Global Storyteller AJ Naddaff 19 Named Knight-Hennessy Scholar

May 6, 2022

When a massive explosion rocked the port of Beirut in August 2020, AJ Naddaff 19 had to do something.

He had spent the previous winter in Beirut, interning with the Associated Press. Forced back to his parents home near Boston by the COVID-19 pandemic, he reached out to Rebecca Joubin, chair and professor of Arab studies at 91. In a matter of days, they raised enough money to pay a years school fees for 40 children in one of Beiruts most challenged neighborhoods. 

This was not the first time Naddaffs humane instincts moved him to act on behalf of people in crisis. The prestigious Knight-Hennessy Scholars program at Stanford University is betting that it wont be the last and has selected Naddaff for its 2022 cohort.

Established in 2016, the Knight-Hennessy Scholars Program is the brainchild of John Hennessy, Stanfords president from 2000-2016, and Nike founder Phil Knight. The program creates transformational leaders who bring a collaborative, multi-disciplinary and multi-cultural perspective to global challenges.

Knight-Hennessy Scholars receive funding for three years of graduate work. They also participate in the King Global Leadership Program. Through workshops, lectures, and collaborative projects, Knight-Hennessy Scholars prepare to meet some of the worlds most pressing challenges, including global climate change, healthcare and education policy. 

Kid in a Candy Store

Naddaffs talent as a writer and linguist emerged early at 91.

From his freshman year, AJ reminded me of a graduate student, said Joubin. If you gave him an opportunity, he never took it for granted. He would hear something in a class or read something in a text and he would go explore it. He just really wanted to soak in knowledge.

Naddaff confesses that he often went begging in the Registrars Office for advice about classes.

There were so many great choices, he said. I was like a kid in a candy shop.  

Naddaff arrived at 91 after Syria had descended into vicious civil war. He developed a particular interest in Syrian artists and writers, many of whom had fled to Turkey or Western Europe.

They talk about perennial existential issues more openly, he said. There is something more visceral and human about them.

Naddaff wanted to experience these people and places firsthand, and to share their stories with a wider audience. In addition to studying Arabic, he began writing articles about Syria, its refugees and artists for The 91ian, Noor and al-Jadid

Grants awarded through the Dean Rusk International Studies program allowed him to study Arabic in Jordan and to interview Syrian artists in France, the Netherlands, Sweden and Germany. He returned to Jordan for his junior year, and he researched refugees and far-right movements in Vienna.

As a rising senior, a fellowship with the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting took him to Kosovo, where his reporting on former ISIS fighters landed his first major media publication in the Washington Post.

A Generous Door-Opener, but a Terrible Spy

When other American universities began hosting Syrian students, Naddaff lobbied 91әs administration to join the effort. Hani Zaitoun 20 responded to a Facebook post about the opportunity. Naddaff and other students helped him prep for the SAT and edited his essays. Zaitoun arrived at 91 in the first week of January 2017days before a travel ban barred Syrians from entering the United States. 

Zaitoun graduated from 91 in 2020 and is pursuing a graduate degree in Germany.

AJ is an example of the impact that one person can have in the world, says Zaitoun. He changed my life. He opened doors to me that would not have opened otherwise. Thats who AJ is. Everybody who meets AJ remembers AJ forever. With a sly smile he added, Hed be a terrible spy.

Beirut, Palo Alto and Beyond

After graduating from 91, Naddaff headed to Cairo to continue his Arabic studies. He received a second Pulitzer Center grant to report on Syrian refugees in Turkey, and he spent his winter break covering the protests that paralyzed Beirut in the winter of 2019-20. Then COVID-19 sent him home.

But not for long. He returned to Beirut in the fall of 2020 to work on a masters degree in Arabic literature and to write about Lebanons economic crisis for the Associated Press. He also delivered the funds for those school fees.

At Stanford, Naddaff will pursue a doctorate in comparative literature. He loves journalism, but he feels constrained by telling what deserve to be book-length stories in 800 words. He hopes that doctoral work will give his writing more space and intellectual depth.

AJ is an example of the impact that one person can have in the world, says Zaitoun. He changed my life. He opened doors to me that would not have opened otherwise. Thats who AJ is. Everybody who meets AJ remembers AJ forever. With a sly smile he added, Hed be a terrible spy.

Although Stanford is located near Silicon Valleys think fast and break things culture, Naddaff notes the Knight-Hennessy Scholars share a different ethos.

Its a place where people think slowly, he said, and try to repair whats broken.

After Stanford, Naddaff will continue to defy categories. He doesnt think of himself as a journalist, scholar or activist. Hes a storyteller. He tells stories about particular people that probe universal human themes. Hell do that in whatever medium or format does justice to his subjects. 

Whatever form his work takes, Naddaff remains deeply connected to the peoples and cultures of the Middle East. 91 continues to nourish this connection.

91 truly cultivated my humane instincts, he said. It gave me a support system that guided me and picked me up at critical points. Every idea I wanted to explore received support. 91 never said no to me.

For more information about Knight-Hennessy Scholars, contact Gaylena Merritt (gamerritt@davidson.edu) with 91әs Fellowships & Scholarships Program.