
Arezou Rezvani
Reporter and Editor at NPR
Writer, traveler, dreamer, lurker @NPR following politics, conflict and extremism in lands near and far. [email protected]. 📍Beirut
Articles
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1 week ago |
mprnews.org | Leila Fadel |Arezou Rezvani |Taylor Haney |Kyle Mackie
For years, Sarah Inama had a poster hanging in her Idaho classroom that encouraged her 6th grade students to be kind and inclusive with one another. "Everyone is Welcome Here," it read in bright multi-colored letters atop a row of hands with varying skin tones. The poster had never drawn any attention, until recently, when her principal and vice principal asked her to take it down.
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2 weeks ago |
mprnews.org | Leila Fadel |Arezou Rezvani |Taylor Haney |Kyle Mackie
Create an account or log in to save stories. Thanks for liking this story! We have added it to a list of your favorite stories. Many Americans are worried that their First Amendment right to free speech is fading. NPR's Morning Edition has talked to legal experts, activists, immigration lawyers, scientists, students, teachers and others over several weeks to understand why.
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1 month ago |
npr.org | Leila Fadel |Arezou Rezvani
Demonstrators in New York City on Saturday, March 15, gather to show support for Columbia University student activist Mahmoud Khalil and demand his immediate release from ICE detention. Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu via Getty Images hide caption toggle caption Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu via Getty Images This was supposed to be a season of joy for 28-year-old Noor Abdalla. She and her husband, Mahmoud Khalil, are expecting their first child next month, and they were getting ready.
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1 month ago |
npr.org | Leila Fadel |Arezou Rezvani |Scott Simon
Audio will be available later today. In her first broadcast interview, Noor Abdalla speaks about the arrest and attempted deportation of her husband, Columbia University protestor Mahmoud Khalil.
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1 month ago |
kpbs.org | Leila Fadel |Arezou Rezvani |Milton Guevara
Updated February 25, 2025 at 12:27 PM ETNot long ago, Hungary wasn't on the radar for many Americans. But the small country in central Europe — about the size of Indiana — has become the envy of some American conservatives in recent years, particularly President Trump and his inner circle. Hungary — under the leadership of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán — isn't the democracy it used to be.
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An Islamic State fighter I randomly met in Damascus on the kind of future he wants for Syria: "If they don't apply Sharia law, this war will never end." https://t.co/49NQIjQzXT

RT @QUSAY_NOOR_: 🚨#Caesar's photo smuggler reveals his identity For many years, the world only knew them by these two names: Caesar and Sa…

RT @Rsherlock: In other cells, prisoners had drawn in the walls - incredible art without pens, just scratching at the paint - decorations,…