Tahrir Revisited: Egypt’s Unfinished Revolution
Beginning in the early days of the uprisings of January and February 2011 and continuing through the “Covering a Revolution” Fellowship that brought 17 top, young Egyptian and American journalists together in Cairo in October, “Tahrir Revisited” encapsulates the first year of reporting led by GroundTruth founder Charles Sennott — including a FRONTLINE documentary.
At the five year anniversary of the uprising, GroundTruth returned to Tahrir Square to see what had become of the Eygptian revolution, and where the country might be headed now.
This Special Report, produced by The GroundTruth Project, appeared on GlobalPost.com in 2011.
Factory workers in limbo as Egypt renationalizes
State of fear: Egypt’s Copts in peril
Egypt: Uncertainty is bad for business
Reviving Revolution: The role of art in an uncertain Egypt
Revolutionary art mirrors Egypt’s changing pulse
Thousands rally for alleged torture victim Essam Atta
Christians in Egypt: A storm within the storm
Mothers of the Revolution
Egypt: Samira v. the Military
History catches up to famous Egyptologist Zahi Hawass
Press censorship threatens Egypt’s ‘unfinished revolution’
In Cairo, journalists find strong allies
Heba Morayef: Human rights and Egypt’s public
Shadi Hamid: The “trade-offs” of democracy
Has Egypt’s revolution become a military coup?
Egypt’s Unfinished Revolution: Revisiting Tahrir Square
For refugees in Egypt, it’s worse
Egyptian women challenge rights abuses, militarization
Behind Egypt’s revolution: youth and the internet