Monday, May 19, 2014
We
spend the hour remembering the pioneering journalist William Worthy,
who died earlier this month at the age of 92.
During
the height of the Cold War, Worthy defied the U.S. government by
reporting from the Soviet Union, Cuba, China, Iran, North Vietnam and
Algeria.
He
also worked closely with many African-American leaders, including A.
Philip Randolph and Malcolm X.
In
the late 1950s, the State Department refused to renew his passport
after he returned from a reporting trip into China.
Despite
not having a passport, Worthy traveled to Cuba in 1961 — two years
after the Cuban revolution—and interviewed Fidel Castro.
He
was arrested upon returning to the United States--not for traveling
to Cuba but for entering the United States illegally—an American
citizen without a passport.
The
ordeal became the subject of Phil Ochs’ song, "The Ballad of
William Worthy."
In
1981, Worthy traveled to Iran, two years after the revolution ousted
the U.S.-backed Shah, resulting in a series of blockbuster exposés
about U.S. actions in Iran.
"For
this generation of younger journalists who are coming of age in the
era of the Edward Snowden documents, WikiLeaks, of the government
surveillance on the metadata of journalists and many millions of
people in this country and around the world, I would say that William
Worthy is the single most important journalist that they’ve never
heard of," said investigative journalist Jeremy Scahill, who
considered Worthy a mentor. "If Bill Worthy was a white
journalist, and not been an African-American journalist, he would be
much better known than he is right now."
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