Louisa B. Waugh

Louisa B. Waugh is a British author and humanitarian known for her extensive travels and deep involvement in conflict resolution and human rights. She has authored several impactful books and spent significant time working with displaced communities across various global hotspots.

Louisa's adventurous spirit was evident from a young age, drawn to the unexplored territories marked in her school's atlas. In the mid-90s, she impulsively moved from London to Mongolia to begin her professional career. There, Waugh embraced the harsh climates and unique cultures, working as a freelance BBC radio correspondent in Ulaanbaatar.

Louisa Waugh spent almost three years in Mongolia, living in a yurt in a remote village in the Mongolian mountains. This experience formed the basis of her first book, Hearing Birds Fly, which won the inaugural Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prize in 2004.

Using her prize money, Louisa researched Selling Olga (2006), exploring human trafficking across Europe. While based in Edinburgh, she also worked as an outreach worker for mental health and contributed to a Rape Crisis Centre.

Her next significant move was to the Palestinian territories at the suggestion of Palestinian writer Raja Shehadeh. In Gaza, she worked with a Palestinian human rights organization. In 2013, Waugh wrote Meet Me in Gaza, an account of day-to-day life in Gaza and the region's historical turbulence.

Post-Gaza, Louisa returned to Scotland, seeking peace and solitude. However, her commitment to humanitarian causes soon led her to the Central African Republic (CAR) amidst political upheaval. She spent six months in Bangui, investigating the humanitarian crisis following a coup by the Seleka militant alliance.

For two years, Louisa Waugh managed a national peace-building project in Mali. She gained a deeper understanding of local culture and supported Timbuktu communities in Bamako. Then, she volunteered in Samos, Greece, helping refugees in dire conditions, which she found profoundly impactful compared to the responses of larger organizations.

Louisa B. Waugh has worked in Senegal and returned to the UK, where she now serves as a conflict advisor. Based in Brighton, she continues to write and share her experiences through her blog.

Photo credit: X @WaughLouisa

Quotes

Alisa Kalyuzhnahas quotedyesterday
Shortly before I left the West Bank, a friend of a friend, originally from Gaza, gave me some advice. ‘Worry about your own safety, but not too much – there’s no point,’ he said. ‘Just keep your eyes open, don’t do anything really stupid – and laugh as much as you can.’
Alisa Kalyuzhnahas quotedyesterday
the night’s twice as dark –
its double darkness
is up to no good
Alisa Kalyuzhnahas quotedyesterday
Despite its blighted history of being invaded and occupied over and again, there have been golden times too, when Gaza flourished and everything seemed possible. Perched at the edge of the eastern Sinai, the ancient crossroads between North Africa, the Middle East and Mediterranean Europe, Gaza was a lodestar of the medieval spice trade, once the most lucrative business on earth. For at least ten centuries Arabian merchants crossed the Rub’ al-Khali, the fabled ‘Empty Quarter’, with fragrant cargoes of frankincense, myrrh and other spices, bound for the port of Gaza.

Impressions

lamyaalfaifyshared an impression2 months ago
👍Worth reading

Such an amazing underrated book. Definitely one of my favourites.

  • Louisa B. Waugh
    Meet Me in Gaza
    • 48
    • 7
    • 4
    Books
  • Inn Chashared an impression25 days ago
    👍Worth reading

  • Louisa B. Waugh
    Meet Me in Gaza
    • 48
    • 7
    • 4
    Books
  • hizbullahmoslimshared an impression2 months ago
    👍Worth reading

  • Louisa B. Waugh
    Meet Me in Gaza
    • 48
    • 7
    • 4
    Books
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