Tag Archives: Maria Moors Cabot Prizes

In Memoriam: Joaquim Ibarz

J-School students Mariana Cristancho-Ahn and Nuria Net with Joaquim Ibarz at the 2010 Cabot prize gala

Last Saturday, journalist and 2010 Maria Moors Cabot Prize winner Joaquim Ibarz passed away in his hometown of Zaidín in Spain after battling with brain cancer. “Quim,” as he was known to friends and colleagues, served for 28 years as a Latin American correspondent for Barcelona’s “La Vanguardia” newspaper.

His passion and love for the region (not to mention his sense of humor) was palpable for us students who had the priviledge of meeting Quim last October when he came to Columbia to receive his Cabot prize for his outsanding career. During an informal roundtable between the Cabot prize winners and students, he was very keen on sharing his advice and hearing from us, in our own words, our thoughts on journalism in Latin America (read a recap of the Cabot winners chat with students here).

Ibarz, who was 68, got diagnosed just last summer when he was still living in Mexico City, his home base since 1982. He moved to Barcelona to receive treatment shortly afterwards and while in remission, made a valiant effort to travel to New York for the Cabot gala, held at Columbia’s Low Library and presented by University president Lee C. Bollinger and Journalism School Dean Nicholas Lemmann.

Gracias Quim for your life example!

Read our article on the 2010 Maria Moors Cabot Prize ceremony here

More about Joaquim Ibarz:

His Cabot prize acceptance speech (in English)

La Vanguardia tribute

La Vanguardia obit

Diario El Alto Aragón obit

Recap: Freelancing Advice from the Cabot Prize Panel

By Camilo H. Smith

 

Four  award-winning journalists working in Latin America joined Maria Moors Cabot Prize director Joshua Friedman in October for a panel discussion on the challenges of working as an independent journalist. The event was moderated by Sandro Mairata (J ´11).  The panelists offered advice on thriving as a U.S.  journalist abroad and the economic challenges such a venture entails. Accounts of covering government corruption, censorship and violence filled  the discussion.  These topics make up much of the work of the Cabot award winners on the panel, which included Norman Gall, Tyler Bridges (above), Joaquim Ibarz and Carlos Fernando Chamorro.The idea of sacrificing for your craft was repeated during the panel, especially from expat journalists such as Bridges and Gall. It’s a challenge that´s shaped by every reporter´s own path, said Bridges.

With so many mainstream publications cutting back their Latin America coverage, the time is ripe for freelancers to make a go at it alone. ¨What you want to try to do is have some regular gigs, so that the Miami Herald or New York Times might call you.,¨ Bridges said.