

负担,

其中一个人转身说库拉

这意味着他们中

的很多人都是垃圾,即使如此,他们也非常

详细地甚至

明确告诉我他们如何处理村里的

女童

问题

如果一个女孩出生了,

他们有

自己的摆脱它的方法,他们

只会去找母亲

,说孩子还在出生,

母亲知道现实,村民

知道现实

,母亲也知道她

会 继续这样做,直到

在这样的时刻生下一个男孩我已经反思

了我自己的生活

我毕竟是一个

独生子女,一个

保守的小家庭的独生女,但

至少

我有机会 至少我有

自由意志来做我自己的决定

直到今天很多女性

都没有的

东西 我特别知道 两个

女孩 两个十几岁的女孩

出生在离我出生地大约 250 公里的

一个叫 badayou 的地方 没有

这是两个女孩的故事,她们

据称

被强奸谋杀,然后在

村里公开场合被吊到一棵树上,当我到达那里时,这起案件引发

了很多愤怒,

那里有防暴

警察

到处都是愤怒的

家人非常愤怒

高速公路被封锁他们坐在

那边的尸体上说我们

不会火化直到

正义得到伸张

有很多国际

媒体对此进行了讨论因为他们已经走了 为了

解脱,因为

那个村子没有厕所,当时

事件发生得

很好,事情很复杂,当我

到达那里时,有很多

观点和反对意见,为了解决

问题的核心,我决定去

回到报告规则 101

你首先与死者家属交谈

确认他们 我去了那里 我看到了他们

简陋的家

我看到了父亲,

但我无法迈出第一步 我

记得只是站在那里想

你怎么 你怎么问 一个女儿,

或者你如何问一个父亲,

他们的两个女儿是如何以如此公开的方式死去的,

你是如何带着相机和麦克风一边呻吟着进入房子的,

你是如何开始对话的

我记得我被困在那里

无法迈出

那一步,但多年来我已经

采取了很多次艰难的步骤,

但主要是

感谢我能够

讲述他们的故事

所有这些故事改变了我的生活

他们的

生活过着我实际上报道

的生活,这改变了我

的一些任务,我们

没有合适的食物或住宿可以依赖,

在八大友 15 天没有厕所的情况下,

但至少我们能够带出

故事 做出艰难的决定,知道这

是为了更大的利益,

这些年来我一直在思考这些故事

,我想

我认为我的生活很艰难,我想

我想把这一切扔掉,然后

回家想

这些年来,我无法接受,坦率地说,

我有过几次这样的机会

回家 ss 人们到吸毒成瘾者和

罪犯 我和这个国家

最有权势的女人共进午餐

,同一天不吃晚饭,听

一个女孩

在 13 岁时被贩卖的故事。

我仍然记得她是如何表现出来的

当她告诉我她是如何被利用和虐待时,她的伤痕,她的声音中的划痕,

卖和转卖,

被迫与一个比她大得多的男人结婚,

她生下的孩子们从来没有

控制过他们

,在那里她仍然告诉我她的

故事

就像那样

改变了你 知道你们现在都

在肚子里翻腾,但

我至少有说话

的自由 讲述这个故事的

自由 反思它的自由

一个声音,如果你正在看这个,

相信我,你在做什么

在我的这些时刻,或者

在我也被打破的那些时刻

,我不会对你撒谎,

我有我的时刻 当我坐在黄金时段的电视上向国家打招呼时,我无声

哭泣的时候

两次惊恐发作都隐藏

在化妆和微笑的后面,

但我仍然在晚上睡觉我仍然

在睡觉

,以为黄金时段

电视

上的那个地方已经 它的影响

认为我们已经设法改变了一些生活,如果不是全部的话

,至少与

我们改变了那个女孩的生活的报道开始了对话,

今天被贩卖的那个女孩有一份体面的工作,

她聘请了律师

夺回监护权并夺回

她两个孩子的监护权

政府被迫

在几代人从未有过的村庄建造厕所

非政府组织正在这些国家最偏远的角落开展工作

该国的性别比例

,最重要的是,我们

在该国制定了一项新的性骚扰法,这

是世界上最好的法律之一,我

不是一个沉默的旁观者,我一直

是变革

的推动者,有时是一个响亮的变革者,所以我的信息 对

你来说,

当顿悟的那一刻击中你时,

它拥抱它,享受它,

因为你的生活即将改变,

还有

很多其他人的生活,谢谢你