Teen Returns From Iraq Expedition
16-Year-Old Student Returns To Florida, Family
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Play CBS Video Video Florida Teen Is Home From Iraq Michael Weber reports on the return of 16-year-old Farris Hassan after his astonishing trip to Iraq and the ongoing insurgent violence in the country that the teen left behind.
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Video Farris Returns From Iraq CBS News RAW: Farris Hassan, the Florida teenager, who traveled to Iraq on a journalistic field trip during Christmas break, returned to Miami, Florida.
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Video Going Home For The New Year Florida's Farris Hassan is on his way home after a dangerous adventure. CBS News' Jim Acosta reports the teen decided to travel to Iraq without even knowing the country's language.
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Farris Hassan, 16, sits in the car that picked him up at the Miami International Airport Sunday, Jan. 1, 2006, giving the thumbs up after arriving back in Florida after taking a journey to Iraq. (AP)
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Shatha Atiya displays photos, of her 16-year-old son, Farris Hassan, who traveled to Iraq during the Christmas holidays, in her Fort Lauderdale, Fla. home Friday, Dec. 30, 2005. (AP)
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Farris Hassan, in Baghdad, Wednesday Dec. 28, 2005. (AP)
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Farris Hassan was surrounded by family members as he walked to a car waiting outside Miami International Airport Sunday evening. He waved and smiled at reporters.
The teenager had cut school and left the United States on Dec. 11, traveling to Kuwait, where he thought he could take a taxi into Baghdad to witness the Dec. 15 parliamentary elections. The border was closed for the elections, so Farris went to stay with family friends in Lebanon, before flying to Baghdad on Christmas.
He contacted The Associated Press bureau in Baghdad on Tuesday and related his story.
His goal, he said, was to better understand what the Iraqis are living through. The prep school junior had recently studied immersion journalism, in which the writer lives the life of his subject.
"I thought I'd go the extra mile for that, or rather, a few thousand miles," he told the AP last week.
He was able to secure an entry visa for Iraq because both of his parents were born there, though they've been in the United States for more than three decades. He took his U.S. passport and $1,800 in cash, but didn't tell his family what he was doing until he arrived in Kuwait and sent them an e-mail.
Farris' long journey home began Friday, when he was put on a military flight from Baghdad to Kuwait, his father said. He spent a day and a half under the watch of the 101st Airborne, the same division that had picked him up from a Baghdad hotel.
A U.S. official then accompanied the teen on a flight from Kuwait to Europe, and from there he flew home to the United States, said his father, Dr. Redha Hassan.
The State Department has warned Americans not to visit Iraq. Forty U.S. citizens have been kidnapped since the war started in March 2003, and 10 of them have been killed, U.S. officials say. About 15 are missing.
Now that he's back, Farris has some answering to do. Officials at Pine Crest School, the academy he attends in Fort Lauderdale, have asked for a meeting with his parents before he is allowed to return to class.
His mother, Shatha Atiya, when asked what would happen when Farris got home, said: "When he first gets off the plane, I'm going to hug him. Then I'm going to collapse for a few hours, and then we're going to sit down for a long discussion about the consequences."
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