Arlington Reads: David Finkel's Visit with Arlington Students
Yesterday the students at Arlington's New Directions High School and the Yorktown High School student newspaper, the Sentry, had the honor of meeting David Finkel, author of The Good Soldiers.
Mr. Finkel visited New Directions and Yorktown during the day, before speaking in the evening at Central Library as part of this year's Arlington Reads program. He spoke with the students about the 8 months he spent in Iraq with the 2-16 Battalion. Most of the 800 soldiers in the 2-16 were 19-years-old, probably not much older than most of his student audiences. At the end of the 2-16's deployment 14 soldiers had died and 75 had received Purple Hearts.
David Finkel with students from New Directions
Here are some of the questions asked by the New Directions students:
What made you risk your personal safety to do this? Mr. Finkel replied that he didn't really know what he was getting into. He'd covered wars before, but had never lived up close with a battalion in a war for an extended period. But he believes that it's important for people to have as much information as they can in order to make decisions in the world. He explained that what he does is "observed journalism," a type of journalism where you don't email or phone to get information, you go out and observe and observe and observe until you have a story. His isn't a book about war; it's a book about what war does to the characters of young men.
Where did you sleep? Mr. Finkel explained that he had his own room in one of the cement buildings. Many of the soldiers slept in trailers, but he was put in a building that was believed to be safer from bombing. At the end of his stay, after a bomb hit the building, the soldier who told Mr. Finkel bombs didn't reach buildings wryly commented, "I guess I was wrong."
When you returned did you suffer from PSTD (Posttraumatic Stress Disorder)? Loud noises made Mr. Finkel jumpy for a while after her returned. He said he was downtown on a rooftop watching fireworks on July 4th, and realized that was a bad decision. But he's OK now.
Was there one day when you really wanted to leave? What moved Mr. Finkel most wasn't the ongoing horror that he saw, but seeing the decency that people were capable of in the midst of the horror. He told the students that one huge difference between his experience and the soldiers' was that he was able to take breaks and come back to Washington when it got too tough for him.
Did you keep up with the men after you returned home? Yes, Mr. Finkel is still in touch with many of the soldiers. As a matter of fact, his next book (expected to be published in 2013) will be about the experience of some of the soldiers from the 2-16 after they returned home.
Finkel also spoke with the students about why he became a journalist:
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