Monday, April 19, 2010

Images that changed the world

Some of this pictures are quite disturbing. It permeates the harsh realities of life. Emotionally disturbing. You have been warned.


Man walks on the Moon

In one of the most famous photographs of the 20th Century, Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin walks on the surface of the moon near the leg of the lunar module Eagle. Apollo 11 Commander Neil Armstrong took this photograph with a 70mm lunar surface camera. Armstrong and Aldrin explored the Sea of Tranquility for two and a half hours while crewmate Michael Collins orbited above in the command module Columbia. As the world remembers the thrilling Apollo 11 mission 35 years later, NASA’s newVision calls for a return to the moon, followed by journeys of discovery to Mars and beyond.

 

Police beating of Rodney King

Rodney King has been arrested for spousal abuse DUI, possession of the drug PCP, indecent exposure and speeding. Rodney might best be remembered by the riots in Los Angeles following his beating by several policemen. Rodney King has the unique planetary aspects common to those born in the 1965 era. It would seem logical for the astrology of this particular year in time to show anti social tendencies in ones personality. The sixties was all about rebellion and anti establishment behaviour. Perhaps the aspect Saturn opposite Uranus in that year combined with Mars Pluto as shown in Rodney King’s chart is representative of the ‘abused’ and the ‘perpetrator’ in his situation.


The lynching of young blacks

This is a famous picture, taken in 1930, showing the young black men accused of raping a Caucasian woman and killing her boyfriend, hanged by a mob of 10,000 white men. The mob took them by force from the county jail house. Another black man was left behind and ended up being saved from lynching. Even if lynching photos were designed to boost white supremacy, the tortured bodies and grotesquely happy crowds ended up revolting many.



Dying Soldier Clings to Priest

Puerto Cabello naval base, Venezuela, 4 June 1962. A soldier who has been mortally wounded by a sniper clings onto navy chaplain Luis Padillo. About the image Braving the streets amid sniper fire, to offer last rites to the dying, the priest encountered a wounded soldier, who pulled himself up by clinging to the priest’s cassock, as bullets chewed up the concrete around them. Rondón Lovera, who had to lie flat to avoid getting shot, later said that he was unsure how he managed to take this picture.


Execution of a Viet Cong

This picture was shot by Eddie Adams who won the Pulitzer prize with it. The picture shows Nguyen Ngoc Loan, South Vietnam’s national police chief executing a prisoner who was said to be a Viet Cong captain. Once again the public opinion was turned against the war.

Source: Associated Press

This is a picture of a truck driver who was taken out of his truck and assualted during the LA riots. The LA riots accured after four cops were found innocent after they were video-taped beating Rodney King.
   

Burial of an unknown child

Burial of an unknown child. This unknown child has become the icon of the world’s worst industrial disaster, caused by the US multinational chemical company, Union Carbide.


Man mutilated Rwanda

Rwanda, June 1994. Hutu man mutilated by the Hutu ‘Interahamwe’ militia, who suspected him of sympathizing with the Tutsi rebels. About the image Nachtwey says his specialty is dealing with ground level realities with a human dimension. He feels that people need photography to help them understand what’s going on in the world, and believes that pictures can have a great influence on shaping public opinion and mobilizing protest.


Last Jew of Vinnitsa


Picture from an Einsatzgruppen soldier’s personal album, labelled on the back as “Last Jew of Vinnitsa, it shows a member of Einsatzgruppe D is just about to shoot a Jewish man kneeling before a filled mass grave in Vinnitsa, Ukraine, in 1941. All 28,000 Jews from Vinnitsa and its surrounding areas were massacred at the time.


Kim Phuc, a nine-year old girl running naked and severely
 burned on her back by a napalm attack.

The United States was even more innocent of this tragedy. This young girl was burned after a bombing attack by a pilot of the Air Force of South Vietnam. Once again anti-war organizations used this photo to attack the United States and implied that it was an American pilot that dropped the napalm.


Sierra Leone elections

May: Sierra Leone held multi-party elections following the end of a brutal 10-year war. Ahmad Tejan Kabbah was re-elected by a landslide. The rebel Revolutionary United Front turned itself into a political party but its candidate won less than 2% of the vote. RUF leader Foday Sankoh is in prison and is expected to be charged with war crimes by the UN-backed Special Court.


Policeman extinguishes man on fire
The aftermath: South Africa a policeman extinguishes the fire on a man who was set alight by a Reiger Park mob.


First Black Student

World Press Photo of the Year: 1957 Douglas Martin, USA, The Associated Press. Charlotte, North Carolina, USA, 4 September 1957. Dorothy Counts, one of the first black students to enter the newly desegregated Harry Harding High School. About the image Reporters and photographers bore witness and recorded the violence that erupted when Dorothy Counts showed up for her first day at an all-white school. People threw rocks and screamed “Go back where you came from”. They got their way – after a string of abuses, Dorothy’s family withdrew her from the school after only four days.


Kuwait oil field on fire

The Kuwaiti oil fires were a result of the scorched earth policy of Iraqi military forces retreating from Kuwait in 1991 after conquering the country but being driven out by Coalition military forces .



African violence spreads west to South America

Montevideo, Uruguay – 83 people have been killed and hundreds injured in the last wave of violence to hit the Uruguayan capital. Local media is reporting that the most recent outburst began in the low income neighbourhood of Malvin Norte in the South eastern part of the city, but quickly spread to outlying areas. Police and military personnel were quickly dispatched to bring rioters under control. This is the fourth major outbreak of violence Uruguay in the last two weeks.A Government official tied this latest outbreak of violence to the ongoing spread of violence from Western Africa, the effects of which have been seen in Brazil, Paraguay, and as far west as Ecuador. Government officials are putting the blame solely on the activities on the continent to the east.


Rosa Louise McCauley Parks
Rosa Louise McCauley Parks (February 4, 1913 – October 24, 2005) was an African American civil rights activist whom the U.S. Congress later called the "Mother of the Modern-Day Civil Rights Movement." On December 1, 1955 in Montgomery, Alabama, Parks, age 42, refused to obey bus driver James Blake's order that she give up her seat to make room for a white passenger. Her action was not the first of its kind: Irene Morgan, in 1946, and Sarah Louise Keys, in 1955, had won rulings before the U.S. Supreme Court and the Interstate Commerce Commission respectively in the area of interstate bus travel. Nine months before Parks refused to give up her seat, 15-year-old Claudette Colvin refused to move from her seat on the same bus system. But unlike these previous individual actions of civil disobedience, Parks' action sparked the Montgomery Bus Boycott.


Robert F. Kennedy
The assassination of John F. Kennedy, the thirty-fifth President of the United States, took place on Friday, November 22, 1963, in Dallas, Texas, at 12:30 p.m. Central Standard Time (18:30 UTC) in Dealey Plaza. Kennedy was fatally shot while riding with his wife Jacqueline in a Presidential motorcade.


911





Need I say more