11/08/2025
Aishah Hasnie was born into a tapestry of tradition and tenacity—her parents' quiet dreams of opportunity carrying her across oceans to a Canadian winter where she traded mango orchards for snowy schoolyards in Ontario. A journalism fire ignited at Queen's University, fueling stints at local news desks before the Fox News siren called her to Washington in 2008, where she honed a reporter's edge covering Capitol corridors and global flashpoints with the precision of a calligrapher's brush. From anchoring weekend editions with unflinching poise to embedding in war zones that tested her mettle, Hasnie's voice cuts through the static—questioning power with a gaze that misses nothing, her hijab a crown of conviction amid the network's glare. Off-air, she wanders Virginia trails with her rescue labrador, brews cardamom chai strong enough to wake the dawn, and journals midnight reflections on faith and fairness, her life a steady compass proving that the sharpest stories are the ones we chase not for headlines, but for the light they cast on hidden truths.