On great photographs and their impact

Power of photography

Israeli indifference to Palestinian suffering

By Lawrence Davidson

Some images move us, or at least should move us, to sudden insight into the consequences of our actions. Images of innocent victims of violence, particularly children, should have the capacity to penetrate the most hardened defences and touch our hearts.

However, the truth is that this does not always occur. Skewed information environments, operating over time, may condition us to react with compassion only to images depicting the suffering of our own community.

When many of us see the anguish we have caused an “enemy,” we feel not compassion or regret but annoyance. The reaction is: “Why are you showing me that? Don’t you know it is their (the other’s) own behaviour that made us hurt them? It is their own fault.”

That we react this way to the horrors we are capable of causing is a sure sign that those same actions have dehumanized us.

The pictures in question

Funeral procession of children killed by Israel in Gaza

Funeral procession of children killed by Israel in Gaza. Photo by Paul Hansen published in Dagens Nyheter

– On 15 February 2013, the World Press Photo of the Year 2012 {{PIC1}} was made public. The winning image (selected from 103,481 photos submitted by 5,666 photographers from 124 countries) was taken by Swedish photojournalist Paul Hansen, working for the daily newspaper Dagens Nyheter.

The photo depicts a funeral procession in the narrow streets of Gaza. Two men, visibly expressing the emotions of anguish and anger, are leading the procession. They are carrying the bodies of two-year old Sahaib Hijazi and her four-year old brother Muhammad. Both children are wrapped in white shrouds. Both were killed when their house was hit by an Israeli missile strike on 20 November 2012.

In making the announcement of the winning image, Santiago Lyon, the vice-president and director of photography for the Associated Press, said: “A picture should engage the head, the heart and the stomach… This picture for us on the jury reached us on these three levels.” Winning the prize with such a photo brought mixed emotions to Hansen: “I was very happy on one level, of course… And, I was also very sad. It was a very sad situation.”

– On 15 November 2012, five days before Hansen’s photo was taken, another photograph showed up on the front page of the Washington Post. This image showed Jihad Masharawi, a Palestinian journalist resident in Gaza, in deep anguish as he holds the body of his dead 11 month-old son killed when an Israeli bomb landed on their home. Mary Ann Golon, the Washington Post’s director of Photography, explained: “When we looked at the selection that night of Middle East photos from the wire services, this photo got everyone in the gut… it went straight to the heart, this sobbing man who just lost his baby son.” It should also have spoken to the head, but for some of the newspaper’s readers, that was not the case.

Jihad Misharawi, a BBC Arabic video editor, carrying the body of his dead son

Jihad Misharawi, a BBC Arabic video editor, carrying the body of his dead son

The fact that this image found its way onto the front page of the Washington Post meant that it was noticed by many more Americans than the Hansen photo. As a consequence Zionist readers and organizations wrote to the paper’s ombudsman and the editors, “protesting the photo as biased”.

What they meant was that the Washington Post should have somehow made it clear that the Palestinians had “made the Israelis do this” by periodically launching their small rockets into southern Israel. In other words, they wanted to know why the paper had not “balanced the photo of the grieving [Palestinian] father with one of Israelis who had lost a loved one from Gaza rocket fire.” The answer was that, as of that date, there were no such victims in this round of fighting. “No Israeli had been killed by Gaza rocket fire since 29 October 2011, more than a year earlier.”

The Washington Post readers who complained were obviously ignorant of this fact. It is probably the case that the newspaper itself had done nothing to enlighten them about the asymmetric nature of Israeli-Palestinian violence. However, even if the protesting readers were aware of this factor, it might have made little difference. The grieving man was a Palestinian and, in the eyes of the staunch supporters of Israel, that made him responsible for his own grief. His enemy status delegitimized his emotions and thereby undercut the legitimacy of the photograph.

– As soon as the Washington Post image appeared, the Israeli military started posting images of wounded Israelis, particularly children. One emotionally moving photo of a wounded baby also ended up on Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s official Twitter account.

Photo of wounded Israeli baby used as propaganda on Premier Netanyahu's Twitter page

Photo of wounded Israeli baby used as propaganda on Premier Netanyahu’s Twitter page

Thus began a sort of contest of emotionally moving pictures. Which ones would be seen and move the largest audience?

By virtue of their superior firepower and readiness to use it the Israelis could not win this contest. They simply were out there killing and maiming more people than the Palestinians ever could. Thus it would be Palestinian suffering that was bound to provide the most newsworthy pictures. This asymmetry was compounded by an apparent need, on the part of some Israelis, to advertise their willingness to be brutal. And so, Israeli images that were at once threatening and disturbing were posted on the internet.

– For instance, on 15 February 2013, an image was posted on Instagram, an image sharing website, by an Israeli soldier, Mir Ostrovski, who apparently belongs to a “sniper unit”. It shows the head and back of a Palestinian boy in the crosshairs of a rifle. One assumes it is Ostrovski’s rifle. The photo was commented upon by the organization Breaking Silence, which represents Israeli veterans critical of their government’s policies toward the Palestinians. “This is what the occupation looks like,” the group wrote, “[such] pictures are testaments to the abuse of power rooted in the military control of another people.”

Israeli sniper's photo of the  head and back of a Palestinian boy in the sniper's crosshairs

Israeli sniper’s photo of the head and back of a Palestinian boy in the sniper’s crosshairs

We can be pretty sure that was not Ostrovski’s take on the situation. The head in the crosshairs, despite its youth, belonged to an enemy.

Conclusion

The old cliché that tells us a picture is worth a thousand words, says nothing about what those words might be. As it turns out, they are not determined by the image alone. They are also determined by the state of mind of the viewer and that mind is, in turn, embedded in an information environment.

In respect to Israel and Palestine, the West’s informational environment was once dominated by the Zionist narrative. That is no longer the case. The Palestinian narrative is now also present. That the first two images pasted above are in the news at all is a sign of this change.

As a result, the Zionist readers of the Washington Post cry foul and speak of “bias”. It would be better if they stopped complaining and tried to look at those images with an “unbiased” mind.

Perhaps it would help them do so if they considered the words of Shylock in The Merchant of Venice and their application to the Palestinian frame of mind.

 If you prick us, do we not bleed?…

If you poison us, do we not die? 

And if you wrong us, shall we not revenge? 

If we are like you in the rest, we will

resemble you in that…

The villainy you teach me, I will execute, and it shall go hard 

but I will better the instruction.

The Israelis and their supporters should look long and hard at those images that depict the consequences of their own actions. They should think long and hard on the fact that they may pay for that action in kind. For it is primarily they, the stronger party, who must overcome the barriers to compassion and regret.

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