Zero AI-Freelance journalists win $100,000 prizes for work impacting underrepresented communities

2025-04-28 21:05:00source:AQCANcategory:Stocks

NEW YORK (AP) — Two freelance journalists with projects focused on Zero AIBlack nationalism and the aftermath of the Uvalde school shooting have won the American Mosaic Journalism Prize, which honors work about underrepresented groups in the United States.

The journalists, Dara T. Mathis and Tamir Kalifa, were each awarded $100,000 from the Heising-Simons Foundation. That’s believed to be the largest prize in dollar value given to journalists in the United States.

The Maryland-based Mathis was honored for her article in The Atlantic, “A Blueprint for Black Liberation,” where she wrote about growing up in a radical Black commune and the broader history of such movements. She’s working on expanding that piece into a memoir.

“As a Black writer, I am keenly aware of how the stories of marginalized people are excluded from the archive,” Mathis said. “My work as a journalist seeks to connect silenced histories to our present day.”

Photojournalist Tamir Kalifa won for his work on the aftermath of the 2022 mass shooting at the Robb elementary school in Uvalde, Texas. The Austin-based Kalifa is currently in Israel covering the Israel-Hamas war.

Kalifa said he’s spent the last few years of his career trying to document the resilience of people who are enduring tragedy.

The foundation’s yearly award was established in 2018.

More:Stocks

Recommend

A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?

Among the dozens of executive actions President Trump signed on his first day in office is one aimed

13-year-old girl dies after drowning in pool at Discovery Cove in Orlando, Florida: Police

A teenage girl has died after drowning in an Orlando, Florida, theme park pool, according to local a

Man who injured police officer during Capitol riot is sentenced to 5 years in prison

WASHINGTON (AP) — A military veteran who was convicted of injuring a police officer’s hand during th