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INTRODUCTION • 82 DAYS IN CAPTIVITY
Jill Carroll, a freelance reporter for The Christian Science Monitor, was kidnapped by Sunni Muslim insurgents in Baghdad on Jan. 7, 2006.
Over the next 82 days, she had closer contact with Sunni insurgents than any American who has lived to tell the tale.
She cooked with the women. She played with the children. She was locked away in rooms to the sound of cocking guns.
Deprived of control over the smallest aspect of existence, she feared for her life every day.
Her chief captor required his journalist hostage to "interview" him for hours at a time. He would expound on the insurgent worldview and the ruling council set up by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
In her last hours of captivity this man told her: "Forget about the council. You can't talk about the women or the children. You have to say you were in one room the whole time. Everything is forbidden. You must forget it all."
She couldn't. This is her story.

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'We should have picked up the warning signs [on my kidnapping].'


JILL CARROLL UPDATE BLOG
(updated 05/03/07)
Monitor Editor Richard Bergenheim released a statement Thursday, May 3, on the reported death of one of Jill's suspected kidnappers.
HOSTAGE: The Jill Carroll Story
Introduction
 
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Part 1 • The Kidnapping
 
YOUR VIEWS | Reporting in war zones
How should reporters cover war zones like Iraq?
 
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Part 2 • A Spy With A Homing Device
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Part 3 • The First Hostage Video
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Part 4 • A Mother As Suicide Bomber
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Part 5 • Mujahideen movies
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Part 6 • RECITING KORANIC VERSES
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Part 7 • False hopes
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Part 8 • A new enemy
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Part 9 • The Muj Brothers
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Part 10 • Freedom
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Epilogue • Family reunion
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