|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
Awards
OverviewA frontline eyewitness account of the Syrian Revolution from prizewinning journalist and activist Hadi Abdullah, who broke the story of Assad's alliance with Hezbollah, a fact that changed the course and severity of the war. ""This is Hadi al-Abdullah. A few years ago, he was studying to be a nurse. But when war broke out in Syria, he took a different path. He chose to join antigovernment protests and tell the world the story of an uprising that became a civil war. Years of conflict turned him from an eyewitness into a frontline war reporter. This new role of his brought added risk, for himself, and for his friends and colleagues. Sometimes they would go towards the bombs, sometimes the bombs would come towards them."" —New York Times documentary ""Dying to Be Heard: Reporting Syria's War"" Abdullah became a trusted voice on social media, where he joined the ranks of cyber-dissenters and reported from the field. His memoir tracks his experience as a first responder during the Arab Spring uprisings, through the liberation of Syria in December 2024, by which time as a war reporter he had lost many of his closest friends, two of whom were his cameramen. After the brutal siege of Homs, Abdullah fled north to Idlib Province among the rebel factions, which posed their own dangers to young reporters. Astonishing for its rendering of friendships forged during the emotional impacts of war, and using creative language and style, Critical Conditions explores not only the political concerns of the author and his closest friends who all risked capture, prison, torture, or death every day, but gives centrality to their feelings during the life-changing mission they undertook by challenging the authoritarian regime of Bashar al-Assad. Critically injured in an assassination attempt in Aleppo in 2016, Abdullah spent months in recovery in Turkey, where he was interviewed for a multimedia feature on The New York Times and by Scott Pelley for 60 Minutes. Later that year, he won the Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom Prize. Abdullah's new Afterword gives breathtaking detail to the Liberation of Syria the first week of December 2024 and remarks on the challenges for Syrians that lie ahead. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Hadi Abdullah , Alessandro ColumbuPublisher: Doppelhouse Press Imprint: Doppelhouse Press Edition: International Dimensions: Width: 12.70cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 19.70cm ISBN: 9781954600355ISBN 10: 1954600356 Pages: 180 Publication Date: 29 July 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsContents: 1. Introduction by the editor 2. Preface 3. Introduction 4. Before the beginning 5. Knocking on freedom’s doors 6. The day of rage 7. The first glance 8. The mask 9. My new voice 10. On the verge of the dream 11. The dead quarter 12. The Orontes’s debt 13. Birth 14. You guys are intellectuals 15. The inner conflict 16. The confession 17. The confrontation 18. In heaven, under fire 19. In the house 20. A stranger in our homes 21. The only survivor 22. Exiting paradise 23. Truce 24. Resumption 25. A bloody road 26. My eyes hurt 27. A journey of longing 28. A new dawn in Kafranabel 29. A long nightmare 30. Why you infidel 31. In the “revolutionaries’” prison 32. Confiscated: restraining order 33. Hadi the martyr 34. Aleppo is burning 35. The dear pledge 36. Under the debris 37. My other eyes 38. Via dolorosa 39. Martyr without permission 40. Meeting the martyr 41. The journey of recovery and homesickness 42. Handless 43. The pledge renewal 44. A crazy idea 45. A non… critical case 46. Two arrows in the heart 47. I shall return 48. The phobia of loss 49. A new chapterReviewsAuthor InformationHadi Abdullah is Syrian reporter and activist. Born in Homs in 1988 he rose to prominence in Syria in 2011 and 2012 when he covered the siege of Homs at the hands of the Syrian regime. In 2016 he won the prestigious Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom Prize in the citizen journalist category. He currently resides in Homs in Syria and has worked for various Syrian opposition networks, including Syria TV. He is active on Instagram and Telegram. Alessandro Columbu is Senior Lecturer in Arabic at the University of Westminster. Originally from Sardinia, Alessandro learned Arabic in Syria, Lebanon and Jordan, and earned his PhD in Arabic literature from the University of Edinburgh. His latest publication is Zakariyya Tamir and the politics of the Syrian short story – Modernity, gender and authoritarianism published by IB Tauris. He won the 2023 Sheikh Hamad Award for Translation and International Understanding for his translation of Zakariyya Tamir’s Sour Grapes, published by Syracuse University Press. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |