The photograph was sold to The New York Times
 where it appeared for the first time on March 26, 1993 as ‘metaphor for
 Africa’s despair’. Practically overnight hundreds of people contacted 
the newspaper to ask whether the child had survived, leading the 
newspaper to run an unusual special editor’s note saying the girl had 
enough strength to walk away from the vulture, but that her ultimate 
fate was unknown. Journalists in the Sudan were told not to touch the 
famine victims, because of the risk of transmitting disease, but Carter 
came under criticism for not helping the girl. ”The man adjusting his 
lens to take just the right frame of her suffering might just as well be
 a predator, another vulture on the scene,” read one editorial.
Carter eventually won the Pulitzer Prize 
for this photo, but he couldn’t enjoy it. “I’m really, really sorry I 
didn’t pick the child up,” he confided in a friend. Consumed with the 
violence he’d witnessed, and haunted by the questions as to the little 
girl’s fate, he committed suicide three months later.

No comments:
Post a Comment