the power of photography…

May 11th, 2010 § 0

ive seen this image a hun­dred times and each time thought injus­tice. its inter­est­ing though to learn the story behind it.

(listverse.com) The photo above was taken in 1968 and is one of the most famous images of the 20th cen­tury. The pic­ture was taken by pho­tog­ra­pher Eddie Adams and won the Pulitzer Prize. It is also included in the 15 Incred­i­ble His­tor­i­cal Pho­tographs list. Many have seen this pho­to­graph but most are not aware of the full story behind it. The man on the left shown exe­cut­ing a pris­oner is South Viet­namese national police com­man­der, Gen­eral Lone. Before the exe­cu­tion it was reported that the pris­oner had been the cap­tain of a ter­ror­ist squad that killed the fam­ily of one of his deputy com­man­ders. After shoot­ing the pris­oner, the gen­eral walked over to a reporter and said, “These guys kill a lot of our peo­ple, and I think Bud­dha will for­give me.” When the photo was shown on tele­vi­sion and appeared on the front pages of news­pa­pers around the world, it was seen as an act of sav­agery and sym­bol­ized an unjus­ti­fied war. Three months after the photo was taken, Gen­eral Loan was severely wounded and taken to Aus­tralia for treat­ment. There was such an out­cry against him that he was moved to Wal­ter Reed Army Med­ical Cen­ter in Wash­ing­ton DC. Dur­ing the fall of Saigon in 1975 he asked for Amer­i­can help in flee­ing with his fam­ily but was ignored and had to escape with his fam­ily in a South Viet­namese plane. Gen. Loan, whose right leg had been ampu­tated, set­tled in north­ern Vir­ginia, where he even­tu­ally opened a pizze­ria restau­rant. Loan was then forced into retire­ment when his iden­tity was pub­licly dis­closed. Eddie Adams (the pho­tog­ra­pher) stayed in touch and recalled that on his last visit to the pizza shop, he had seen writ­ten on a restroom wall “We know who you are, fucker.”

Inter­est­ing Fact: Eddie Adams said this in a Time mag­a­zine inter­view: “The gen­eral killed the Viet Cong; I killed the gen­eral with my cam­era. Still pho­tographs are the most pow­er­ful weapon in the world. Peo­ple believe them, but pho­tographs do lie, even with­out manip­u­la­tion. They are only half-truths. What the pho­to­graph didn’t say was, ‘What would you do if you were the gen­eral at that time and place on that hot day, and you caught the so-called bad guy after he blew away one, two or three Amer­i­can sol­diers?’” When Gen­eral Loan died of can­cer in 1998, Adams praised him and sent flow­ers with a card that read, “I’m sorry. There are tears in my eyes.”

http://listverse.com/2010/03/31/top-10-careers-damaged-by-photographs/

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