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Ash-Har Quraishi Biography

Ash-har Quraishi is an American broadcast journalist and reporter for WMAQ-TV in Chicago. He was previously the chief Midwest correspondent for now-defunct Al Jazeera America at its Chicago Bureau.

He has served as CNN’s bureau chief in Islamabad and was listed in a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union against the National Security Agency. He later worked for WTTW-TV in Chicago and for the Chicago News Cooperative.

Ash-Har Quraishi Age

He was born on 5 January 1975, Chicago, Illinois. Quraishi is 44 years old.

Ash-Har Quraishi Height

The American reporter maintains a low profile about his life hence there is no provided information about his actual measurements. This information will soon be updated.

Ash-Har Quraishi Career

Quraishi served as CNN’s Islamabad Bureau Chief covering news from across Pakistan, based there within days of the 9/11 attacks. In 2001 At the age of 26, he was CNN’s youngest International Bureau Chief.

While at the network he reported on political and military tensions between nuclear neighbors India and Pakistan and the hunt for Osama Bin Laden on the volatile Pakistan/Afghanistan border.

Ash-har Quraishi Photo

He covered the 2002 kidnapping and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl, providing live reports from the port city of Karachi. He was live from the capital of Islamabad minutes after the bombing of a Protestant church within the diplomatic enclave.

Quraishi also covered the 2002 Pakistani elections and was the first western journalist to report the capture of suspected 9/11 planner Khalid Shaikh Mohammed.

Following the capture, Quraishi conducted an exclusive one-on-one interview with Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf. Quraishi was honored by the South Asian Journalists Association for his coverage of the 2002 parliamentary elections. In 2004 he was named one of the top 50 South Asian Global Achievers in Mass Media by Triangle Media Group.

Ash-Har Quraishi NBC

Ash-har Quraishi joined NBC 5 as a general assignment reporter in August 2016. Ash-har is an Emmy Award-winning television journalist, producer, and filmmaker with more than 20 years of international, investigative and long-form reporting/production experience.

Before joining NBC 5, Ash-har was the Chief Midwest Correspondent for Al Jazeera America. Previously he reported for WTTW’s flagship nightly news magazine show Chicago Tonight and was a CNN international correspondent and bureau chief.

His reporting and photography have been featured on CNN, The PBS NewsHour, A&E, The Oprah Winfrey Show and in The New York Times.

With Al Jazeera America from its launch in August 2013, Quraishi reported from throughout the Midwest and around the country. He covered immigration, healthcare, the debate over minimum wage as well as gun violence in Chicago.

He covered the massive Colorado flooding in September 2013 and was on the ground just hours after massive tornadoes ripped through central Illinois in November.

Quraishi was the network’s lead reporter as unrest, rioting, and looting began in Ferguson, Missouri after the fatal shooting of Michael Brown.

Quraishi and his crew themselves were fired upon without warning by police using rubber bullets and tear gas while attempting to report live from the area.

In 2011 he co-produced the award-winning documentary “Fordson” about the Arab-American experience in post 9/11 America. The film released in theaters nationwide and screened at the U.S. State Department.

The acclaimed documentary premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival in Park City, Utah and won major festival awards around the country.

After receiving the award for Best U.S. Documentary Feature at Michael Moore’s Traverse City Film Festival the Academy-Award-winning director called the film: “Powerful… intelligent…moving… One of the best documentaries I’ve seen this year.”

Before his posting in Chicago, Quraishi was the Chief Investigative Reporter for the CBS affiliate in Kansas City. His investigative reports there exposed corruption, fraud, illegal activity and prompted a change in city and state government.

A bold investigation into lax airline passenger screening procedures resulted in a federal probe by the Department of Homeland Security and was recognized with a 2009 Regional Edward R. Murrow Award for Investigative Reporting and a Heart of America Award from the Kansas City Press Club.

In 2008, he co-hosted election specials from Washington D.C. focused on bilateral relations between the United States and Pakistan for GEO Television – a joint production with America Abroad Media.

Previously, Quraishi spent more than six years working at CNN. He served as CNN’s Islamabad Bureau Chief/Correspondent, responsible for the network’s coverage of Pakistan immediately following the 9/11 attacks.

Quraishi reported extensively on major events the region, including the Agra Summit, the ongoing conflict between nuclear neighbors India and Pakistan, the floods in Eastern India, the hunt for Osama bin Laden, the religious extremist movement in Pakistan and the clashes along the Line of Control in the disputed region of Kashmir.

He reported live from Karachi on the disappearance of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl and the bombing of the Protestant International Church in Islamabad.

Additionally, he provided live coverage of the first general elections in Pakistan since the 1999 military coup and reported on the lead up to polling day in an award-winning five-part series.

Quraishi was the first television correspondent to report the capture of top Al Qaeda operative and 9/11 architect Khalid Shaikh Mohammad in Rawalpindi, Pakistan.

He was live from the capital as the story unfolded and conducted an exclusive one-on-one interview with Pakistan’s President General Pervez Musharraf following the arrest. Before his posting in Pakistan, Quraishi was based in Atlanta where he worked in various capacities.

He supervised the production of the network’s premiere long-form news program “CNN&TIME” overseeing all aspects of production. His work has been honored with numerous awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association, Investigative Reporters & Editors, The Society of Professional Journalists, the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, the Press Club of Atlantic City and the Chicago Headline Club.

He has been awarded a CINE Golden Eagle Award, a Peter Lisagor Award, four National Headliners and in 2010 was an IRE Award finalist.

He is a five-time Emmy Award winner and has received five Edward R. Murrow Awards. In 2004 Triangle Media Group named him one of the top 50 South Asian Global Achievers in Mass Media.

Quraishi served on the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences’ Midwest Board of Governors. Born and raised on the northwest side of Chicago, Quraishi attended the Chicago Public Schools and holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Journalism from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is married to documentary producer and CNN veteran, Basma Babar-Quraishi and has a 12-year-old daughter and 4-year-old son.

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Ash-Har Quraishi Interview

Interview with the Producer of “Fordson: Faith – Fasting – Football”

The new documentary, Fordson: Faith – Fasting – Football, is in theaters now through Thursday, September 15th. The film follows a predominately Arab-American high school football team from Dearborn, Michigan as they prepare to face their cross-town rivals while fasting for Ramadan. Far more than a sports flick, Fordson is a story of a Muslim community balancing their Islamic and American identities in a post-9/11 world.

We caught up with Ash-har Quraishi, who produced Fordson along with his wife, Basma, as he geared up for the film’s release.

[Youssef Chouhoud]: First off, congratulations on your project coming to fruition.

[Ash-har Quraishi]: Two and a half years, but it is finally on the big screen, which is what we have always hoped for.

[YC]: So for our readers who may not know, can you tell us a little bit about the role of a film producer?

[AQ]: Well, the producers are really responsible for making sure everything happens, so they are kind of the glue that keeps the production together. Traditionally, producers will be involved with everything from development to pre-production to finding the production crew that you are going to use. In my case specifically, my wife and I worked on coming up with the look of the film, what format we were going to shoot on, and also determining who we wanted to shoot the film.

Both my wife and I worked at CNN. We both have production backgrounds. I was the production supervisor at CNN before getting into reporting and becoming the bureau chief in Pakistan.

[YC]: What drove you and your wife to this specific aspect of film making?

[AQ]: I picked up my first camera when I was, I think, six years old. I shot my first film when I was six, on a Hi 8 camera that my dad gave me. My love for filming things started at an early age.

I started shooting small, short films when I was a teenager with friends, cousins and siblings. Basma was the same way. She used to shoot videos, as well, when she was a child.

So we were always drawn to the production aspect of things, knowing how to light things and how to frame things and composition and artistic parts that come together when you are making a film.

I always had a love for cinema, generally speaking as well. I wanted to be a film director – a narrative film director, but the closest that I could get to it without scaring my parents too much was broadcast news.

I was able to satisfy that desire looking through the viewfinder of the camera and putting things together and editing and shooting and all that.

Basma, who was the other producer on the film, came from a documentary background. We both have long foreign production experience.

I supervised the show CNN in Time, which was our magazine unit and kind of CNN’s 90’s version of 60 Minutes, if you will, or Dateline.

She then went to work for CNN Presents which is the documentary unit, which produces one hour or two-hour documentaries. I pulled her out of that and we did the breaking news for CNN International for three years out of Islamabad.

This was her first opportunity to really get back to long form, full documentary length production. She has done a couple of docs as well as a field producer.

[YC]: How did you come to produce this particular film. Were you and Basma actively looking for a project that told the post-9/11 American Muslim story in a compelling and unique way, or did Rashid Ghazi, the film’s director, just make you an offer you couldn’t refuse?

[AQ]: Well you know what it was, Rashid is my brother-in-law – he is married to my sister. Rashid actually was one of the people who encouraged me to get out of pre-med and go into broadcast when I was in college.

It was scandalous when we were kids. I remember when Rashid was probably a teenager, there was a rumor going around in the community that Rashid wanted to become a film director, which was, you know, taboo back in the 80s.

If you remember The Message, for example, was protested when it was made and later embraced by the Muslim community. When it first came out in theaters, it was something that wasn’t understood and automatically a lot of people came out from the Muslim community against that film.

My dad was talking about it last night about how they organized a group of people to protest the film and then afterward the ‘alims looked at it and saw what good there was in the film and how well it was done and it was embraced.

They changed the name of it because originally it was called The Messenger of Allah and then it became The Message. There has been this sort of perpetual misunderstanding or suspicion about what it means to make films.

We never thought that. We always thought this could be a tool that is used for producing good content. When Rashid came across this story back in 2003/2004, a friend of his, Chris Lawlor, had written an article in USA Today about this great team in Dearborn, Michigan.

At the time, Rashid didn’t have anything to do with the film, but he thought he could do it possibly as a live telecast, which is what he does – his business is sports marketing.

He puts together these high school games that are broadcast on ESPNU. He had mentioned the project to us because we were looking for a project to work on together for a number of years.

I think the first time he had mentioned it to me was back in maybe ‘06/‘07. I said, “Yeah when it looks like it is coming together, let me know.” I was working full time in Kansas City and said I’d come up, Basma and I would produce it.

[YC]: This film had to overcome a lot of hurdles to get made – not surprising for anyone familiar with the American public school system and high school sports personalities.

[AQ]: The problem was that Michigan state rules don’t allow live telecast of high school games, so he had to come up with a different way to tell the story or to at least get this team some notice.

In the ensuing years as Ramadan started sliding more into football season, the spotlight sort of shined on the scene. So there were more articles about it, and he was interested in doing a more in-depth version of what we already knew about the team, so he pursued a documentary route.

Every year it just didn’t work out with getting the rights to do it and getting the principal and coach on board and the school board on board – it was always a problem.

Finally, in 2009 we were getting close, and it was our last chance because it was the last year that Ramadan would fall during football season for 20 years, basically.

It was the last chance to do it. He worked really hard to try and get the rights. There was a new coach who had been there for two years. In the last meeting, Rashid and I drove up to Dearborn from Chicago in June, probably, of 2009.

We met with the coach and we met with the principal. I did my best to make him (the coach) feel comfortable. The principal said to us, “If the coach signs off, I’m okay with you doing it.”

The key was convincing Coach Fouad Zaban that we would handle the story and not be in the way because his main priority was to make sure that his team was able to practice and train without the distraction of cameras following him around for extended periods of time.

That was part of my assurance as a production guy and producer – to assure him that not only would we stay out of the way, but we would also handle the material respectfully and not in the fashion of reality television, really.

Basically, my credibility is all that I have, in my business, as a journalist and television broadcast journalist. I’m a newsman, and so that was my standpoint.

Rashid has got a marketing background, so it’s a different sort of industry he works in. My industry is purely based on credibility. I hope that in our backgrounds he had seen we worked for CNN and I was an investigative reporter … and that we actually had some credibility. He was convinced. Fouad said okay.

Then the school board said no, so Rashid made a last-ditch effort. He drove up to Dearborn from Iowa where he was for an event. He went to each school board member to find out who said no.

None of them would own up, so he said, “Well, if nobody said no, then I think that means yes.” They said okay, and we busted my head to get the production together in ten days, which is a massive undertaking for a project of this scale.

We ran out, and both of us started scouting locations, interviewing potential subjects who would be the main focus of the doc – the potential players.

We got that all lined up. We figured out who we were shooting with and started rolling tape on September 10th – I believe it was – 2009.

Not only was it the last time that Ramadan was going to fall in football season, but it was also just sort of that the stars were aligned for us, alhamdulillah.

The last ten days of Ramadan happened to be during our production shoot. We started the film on September 11, 2009, which was a Friday night and that was a big game for Fordson, and we followed them … as they are fasting and training and going through the last ten days of Ramadan up to their Friday night game against their cross-town rival.

This was the biggest game of the year for them with their cross-town rivals the Dearborn Pioneers and then Eid was the following weekend, so it was like everything lined up for us.

Had we done it earlier, all of these things would not have happened in the way that they did. Had we gotten the rights in 2004/2005, it would have been a different film, I think.

My explanation is that it was meant to happen when it happened.

[YC]: You mentioned not wanting to tarnish your credibility as a journalist and chase after the sensational. Yet, there is quite a bit of naturally occurring drama in Dearborn, given the area’s ethnic and religious character.

Seeing as how not all Arabs are Muslim and not all Muslims are Sunni, does the film address at all Dearborn’s intra-communal tensions?

[AQ]: It does not because the original intent of the film was to shine a light on a community that has largely been misunderstood and mischaracterized by the mainstream media.

Our goal, our aim, our target audience – if you will – was not another Muslims. It is a very educational film, in part, but also sort of an invitation to people who are not familiar with the customs of Muslims or American Arabs and sort of invite them in – as I like to say, give you a place at the dinner table.

Our goal was to really go after the common qualities we all share as Americans – as human beings, really. Yes, some of our characters are Shi’a, and some of our characters are Sunni, but what we focused on was what made them similar.

You wouldn’t be able to tell, and I would say it is a nondenominational film. It is about Muslims in general. It is about Arab Americans.

It’s about Americans. I think it really is a positive and inspirational story that instead of focusing on divisiveness focuses on commonalities.

[YC]: These days any project even tangentially related to Islam and Muslims are often viewed with skepticism if not outright suspicion.

[AQ]: Absolutely. The fact of the matter is that if you do anything that focuses on Islam, you are going to encounter controversy and encounter people who don’t like what you are saying.

If you look at the 2008 presidential election, the idea that Barack Obama was a Muslim was made an issue and was politicized. The idea of being associated with Islam in any way is a negative thing is something that has been politicized in the last couple of years.

The Park51 mosque controversy obviously opened up a lot of what is really going on in America today.

If you think about it, in my estimation, in the last three or four years it seems like while it’s not good to be Islamophobic, it is okay and alright.

It is much more acceptable to be Islamophobic because you can justify why you are Islamophobic. I think with the distance from 9/11, it has become worse because right after 9/11 there were certain isolated incidents regarding Islam and Muslims, but I think that there was a concerted effort to highlight the fact that the people who perpetrated the terrorist acts of 9/11 were a very narrow, radical, extreme element and not at all carrying the sentiments of all Muslims.

That message sort of has dissipated quite a bit. It feels like in the last couple of years Islamophobia has come out as more acceptable. That is another reason why it is so important that the film comes out now rather than four or five years ago when things weren’t as bad and people weren’t protesting and picketing the construction of mosques around the country as they are now.

[YC]: Was the film’s release period, which straddles the ten-year commemoration of the September 11th attacks, a conscious decision to face potential critics head on?

[AQ]: I think that eventually became a part of the strategy, but I don’t think that was originally the intent because we did shoot it in 2009. All of us have full-time jobs, so working after eight o’clock at night until two or three o’clock in the morning, you only get so much done.

It took some time for us. We released it as early as we could, given the circumstances. It just so happened that it is the 10th anniversary of September 11th, and we can’t shy away from it.

These are issues that everybody is thinking about and everybody is talking about. We think that this is a story that had we focused on the negative things and all of the sort of discourse that is negative about what is happening in America and not told the story that was inspirational and about Americans, then we would have maybe shied away from a 9/11 anniversary release.

I don’t think that that is what this film is about. I think that this film will be very inspiring. Because of the message of the film, I think that also sort of tempered our concerns as to how it could be received being released so close to the September 11th anniversary.

[YC]: Scanning the press that the movie has gotten leading up to its release, I have to say on balance it’s been quite positive.

[AQ]: Very positive! Rashid even did Fox News. Alhamdulillah, we have been really fortunate. And I think that is just a testament to what we had intended to do and what we were able to accomplish.

[YC]: So what’s next for Quraishi Productions, the film company you run alongside your wife?

[AQ]: That is a good question. We have a whole bunch of potential ideas. Now that we have been through the process once, we are looking back.

There are a lot of stories that we wanted to tell or told in some fashion, for example, when we were working in Pakistan when my wife and I were both there – she was producing and I was recording.

There were a lot of stories that we told for a CNN audience in two or three minutes but they could have made feature-length documentaries. So we are exploring a couple of those ideas.

There is one idea I don’t want to say yet that we are seriously considering starting production on a specific documentary.

[YC]: If you had one bit of advice to give a budding filmmaker, what would it be?

[AQ]: I would say the biggest thing is to look for stories that have some appeal to the masses and have a message. It is one thing to just produce a film.

It is a big commitment, so if you don’t believe in the project and if you are doing it just for a paycheck or whatever, that’s just not going to make for fulfilling or compelling film making.

The reason we did this project – I mean, we weren’t paid for this project – we agreed to put our time into it and then if insha’Allah it does make some money, then we’ll deal with that later.

This was a passion project, and when we shot for eleven days, we knew that this was a project that was really sort of going to encompass our lives for the next two years.

There was a huge commitment on our part. You live, breathe, sleep, and dream about this film, and so I think that the first thing is that you have to be able to commit to a story.

I think the most important thing is to be true to yourself when you’re picking what story you want to tell.

[YC]: Thank you very much for taking the time to speak with us, Ash-har. We at MuslimMatters all wish you and Basma continued success, insha’Allah.

[AQ]: Not at all. My pleasure. Thank you for talking to us, and we appreciate everything you guys are doing.

Source:muslimmatters


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