
Episode 96: Remembering Kim Wall
Explicit content warning
07/27/20 • 46 min
This episode, we’re not talking about how the gifted journalist and traveler Kim Wall died, we’re talking about how she lived. And we’re doing it by talking with journalists Caterina Clerici, Christina Ayele Djossa, and Ingrid Wall—who is also Kim’s mother and author of A Silenced Voice of a new book about her life and work.
This episode opens with the beautiful singing of Aidi Songlong, a musician who sings a traditional Moso music style called ahabhala. Christina Ayele Djossa reported on this remarkable matrilineal ethnic group who live near China's border with Tibet.
Show notes:
A Silenced Voice: The Life of Journalist Kim Wall
Christina Ayele Djossa on Twitter
Kim Wall and Caterina Clerici on Haitian Tourism for Roads & Kingdoms
Kim Wall Memorial Fund at IWMF
Kim Wall Memorial Fund: Donate
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This episode, we’re not talking about how the gifted journalist and traveler Kim Wall died, we’re talking about how she lived. And we’re doing it by talking with journalists Caterina Clerici, Christina Ayele Djossa, and Ingrid Wall—who is also Kim’s mother and author of A Silenced Voice of a new book about her life and work.
This episode opens with the beautiful singing of Aidi Songlong, a musician who sings a traditional Moso music style called ahabhala. Christina Ayele Djossa reported on this remarkable matrilineal ethnic group who live near China's border with Tibet.
Show notes:
A Silenced Voice: The Life of Journalist Kim Wall
Christina Ayele Djossa on Twitter
Kim Wall and Caterina Clerici on Haitian Tourism for Roads & Kingdoms
Kim Wall Memorial Fund at IWMF
Kim Wall Memorial Fund: Donate
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Previous Episode

Episode 95: A New Album in Madrid and Other Good News
As the pandemic grinds on, I find myself unseasonably emotional about newborns and weddings, like some kind of weepy grandpa. Any good thing to latch on to in these twilight year, I guess. I feel that way about my old friend’s new album. Como Vivir en el Campo is a Madrid-based rock trio, and their drummer is Carlos Barros, who has been both friend and family to me over the years. Carlos has introduced me to many things, not least the nearly inexhaustible pleasures of Julio Iglesias’ album Hey. He talked to me from a village in Aragón, Spain about the process of making the album, and about how they were aided by the great global collective subconscious. You’ll see. Also in this episode, a conversation with American artist Aaron Firestein in Bogotá about what the US can learn from Colombia. And I’ll have a bit of good news about The Trip podcast, this very podcast, at the end of the episode.
Show notes:
Como Vivir en el Campo Bandcamp
Where to Invade Next by Michael Moore
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Next Episode

Episode 97: Queens
How do you travel in a world on lockdown? Just start at home. And in this, now, I have a mighty advantage. Because this month, I moved from Manhattan to the Borough of Queens, the most linguistically diverse place on earth. This episode has three would-be guides to this new life: writers Laurie Woolever and Tiffany Langston, along with Astoria souvlaki legend Elpida Vasiliadis.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If you like this episode you’ll love
Episode Comments
Generate a badge
Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode
<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/the-trip-344389/episode-96-remembering-kim-wall-50030752"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to episode 96: remembering kim wall on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>
Copy