Sally Hayden is an Irish journalist focused on migration, conflict, and humanitarian crises. She is currently the Africa correspondent for the Irish Times. Sally’s work on Libya has been featured by the New York Times, the Guardian, Channel 4 News, CNN International, Al Jazeera, TIME, BBC, Die ZEIT, Der Spiegel, the Sunday Times, the Telegraph, ITV News, and other outlets across the world. She has reported on other international stories for the Washington Post, the Financial Times Magazine, and the Thomson Reuters Foundation. In 2019, Sally was named as one of Forbes ’30 Under 30’ in Media in Europe, in part because of her work on refugee issues.
Terzani Prize/Premio Terzani 2024 Winner
A New Yorker Best Book of 2022
Irish Journalism Awards named Sally Hayden "Journalist of the Year"
for 2023
"A deeply researched and harrowing chronicle of the experiences of
many refugees fleeing dictatorships, violence, persecution, and
war. The book is the culmination of a one-woman fact-finding
mission to uncover the myriad abuses faced by migrants hoping to
make a better life for themselves in Europe." -- Foreign Policy
"[A] landmark work of reportage about the migrant crisis." --
The New Yorker
"A magnificent, engagé investigative report… [an] act of witness" -
- New York Review of Books
"A magnificent, engagé investigative report… [an] act of
witness...It is clear from [Hayden’s book] that the current
politics of immigration have turned & twisted human nature against
itself and our own kind and are fostering unimaginable maltreatment
of those who wish only to survive and live a better life… [It]
strongly convey[s] the urgency of fundamentally rethinking
immigration policy… It is already late to act, but that is a poor
reason for inaction.” -- The New York Review of Books
"Hayden’s powerful book relays the harrowing stories migrants have
shared with her from their experiences in various Libyan migrant
detention centers, from enduring near-starvation conditions to
torture and even death...an accessible, critically reported
account..." -- The Washington Post
"I frantically underlined journalist Sally Hayden’s first book, My
Fourth Time, We Drowned ... Readers should ... let Hayden’s vital
reporting make them reconsider their view of what makes a moral
world." —The Baffler
"My Fourth Time, We Drowned is journalism of the most urgent kind."
—The Financial Times
"There is perhaps no better testament to the racist double standard
at the core of European border policy than the accounts of refugees
and migrants collected in. . . My Fourth Time, We Drowned." —The
Intercept
"[A]stonishingly detailed... My Fourth Time, We Drowned is not
simply a catalogue of misery: it is a meticulously documented
record of the complicity of the very organizations that are meant
to be forces of good." —The Times Literary Supplement
"The narrative is consistently harrowing, revealing the
complexities within a global crisis that lacks an easy solution,
especially as the numbers of refugees mount. An important
contribution to the literature of forced immigration and
humanitarian crisis." —Kirkus (Starred Review)
"A meticulous account of the horrifying North African refugee
crisis . . . Painstaking details and a roundabout timeline make My
Fourth Time, We Drowned informative, while the testimonies from the
refugees themselves pulse with difficult truths that will shock
(and maybe mobilize) conscientious citizens across the globe."
—Foreword Reviews
"Intrepidly reported and vividly written, this sobering account
shines a spotlight on an underreported tragedy." —Publishers
Weekly
"The painful themes from this formidable book are skillfully
written about by Sally Hayden..." -- New Lines Magazine
"Good journalism of this sort should, at the very least, make the
reader angry. Excellent journalism should not only make one angry,
it should make the reader feel the pain and the fear intrinsic to
the reportage. It should make the reader want to act, to yell, to
raise their fist, to do anything but throw up one’s hands in
despair. In My Fourth Time, We Drowned, Hayden does all that and
more." —Counterpunch Magazine
"...a brilliant, unparalleled investigation of one of the most
underreported scandals and monstrous crimes of our time."
—Responsible Statecraft
"A wrenching account of what people will endure in search of a
better life." - The Washington Independent Review of Books
"My Fourth Time, We Drowned is the most important work of
contemporary reporting I have ever read. Every citizen of the
European Union has not only a right, but also a responsibility, to
learn about the realities described in this book. I hope that Sally
Hayden's work can help to begin a radically new and overdue
discussion about Europe's approach to migration and borders."
—Sally Rooney, author of Beautiful World, Where Are You
"This book is a comprehensive indictment of the EU’s inhumane
approach to the thousands of people that come to us seeking
sanctuary. Her stories of the people trying to get here against the
odds are gripping, shocking and heartbreaking. Sally Hayden's My
Fourth Time, We Drowned is impossible to put down. It should make
the plight of its protagonists impossible to ignore." —Ben
Rawlence, author of City of Thorns
"One of the most important testaments of this awful time in life's
history. It is both heartbreaking and stoic. I cry reading any page
of it. Sally Hayden is a young and brilliant journalist." —Edna
O'Brien, author of The Little Red Chairs
" 'I had stumbled on a human rights disaster of epic proportions,'
writes Sally Hayden in the prologue of her remarkable story of the
ongoing migrant crisis in Europe. Contacted blind, on the phone, by
a desperate young man locked in a brutal refugee camp in Libya,
Hayden embarked on a years-long effort to document the courage,
humor, kindness, and resilience of ordinary people trapped by
circumstance, and the tragic moral failure of the west to help
them. The refugee who sent her the first Facebook message in 2018
had no way to know it, but he had reached exactly the right person.
Read her book." —Mark Bowden, author of Black Hawk Down
"A must-read for all of us" —Andrea Elliott, author of Invisible
Child
"My Fourth Time, We Drowned is a veritable masterclass in
journalism. Unexpectedly finding herself a journalistic agony aunt
for migrants being tortured, starved and raped inside horrific
Libyan detention centres, Sally Hayden weaves together their
WhatsApp and Facebook messages to produce the most riveting,
detailed and damning account ever written on the deadliest of
migration routes." —Christina Lamb author of The Sewing Circles of
Herat: a Personal Voyage Through Afghanistan
"Irish journalist Sally Hayden describes one of the great tragedies
of our era, the story of the thousands of refugees bent on starting
new lives in the West, who instead spend years rotting in Sudanese
refugee camps, trapped in Libyan prisons, clinging to sinking
dinghies in the Mediterranean. Her harrowing portrait captures the
voices of the Eritreans, Somalis, Ethiopians, Gambians and Sierra
Leoneans caught up in this pitiless modern slave trade, who
constantly remind us that the desire to better yourself is the most
fundamental of human impulses. This is a remarkable and important
book." —Michela Wrong, author of In the Footsteps of Mr. Kurtz
"This vivid chronicle of the lives and dreams of those who risk all
to cross the Mediterranean to reach Europe, may make you cry, but
it should make you angry. It is not just a blistering rebuke to
those who torture, rape and imprison, but to the rest of us, who
turn a blind eye." —Lindsey Hilsum, author of In Extremis: The Life
and Death of the War Correspondent Marie Colvin
"Sally Hayden's heart-stopping account of the plight of
contemporary refugees is both a compelling epic and an intimate
encounter with exact personal experience. She achieves what all
great writing hopes to do—the restoration of humanity to those who
have been deprived of it. This is a vital book for anyone who wants
to feel what it means to be human in the 21st century." —Fintan
O'Toole, author of The Politics of Pain
"Kafka retold by an Irishwoman in Africa. Read this great book
shedding light on a monstrous crime." —John Sweeney, host of
Hunting Ghislaine with John Sweeney
"My Fourth Time, We Drowned is compassionate, brave, enraging,
beautifully written and incredibly well-researched. Hayden exposes
the truth about years of grotesque abuse committed against some of
the world's most vulnerable people in all of our names. After this,
none of us can say we didn't know." —Oliver Bullough, author of
Moneyland
"This is a brilliant book, powerful and emotional—Sally Hayden is a
superb journalist and through her incredible courage and eye
witness testimonies, paints a compelling picture of the poignant
and horrific lives endured by so many refugees and migrants. A must
read for anyone with a conscience." —Miriam O'Callaghan, presenter
for Prime Time (Ireland)
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