No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsCrimeUS war reporter Sotloff remembered as brave and fun

US war reporter Sotloff remembered as brave and fun

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Steven Sotloff, the second U.S. journalist murdered by Islamic State militants, was a respected reporter as well known for his irreverent humor as for his sensitive approach to Middle East conflicts.

“He is a journalist who made a journey to cover the story of Muslims suffering at the hands of tyrants,” Sotloff’s mother, Shirley said in a last ditch appeal for mercy last week.

“I ask your justice to be merciful and not punish my son for matters he has no control over,” she said.

In a video showing the beheading of fellow U.S. journalist James Foley, militants had warned Sotloff would be next if U.S. President Barack Obama did not halt raids against the Islamic State in Iraq.

On Tuesday, a video released by the same jihadist group showed the murder of 31-year-old Sotloff, just over a year after he had been taken captive while crossing the frontier from Turkey to Syria.

Well-versed in the history and culture of the Middle East, the self-styled “stand-up philosopher from Miami” wrote for Time, the Christian Science Monitor, Foreign Policy and World Affairs Journal.

Sotloff “is known to us as an honest and thoughtful journalist who strives to understand the story from local perspectives and report his findings straightforwardly,” World Affairs said last month.

Foreign Policy editor David Kenner said he would remember Sotloff “as a brave and talented reporter” while colleague Tom Coghlan recalled him as “a really good writer and humane journalist.”

Friends also shared intimate memories, with an academic who tweets under the name Ms. Entropy describing him as a “dear friend, smartass, hilarious comrade, and brave colleague.”

‘Courage and little bit of craziness’ 

Before his kidnap, the journalist posted poignant images on social media sites of civilians in the grips of conflict beyond their control, including children in a Syrian refugee camp.

On Twitter, he spoke of the conflict in Syria and the Arab Spring popular revolts in countries like Egypt and Libya but also his favorite basketball team, the Miami Heat.

“Is it bad that I want to focus on #syria, but all I can think of is a #HEATFinals repeat?” he wrote in a June 2013 tweet.

“Steven embodies what it takes to report from combat zones,” said Bill Roggio, managing editor of the Long War Journal, a news website for which Sotloff wrote in 2011 from Cairo. “He has that courage and little bit of craziness that you need to take risks to observe and understand a story in dangerous places.”

“Steve Sotloff lived in Yemen for years, spoke good Arabic, deeply loved Islamic world,” tweeted writer Ann Marlowe, who met Sotloff during the conflict in Libya.

Speaking to The Miami Herald before the apparent beheading, she insisted that Sotloff was “no war junkie.”

He was, she said “committed to the Arab Spring and very respectful of Islamic culture.”

One last run 

 “I can’t get the image of Steve Sotloff cracking jokes out of my head. We can NOT let # ISIS win by instilling fear, stopping our work,” tweeted Newsweek’s Middle East editor Janine di Giovanni, who worked with him in Syria.

Other colleagues urged the public to remember Sotloff through his work and not through the video of his violent death.

“Let us stop and honor and remember and talk about Steven Sotloff. Let us discuss his humanity — and reject those who refused to see it,” Al Jazeera America foreign correspondent Nick Shifrin tweeted.

“Steve Sotloff deserved better than being used as a sickening propaganda tool,” tweeted former NPR social media strategist Andy Carvin.

Fellow freelance journalist Ben Taub said Sotloff had actually planned to take a break from reporting, but wanted one last Syria run.

“He said he was chasing a good story, but kept the specifics close to his chest,” Taub wrote in The Daily Beast in August. “He was experienced. He could speak Arabic. He was careful. And he told me he had had enough.”

Recommended: In Syria, freelancers like James Foley cover a dangerous war zone with no front lines

Find links to some of Sotloff’s reporting here

Trending Now

U.S. Congressman Alarmed Over Costa Rica’s Immunity Push

A U.S. Congressman has stepped into Costa Rica's heated political debate, requesting a direct briefing from our country's ambassador in Washington amid growing questions...

Six Airlines Cancel Routes with Venezuela After US Warning

Six airlines cancelled their routes with Venezuela on Saturday, after the United States warned civil aviation about an “increase in military activity” amid the...

Costa Rica Football Federation Dismisses Coach Miguel Herrera

The Costa Rican Football Federation has ended its partnership with Mexican coach Miguel "El Piojo" Herrera after the national team missed out on the...

Costa Rica Tourism Crisis as 22,000 Jobs are Lost in Downturn

Costa Rica's tourism industry faces a sharp downturn, with roughly 22,000 jobs lost in the past year. This drop hits hard in coastal and...

Brazil’s Bolsonaro Moved From House Arrest to Police Custody

Brazil's former president Jair Bolsonaro was taken from house arrest into police custody on Saturday to prevent him from escaping as he appeals a...

Former Costa Rican Presidents Defend Democratic Institutions

Eight former presidents of Costa Rica issued a joint statement on Thursday defending our country's democratic institutions, particularly the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE), against...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica