Two crazy weeks and the most unbelievable story I ever did. When we got to the local base, a medic said, "Hell, I can see right through you." I wish I could have found out how her life unravelled, but as soon as the scene was locked down, I ran back to the office to file. Then we were tied up, blindfolded and moved from place to place for six days. He has fought all night long. And the answer is: I want to show the best and worst face of humankind. Anyone who says they aren't frightened during war is either lying or a fool. I was surrounded by hundreds of angry men, screaming in my face, grabbing me. He walked directly at me. Politicians need to know what it looks like when you send young boys to war. And it was just a routine patrol, or so they thought. When people around me have been hurt or killed, I've recorded it. Nineteen months later, I met my wife. I was one of the first on the scene. It epitomised the whole mood â this older woman caught in the middle of this ridiculous, tragic event. You become a terrible dinner guest. If it had landed on top or a couple of feet over, I would have died. Photograph: Adam Dean/Panos Pictures, John D McHugh: 'We ran behind a Humvee⦠by that point I'd accepted that I was going to get shot â there were so many bullets in the air, it sounded like a swarm of bees.' The opposition were shelling us. The pain came later, back in intensive care, when infections set in and they nearly lost me a couple of times. And my stress is nothing compared with civilians and soldiers. Bernard later died, and people said that I didn't give him dignity, that I should have helped him. The thugs with guns didn't want us there. We were hiding from Taliban gunfire, when there was this explosion. Only then did it hit me how dangerous it had been. It can be agonisingly painful to think that all you're doing is taking pictures. And the day before he was scheduled to leave - the *day* before, he's out with the unit. I'd just finished a master's in photojournalism and thought I'd go to Pakistan to cover the elections. Earth When our captors left us alone, we spoke about what we'd do if we got out. And it was just a routine patrol, or so they thought. It was heavy fighting, and I was very afraid. And the day before he was scheduled to leave - the day before, he's out with the unit. I'd never seen a dead body before. I knew I had to frame the pictures so they weren't too graphic. Photograph: Ron Haviv/VII, Julie Jacobson: 'The media ground rule was that you couldn't photograph a military casualty in a way that they could be identified⦠Making that decision was a public act. Out of universe information My mind refocused and I thought, "No, fuck that!". Photograph: Shaul Schwarz/Getty, 'You see movies, you read books, you can imagine anything. I was with a Russian special commando. The Afghan security forces normally shut down a suicide bombing like this pretty quickly. To get from one side to the other, the residents had to pass through this intersection and Serbian snipers would take shots at them. People surrounded us, celebrating. I was with a lead unit of marines, and we received a triple ambush from the insurgents. My wife and children were very much on my mind because the danger was so extreme. It was fate that my head was tilted to the right, otherwise I wouldn't be here today. We decided to go over the wall. Someone of a normal constitution can't accept that. Pictures like this, of inexperienced rebels being fired on by machine guns and mortars. I had seen corpses, torn apart, in the morgue and didn't want to end up like that. Moments later, he was lying in a 20ft stream of blood. I got in my car and, once I turned the corner, began to scream. My cameras were on the ground, and as they grabbed me I had to lean down and pick them up. Adam Ferguson: 'As a photographer, you feel helpless. Stargate SG-1*"Heroes, Part 2" (Mentioned), He was a war photographer during the Vietnam War.During a patrol, he accidentally photographed a Lieutenant getting shot in the head. It's the closest I've come to capturing the chaos of combat. When people around me have been hurt or killed, I've recorded it. That was pretty dreadful, but she's a writer and understands why I do this. It was one of the most intense experiences I've ever had. I ran to the car horrified. I reconciled it by deciding that more people see a story when a photographer's work is decorated. By that point I'd accepted that I was going to get shot. For about six months, he was with a unit in Vietnam. So I shot nine frames over two and a half minutes. His name was Martin Kristofski. The guy with the knife in his mouth is a human being like the rest of us. Bregman decided to change tactics. We ran behind a Humvee, but now we were being fired on from both sides. They were the lead battalion, the ones who went on to pull down the statue of Saddam. I was looking to settle. For about six months, he was with a unit in Vietnam. When we got out, I felt surprisingly OK. We'd survived â when you survive, this job is always worth the risk. It was like a dog that smells fear. As I approached the aftermath of the bomb, I struggled to compose myself. I've often felt guilty about my pictures. And the day before he was scheduled to leave - the day before, he's out with the unit. Within minutes of nearly being killed, I came across pro-East Timorese independence supporter Joaquim Bernardino Guterres. Photograph: Greg Marinovich/Storytaxi.com, Gary Knight: 'My stress is nothing compared with civilians and soldiers. The month before, I'd seen a guy beaten to death â my first experience of real violence â and hadn't shaken the feeling of guilt that I had done nothing to stop it. For about six months, he was with a unit in Vietnam. I once did a piece on this war photographer. I got a lot of flak.' But suddenly, a Lieutenant pulled him down. This job takes a lot of skill, but a lot of it is luck. One thug offered me "protection". I was a mess.' I like that it's not a clean picture, that it's not well composed and you can't see everything that's happening. The soliders were yelling at me not to shoot, but I'd promised myself I'd come out of this with an image to prove what was happening. They began tearing at me, fighting over the bills. When I got to the hotel, I showed the other photographers. Martin Krystovski Photograph: João Silva/The New York Times, Tom Stoddart: 'Sarajevo was the most dangerous place I have worked on a long-term basis. Taliban started shooting down on us from the mountains. I'm not really interested in military bang-bang pictures; I'm interested in documenting people living through war. Photograph: Adam Ferguson/VII Network, Alvaro Ybarra Zavala: 'Years after i took this picture, every time I see it I feel scared again.' Then a few weeks later Tim Hetherington and Chris Hondros were killed in Misrata, which sent me into a tailspin. And it was just a routine patrol, or so they thought. In February 2001, I spent four weeks traveling through Vietnam, exploring the Old Quarter of Hanoi, hiking through hill tribe villages near Sapa, and drifting down ancient waterways in Hoa Lu.The highlight of my trip to Vietnam was a week in Hoi An, a small, sleepy village about halfway down the coast between Hanoi and Saigon. Making that decision was a public act. Without them, I couldn't have done the story. I love my job but getting shot made me think about life beyond work. Around you are medics, security personnel, people doing good work. Epoch II takes us on a second cosmic voyage to explore the realms that exist outside the current day theories of space travel and reality. I'm 40 now, and a lot has changed in the risks I'm prepared to take. When the pictures were published not long after, Arkan said in an interview, "I look forward to the day I can drink his blood." I told them I'd stop shooting if they stopped killing him. I once did a piece on this war photographer. I could hear bullets hitting it, and thought, "Oh fuck, oh fuck.". Attacked by a Haitian mob, kidnapped by Gaddafi's troops, shot in Afghanistan⦠Who'd be a war photographer? This woman was escorted out of the building and round this devastated street corner. The military turned their guns on him, and as he started to run they grabbed him and kicked him. You cannot separate the rest of your life and I've tried not to control how much I think about them. They didn't realise I'd taken photos.' I took a chance â I had to; that was why I was there, to tell the story â but I made sure I wasn't too greedy. His name was Martin Kristofski. The situation was very tense â people were drunk and aggressive. Photograph: Marco Di Lauro/Getty Images, John Stanmeyer: 'The military turned their guns on him , and as her started to run they grabbed him and kicked him. I'd been in Afghanistan for a month when I stepped on the landmine. An attempt had been made on Bhutto's life two months earlier, so there was already a certain degree of risk. I remember feeling very scared because there was still popping and hissing and small explosions, and the building was collapsing. His name was Martin Kristofski. He began pushing and threatening me. The guy in the photo is shouting, "Don't take my fucking picture!" I was with two marines trying to get into this house. His name was Martin Kristofski. I don't feel pity, but at the same time they took me with them and did everything to protect me. Photograph: Ami Vitale/Panos Pictures, In pictures: the life of a war photographer (contains some graphic images). Suddenly this guy jumped on to it. The bullet went through my ribs and out of my lower back. Sarajevo was the most dangerous place I have worked on a long-term basis. I really hate this shot. I was framing my next shot when a bare-chested man came into view and swung a machete into his blazing skull. Afterwards, I saw [Lance Corporal Joshua M] Bernard â one of his legs was blown off and the other was barely there. Some people would sprint as fast as they could; others would brazenly walk, as if they were giving two fingers. Around you are medics, security personnel, people doing good work. When I won a World Press award for this photograph, I felt sad. I got into Ajdabiya shortly after its fall. Every time you go to a conflict, you see the worst. It's about finding a way of dealing with the fear â you have to be very calm. Gender It was 25 minutes before anybody could get to me. I was crying, shaking. When I put it down, they looked over. I was very much a novice when I took this. I've lost a lot of friends and colleagues â two of them very recently. It was still very fresh and there was a risk o⦠I saw them do it, and I couldn't stop them. 'The Best Photo From Vietnam': One Photographer's Defining Image of War. For about six months, he was with a unit in Vietnam. I didn't think about it and began shooting. I was the third man in line, and as I put my foot down, I heard a metallic click and I was thrown in the air. This is the morning after a night that left four men dead and 10 wounded. The day I don't do that with my photography is the day I'll give up and open a restaurant. His name was Martin Kristofski. We've been to Sudan together, we've been ambushed, we've been in lots of nutty situations. I'm not that interested in pictures of tanks burning â I'm interested in people. I saw the barrel, then he shot the man next to me â I had blood on me, brains. That's part of it. The Phoenix Foundation Mountains Sam Kristofski ARRI 435 35mm I stayed on in Palestine, but was much more cautious after that; have been ever since. âYou know, I once did a piece on this, uh, war photographer. If you keep moving, you can manage the fear. I once did a piece on this war photographer. Photograph: Eric Bouvet/VII Network, Mads Nissen: 'Suddenly this guy jumped on the the tank. I was lucky. While I was out in Afghanistan, my wife had a miscarriage and she equated it to my being away. His name was Martin Kristofski. It felt as if I'd been punched. The occupants of Sarajevo couldn't. I thought, "Don't do anything crazy, just act like you're part of this crazy party.". I remind myself of that all the time. I had wanted to capture the sense of release that everyone had, and this became the shot.' You're not just a journalist or a human being, you're a mixture of both, and to try to separate the two is complicated. These are the Serbian warlord Arkan's men. I was able to get to the epicentre of the explosion. A man in the procession started screaming, "CIA agent" and pointing at me. But suddenly, a Lieutenant pulled him down. Tau'ri It's so messy. I'll keep doing the job I do but I'll be more careful. And it was just a routine patrol, or so they thought. They didn't realise I'd taken photos. I thought, if I'm going to die right now, I might as well be working. Moments later he was lying in a 20ft stream of blood. And the day before he was scheduled to leave - the *day* before, he's out with the unit. They made us lie in the dirt, put guns to us. BRUCE E MARTIN. They started groping me very aggressively, touching my breasts and butt. I was able to get to the epicentre of the explosion. Google Photos is the home for all your photos and videos, automatically organized and easy to share. I remind myself of that all the time. For about six months, he was with a unit in Vietnam. It was almost like a test, to see if I had what I needed for this job.
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