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Milena Jesenská Fellows 2006 - 2009

    2005-2006

    WildmanSarah Wildman
    Senior Correspondent for American Prospect, Washington DC
    Abroad at Home: Muslims and Jews in Modern Europe



    2006-2007

    DeneshaJulie Denesha
    Photojournalist, Alexandria, VA
    Outcasts: The Roma of Slovakia


    StarrAleksandra Starr
    NPR correspondent, contributor to Slate, New York, NY
    Reconfiguring European Identity: Immigration in Austria, Ireland, and Spain

    ToumaniMeline Toumani
    Freelance journalist, contributor to The New York Times, The Nation, Salon.com, n+1, and more, New York, NY
    Reform and Backlash in Turkey, and the Role of the European Union

    2007-2008

    HavenCynthia Haven
    Freelance literary and cultural journalist, Palo Alto, CA
    Poland's Literary Legacy - the 20th Century and Beyond

    TreiLisa Trei
    Public Affairs Manager, Stanford's Center for International Security and Cooperation
    David versus Goliath: Estonia faces Russia as it marks 90 Years of Statehood and Survival



    2008-2009

    AhearnAshley Ahearn
    Producer / reporter, Public Radio International, Somerville, MA
    The European Greenbelt: From Iron Curtain to Green Corridor

    RichertCatharine Richert
    Reporter, Congressional Quarterly, Washington, DC
    When it Comes to Biofuels, the European Union is Going through some Growing Pains

    RomanoCarlin Romano
    Literary Critic, The Philadelphia Inquirer; Critic-at-Large, The Chronicle of Higher Education; Lecturer of Media Theory and Philosophy, University of Pennsylvania;
    European Intellectuals and Anti-Americanism




    MilenaMilena Jesenská (1896-1944) was an outstanding journalist and mediator between the Czech and the German cultures in Bohemia as well as an astute political commentator. She was detained in the Nazi concentration camp in Ravensbrück for her political involvement and resistance, where she died in 1944. She is widely known for her famous correspondence with Franz Kafka.