Politics

When all you can do is tweet for your friend's return

My friend, reporter Dorothy Parvaz, is one of the best journalists and one of the finest people I know ... and she went missing in Syria.

When all you can do is tweet for your friend's return
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by

Ashli Blow

My  friend, reporter Dorothy Parvaz, is one of the best journalists and  one  of the finest people I know ... and she went missing in Syria.

This article appeared on DigitalLife on Today on Tuesday (May 3), a day before Syria confirmed that it is holding former Seattle journalist Dorothy Parvaz. Reprinted with permission from MSNBC.

My friend Dorothy Parvaz has been missing for five days and ... I don't know what to do.

Dorothy is a journalist — no, not just a journalist, a great journalist — who I had the privilege of working with for years. She went to Syria to cover the turmoil there. And that’s where she vanished last Friday.

Those  who know the situation best say the best hope for bringing Dorothy home  alive is to bring as much attention to bear on her situation as  possible so that her captors (likely the Syrian government)  will know the world is paying attention. But how do you do get the  world to pay attention when the world seems singularly focused on the  death of Osama bin Laden?

In moments like these, many people pray.  And I can understand that desire now better than I have ever before.  When things go sideways, praying means doing something when doing  nothing is too painful to consider.

But I'm not a believer in,  well, much of anything. And prayer has never felt quite right to me. And  yet, oh the irony ... here I am, in a moment of need, with a request  for the universe. I want Dorothy back in her family’s arms, safe and  sound. Please. Please. Please.

And so today I sent my  request to the universe the only way I know how. Today I tweeted my  request. And you know what ... the Twitterverse answered.

My good friend and reporter Dorothy Parvaz is missing in Syria. Please spread the word and help us demand her return: http://bit.ly/jfHCww

The response to that tweet was almost instantaneous ...  and overwhelming — wonderfully, surprisingly overwhelming. People — all  kinds of people, some I knew, many many I didn't — heard my request and carried it forth farther than I ever could have.

They  retweeted and retweeted and retweeted all day long. These people, these  wonderful people! Some tweeted because they knew Dorothy. So very many  tweeted simply because they heard a cry for help and decided to answer.  As a tech reporter, I have long known that this is the wonderful power  of social media ... but today I know and understand this power like  never before.

And today it's been these online places and digital networks that  have been the lifeline for many of us who are waiting ... waiting ...  waiting for news about Dorothy.

On Twitter, someone created the  hashtag #FreeDorothy so that together we can raise our voices ... so  that collectively we’re loud enough that someone with some power  somewhere might hear our plea for her safety.

Meanwhile, seemingly from out of nowhere, a Free Dorothy Parvaz page has sprung up on Facebook. It started with 100 likes this morning and  has now well passed 3,500. And it’s there that those of us who know  Dorothy as well as those who don’t, but care nonetheless, have been able  to exchange the scraps of information that we have and share the few  actions we might take.

It’s here on Facebook (that place I often  loathe but can not help but love today) that people have been able to  send their love and support to Dorothy’s family — her father, her  sisters, her brother, her mother, her fiancé. I know how much she adores  them all. And I can only imagine how worried they must be.

Others  have used personal blogs to spread the word about Dorothy and to remind  the world just what a kick-ass person she is. She touched many in her  various jobs, in Seattle at The Times and The Post-Intelligencer, at  both Harvard and Cambridge University, and at Al Jazeera English, where  she currently writes.

As Curt Milton, who Dorothy and I worked with for years at the P-I, says in his blog: “She’s one of the strongest people I know.” I’d also add, she’s the smartest person I know. And one of the most thoughtful.

But still, Dorothy is missing. And I don’t know what to do.

Or maybe I do.

Tweet. Like. Share. Pray.

Do something. Do anything. Even if it feels like there’s nothing that can be done.

Let  the Syrian government know, let God know, let the whole freakin’ World  Wide Web know that Dorothy Parvaz is missing ... and we love her and we  want her back.

If you read this and you want to help free Dorothy, please:

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal