Jahan De Bellaigue File
De Bellaigue's journalism is characterized by its . He frequently writes for New Lines Magazine , where his reporting spans several critical areas:
, a freelance journalist whose reporting from and Aleppo has provided a window into the complex social and political shifts of the Middle East. A New Chapter in a Storied Legacy jahan de bellaigue
Jahan shares this intellectual lineage with his brother Christopher, a well-known author on Middle Eastern affairs ( Patriot of Persia , The Lion House ). While Christopher tells the stories of empires from the outside, Jahan edits the stories of modern governance from the inside. Together, they represent two sides of the same coin: storytelling and analysis. De Bellaigue's journalism is characterized by its
Currently based in , de Bellaigue divides his time between Lebanon and Syria. His recent work is characterized by "first-person" reportage that documents the human cost of conflict: While Christopher tells the stories of empires from
Today, de Bellaigue writes and speaks on themes of belief, belonging, and the moral imagination. He is the author of The Invisible Institution? , a study of the British monarchy’s spiritual role, and a sought-after reviewer of works by Proust, Bernanos, and contemporary Catholic thinkers.