听
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听
听
Filming the Frontlines: Jordan Campbell鈥檚 Journey Into Ukraine
Journalist, photographer and filmmaker听Jordan Campbell听(Comm鈥91) is no stranger to the harshness of international conflict. He has reported from South Sudan, Libya and Iraq for publications like听National Geographic and听Men's Journal. He also founded Ramro Global, a film production company that documents the work of global health and humanitarian initiatives.
But his latest project, an upcoming documentary titled听, is a personal labor 鈥 the origins and experiences of which are unlike anything he鈥檚 ever undertaken.
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International storytelling
After graduating from CU, Campbell started working with outdoor company Marmot as a communications director. Always one to seek out new and interesting perspectives, he befriended a few of the company鈥檚 international representatives, becoming close to his Ukrainian colleagues Iryna Karagan and Pavlo Vasianoych.
Over the course of the next decade, Campbell found himself drawn to bigger stories, fueled by his university training in storytelling, geopolitics and political science. His career segued into global journalism and film.
Still, he remained friends with Karagan and Vasianoych. And when Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, he quickly reached out to Karagan. Concerned, he asked if she would flee. Karagan鈥檚 answer was resolved: Not only was she staying put, she was staying 鈥渢o defend our country.鈥
Her determination highlighted what Campbell saw as 鈥渢he most incredible injustice, a David and Goliath story 鈥 of resistance, resilience and the quest for freedom, democracy and European integration.鈥
Documenting conflict
A month later, Campbell crossed the Polish border heading to Kiev, his camera in tow and post-apocalyptic sirens blaring. 鈥淚t was a ghost town,鈥 he remembered. In areas near Bucha that Ukrainian soldiers had just liberated from Russia, he saw evidence of violence alongside the burnt remains of tanks, buildings and cars.听听听
He returned again that summer and embedded at a military hospital in Pokrovsk, a grisly scene of battered and injured soldiers. 鈥淚t was a life-changing event,鈥 he said. Campbell decided that the footage he shot would become part of a film,听Ukraine Under Fire, that documents Russia鈥檚 invasion and Ukraine鈥檚 resilience, and includes Karagan and Vasianoych as subjects.
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Between visits, Campbell spoke up about what he had seen. At the U.S. Senate Building, he presented before an audience of global politicians during the Parliamentary Intelligence Security Forum, speaking about Russia鈥檚 use of cluster bombs on civilian targets and what he believed was evidence of war crimes and genocide.
鈥淲hat he鈥檚 doing by humanizing the conflict encourages people to take an interest and support the cause of the Ukrainian people,鈥 said Dan Martinez, a retired Foreign Service Officer and Ramro Global advisory board member who facilitated Campbell鈥檚 participation.
Despite the inherent risks, Campbell continued to return to Ukraine, mitigating the dangers by following a few simple rules: 鈥淢ake the best decisions you can possibly make, given where you are and who you're with,鈥 and, 鈥淧ick the people you're going to be with very carefully.鈥
One such person he shadowed was Peter Fouch茅, a South African combat medic. During a frigid morning in early 2023, the two men patrolled a quiet听hamlet near the front line, peering up at the sky for incoming drones. Fouch茅, burly and hardened, a Rambo-like figure cradling an AK-47, emerged from the broken shell of a little stone house. Then, he broke into tears.听
鈥淭he West will be remembered for what they have done or have not done in this war,鈥 Fouch茅 said, staring directly into Campbell鈥檚 lens.
Capturing reality
The summer of 2023 was Campbell鈥檚 fifth visit to Ukraine 鈥 one he now describes as 鈥渄isastrous.鈥 He was with Fouch茅 at the time, and their nerves were shot from exhaustion, PTSD and a relentless, soggy heat. He didn鈥檛 know it, but it would be the last time he鈥檇 see his friend.
As Campbell made plans to return, to embed with Fouch茅 and his Ukrainian colleague Tatyana Millard, he learned that the two were killed near the frontlines. The duo were evacuating injured soldiers from the combat zone 鈥渓ike a superhero team,鈥 Campbell said.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 Peter鈥檚 essence right there,鈥 Campbell remarked weeks after Fouch茅鈥檚 death, while reflecting on the footage he captured of the heroic medic and his piercing statement about the West鈥檚 role in the war. 鈥淭hat's the power of documentary film. It's that close.鈥
Campbell鈥檚 documentary,听, is set to release in December 2024.
Photos courtesy Oleg Avilov