Ukraine

Anne Garrels, War Correspondent and Pioneering Journalist, Dies at 71

NBC Universal, Inc.

For over three decades, her place was in a flak jacket on the frontlines, but now a pioneering international journalist is watching the war unfold in Ukraine from the safety of her home in Norfolk, Connecticut.

Renowned international war correspondent and pioneering journalist Anne Garrels has passed away, her family confirmed to NBC Connecticut.

A Connecticut Women’s Hall of Fame inductee, Garrels' incredible career took her to the front lines around the globe for NBC News, ABC News and NPR, blazing a path for women in broadcasting while shining a light on some of the world’s most pressing conflicts.

After decades spent in Russia and the former Soviet Union, Garrels launched an international non-governmental organization this past spring to send high end medical and military equipment to Ukraine and open a sanctuary for orphans of the war, spearheading the effort from her quiet home in Norfolk.

She longed to be on the frontlines once again, but the cancer forced her to remain stateside. In what was one of her last appearances in front of a TV camera, at times struggling to catch her breath, Garrels said she was making the most of whatever time she had left by doing whatever she could to help.

“It came back again in April, the lung cancer,” she said in May. “I couldn't go through radiation again, because of where the tumor is. It's too close to my aorta. And chemo almost killed me last time.”

https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/witness-to-history-war-correspondent-helps-ukraine-from-ct/2784317/

“I just said, 'No way. My husband's dead. I don't have children. I'm not going to jump through hoops.' I did do a treatment called cryoablation in August, where they put needles in your back and freeze the tumor and it worked. It reduced it considerably, but it sent me into the worst pain imaginable for three months, and despair.”

So instead, she faced down death with the same bravery and dogged determination that sent her to the frontlines in a flak jacket to be a witness to history. And she made a tangible difference for so many lives suddenly upended, trapped in a warzone.

"Over her more than three decades as a foreign correspondent, Anne Garrels has reported from some of the most dangerous places on earth. Known for reporting directly from the frontlines, Garrels’ tremendous skill in bringing the news of the world to our doorsteps from Central America, the Middle East, the former Soviet Union, Afghanistan, and Baghdad makes her one of the greatest journalists of her generation." - CT Women's Hall of Fame
Garrels spent over 15 years reporting from the former Soviet Union and its republics including Ukraine.
Anne Garrels
The pioneering international war correspondent reported from conflicts across the globe for over three decades.
Anne Garrels
In the 1990s, Garrels covered the wars in Bosnia and Chechnya
Garrels served as ABC News' Moscow bureau chief and correspondent until she was expelled from the country in 1982.
Garrels' major journalism awards and honors include the George Polk Award for her work in Iraq, the 2004 Edward R. Murrow Award, the Courage in Journalism Award from the International Women’s Media Foundation, and the Los Angeles Press Club’s Daniel Pearl Award for Courage and Integrity in Journalism.
After the fall of the Soviet Union, Garrels continued covering issues in the former republics from social and economic challenges to military and cultural developments. 

Anne Garrels in the field
Anne Garrels in the field
One of the refurbished ambulances supplied by Assist Ukraine
Some of Anne Garrels' press credentials over the years

Garrels died at the age of 71.

You can watch her inspiring story by clicking here. You can also make a donation to the cause in her honor by clicking here.

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