Verónica Zaragovia is a reporter on state government for KUT.
Verónica Zaragovia is a reporter who seeks immigration, politics and culture stories around the globe. She's based in Berlin, Germany and is a Robert Bosch Foundation fellow and Pulitzer Center grantee. Her favorite program to report for — and listen to — is PRI's The World.
When Uwe Dahlke went to his first Union game 46 years ago, today’s Germany did not exist. Union and Hertha were two teams in divided parts of what was once one Berlin.
Ten years after Kosovo declared its independence from Serbia, Serbs and Albanians in Kosovo remain deeply divided — even over food.
Killeen, Texas has become a kind of Korean food capital, thanks to the many Korean-Americans who have settled there. It has a lot to do with the US Army base there.
A Latino family in Texas gives thanks by sharing a Mexican-style tamale feast with the employees of the company they've built from the ground up.
Because the word's origins are murky, it's difficult to know just how insulting calling someone a "coonass" used to be. Today, some Cajuns view the word as an ethnic slur, while others have embraced it as a badge of honor.