One year after Haroon Zarify was stuck in Kabul after Afghan forces fell to the Taliban within days of U.S. troops' withdrawal, he is still trying to help many of his family members left behind.
Tom Gougeon and Lindy Eichenbaum Lent
It is one of the great paradoxes of our time. Never in the history of the world have people had more access to information. At the same time, never has there been more uncertainty and less trust in the information available. Yet in a sea of spin, misinformation and outright manipulation, people still seek trust and find empathy in their neighbors.
That is why local journalists – including those who work for this outlet – matter now more than ever. Through the isolation of 2020, they have provided a vital service to Colorado communities by keeping us connected and informed. Local journalists are our neighbors who risked their own lives to put faces and voices and stories to the thousands of Coloradans lost to COVID. They have held a mirror to our communities through a new season of racial protest that has challenged powerful institutions – including the media itself – to address systemic racism. They have asked tough questions of those r