Nicholas Kristof, Blog, Net worth, Wife, Age

Nicholas Kristof
Nicholas Kristof

Nicholas Kristof Biography| Wiki

Nicholas Kristof is a political pundit and journalist from the United States. He has won two Pulitzer Prizes and writes op-ed columns for The New York Times and CNN, respectively. He was raised on a family sheep farm and cherry orchard in Yamhill, Oregon, after being born in Chicago, Illinois.

Nicholas Kristof parents

His parents are longtime Portland State University professors Jane Kristof (McWilliams) and Ladis “Kris” Kristof (born Wadoslaw Krzysztofowicz).

How Old is Nicholas Kristof?

Nicholas Donabet Kristof is an American journalist and political commentator who was born on April 27, 1959.  Therefore he is 63years old as of 2022. Kristof is a frequent contributor to CNN and a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner. From 2001 to 2021, he also penned an opinion piece for The New York Times.

Nicholas Kristof Nationality

Nicholas Donabet Kristof is an American journalist and political commentator. He was born and raised in Chicago,Illinois, United States of America.

What did Bill Clinton say about Nicholas Kristof

During “Bill Clinton, Clinton Global Initiative 2009 Annual Meeting plenary session on building human capital, September 24, 2009” Clinton said ,

“There is no one in journalism, anywhere in the United States at least, who has done anything like the work he has done to figure out how poor people are actually living around the world, and what their potential is. So every American citizen who cares about this should be profoundly grateful that someone in our press establishment cares enough about this to haul himself all around the world to figure out what’s going on. … I am personally in his debt, as are we all.”

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Education

Where did Nicholas Kristof Study

While at Yamhill Carlton High School, he served as student body president and editor of the school newspaper. Kristof earned his diploma at Yamhill Carlton High school. Later, he graduated from Harvard College’s Phi Beta Kappa honors program.

He majored in government at Harvard, where he also worked on the Harvard Crimson newspaper and served as an intern at Portland’s The Oregonian. Alumni remember Kristof as one of the smartest undergraduates on campus, according to his profile.

Nicholas at Harvard

Following Harvard, he received a Rhodes Scholarship to study law at Magdalen College in Oxford. He received academic honors and first-class honors for his legal degree. For the school year 1983–1984, he attended The American University in Cairo to study Arabic. He has received several honorary doctorates.

Achievements

The 2009 Lifetime Achievement Award for the Dayton Literary Peace Prize was given to Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn. The 2009 World of Children Lifetime Achievement Award was also given to them jointly. In addition, he received the 2013 Advancing Global Health Award, the 2007 Fred Cuny Award for Preventing Deadly Conflict, and the 2008 Anne Frank Award (from Seattle Biomed).

The Harvard University Goldsmith Award for Career Excellence in Journalism was given to Kristof in 2013.

For their film, “Heartache in the Hot Zone: The Front Line Against Covid-19,” Kristof and The New York Times opinion video team received an Emmy award from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences in 2021.

The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center awarded Kristof an International Freedom Conductor that same year, partly in recognition of his efforts to expose human trafficking and connect it to contemporary slavery. The Dalai Lama was the last person named to hold the title, two years prior.

Anthrax attacks columns

Times reporter Judith Miller was one of several people who allegedly fell victim to anthrax infections on October 12, 2001. Ten days earlier, on October 2, Miller and two other Times employees had co-authored the book Germs: Biological Weapons and America’s Secret War. A few weeks later, it topped the New York Times bestseller list. Its cover image showed a white envelope resembling those used in anthrax attacks. Before the September 11 attacks, the text made mention to Islamic terrorists.

You can find Nicholas on his Twitter account

Grand bargain on Iranian war.

The “grand bargain,” an Iranian proposal to normalize relations with the US, put in place procedures to reassure the US that it won’t develop nuclear weapons, deny financial support to Palestinian resistance groups until they agree to stop attacking civilians, support the Arab Peace Initiative, and ensure complete transparency to allay any United States concerns, was criticized in several articles by Kristof.

Iran wanted in return the lifting of sanctions as well as a US declaration that Iran is not a member of the so-called “Axis of Evil.” In his columns, Kristof made the proposal’s details public. He claimed that the Bush administration’s hardliners crushed the “grand bargain” proposal.

Education Reforms

In his article on education reforms, he wrote in The New York Times, regarding the same.

Kristof stated that he supports school reform more than teachers’ unions in a 2021 New York Times essay. He would prefer that unions advocate for higher pay more so than job security for ineffective teachers. He asserts that unions may persuade educators to accept meager pay in exchange for job stability.

Nicholas Kristof wife

Nicholas is married to his lovely wife Sheryl WuDunn. His wife is a banker and a media personality as well. The couple won The 2009 Lifetime Achievement Award for the Dayton Literary Peace Prize.

Nicholas Kristof’s Net worth

According to Wikipedia, Kristof has accumulated his wealth from blogging and media work. His Net worth is estimated at $5million.