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The
clearest expression of man’s inhumanity towards fellow
humans can be seen in the horrific pictures of emaciated
bodies of refugees forced to occupy human wasteland
of destitution. It is also manifested in the pictures
of the disfigured bodies of war casualties. Such pictures
come also from victims of torture who often add tales
of unimaginable brutality in the hands of their prison
keepers or some secret police to accompany their pictures.
Newspapers, magazines, and television screens make such
pictures available for our everyday viewing. These
gory scenes have become so commonplace that we have
come to expect them instead of being shocked by them.
That
there is some humanity left in the human race is also
illustrated by the admirable response the public shows
to such despicable scenes in the form of assistance
for the victims. Hence we can be glad that there still
is generosity and human compassion. Shrewd fund-raisers
make use of such human misery to make jobs for themselves.
Writers and photographers become famous and win prizes.
Charity becomes business that relies on human suffering
as its vital resource for existence.
Due
to our preoccupation with the two ends of human nature,
the inhuman brute and the compassionate donor, we loose
site of one essential part of humanity. We often victimize
the victim further even as we try to help. The victim
becomes object of our generosity instead of a human
being with dignity. The donor is elevated to sainthood
even as the victim is hopelessly fixed in destitution
and stored away in our memory not to be heard of or
from again. The writer, the photographer and the fund-raiser
became heroes who saved the victim while in fact they
only saved themselves from professional mediocrity.
No one knows what really happens to the person in that
awful picture or the miserable character of that horrendous
story. Our heroes rush to the next hot spot in search
of another picture, another story, and another topic,
for yet another chance of a heroic visibility even as
the first victim lies there dying. With the victim
out of site and out of mind, the generous public follows
the busy hero until it too becomes victim, a syndrome
known as donor apathy or compassion fatigue.
I
too was caught up in this race to be a hero. I worked
with the Oromo Relief Association (ORA) to support Oromo
Refugees scattered through the Horn of Africa. I wanted
to raise funds and send them to ORA. I envied those
who had one of those pictures that would help you raise
millions without effort. I wanted those stories that
bring tears to your eyes and compel you to reach for
that checkbook. I knew they were there, but the right
people never visited those camps. Though my friends
and I worked very hard for the most deserving group
of refugees, we did not have much to show for our efforts.
We needed images that sell. So it was with great anticipation
and excitement that I embarked on my journey when my
opportunity came to visit the refugee camps in the Sudan.
Yabus
refugee camp was located in a remote region of the Sudan,
south of Kumruk and bordering southwest Ethiopia. There
was no sign of international relief agencies. It must
have been too remote for the international media too.
One hundred percent of the assistance came through the
Oromo Relief Association. All the relief workers were
also Oromo. For a person who is familiar with the highlands
of Oromia where most of the refugees came from it was
an inhospitably hot low land of bur and thistles and
not much else. There was only one large tent on the
whole camp. The relief officials had designed the camp
as a small village of little huts. Refugee families
occupied each hut and were put in charge of its care.
The huts were built a few feet apart to give the residents
some measure of privacy. All able bodied persons helped
build new huts so that new arrivals could move into
their own huts.
One
large building with mud plastered wall served as a clinic
manned by a dresser (himself a refugee with medical
training back home). Another building with large rectangular
internal space served as a school. On the outer edge
of the camp was a small hut that housed the grinding
mill. Refugee families brought their rations of donated
grains like corn and sorghum and carried the flours
back.
The
large tent at the center served as distribution center.
Food rations, cloths, sandals and farm implements were
distributed from there. It also served as a community
center. People came over to sit around and pass time
talking. Coffee is served to camp officials in this
tent in the mornings. Camp officials also slept in
this tent. During the day food is served to camp officials
and other workers who were helping with building of
new huts for new arrivals. In the evenings the tent
was full of people. They told stories, played games
and sang songs to lighten their burden. It was here
that I spotted Gurmu.
The
next day I pulled Gurmu away from his work and began
to interview him. He was not an ideal candidate for
the kind of picture I wanted. His personal stories
gave me a good insight into the refugee making machinery
in Ethiopia. I learned more about him and his wishes
more from watching him than from listening to him.
He worked and lived on two different farmsteads. He
successfully farmed in an upland area and in a low land
area. He maintained a home on each farm. He also had
a wife on each farm. It was when he was on his upland
farm that he learned that government agents were coming
for him that night. He was accused of transporting
a wounded Oromo Liberation Front fighter to safety on
his mule. He and his mule were both to be captured
and punished. He took one of his wives and the mule
and escaped before they got him. He wants to go back
for the rest of his family and would do that as soon
as his wife, who fled with him, gets well. At this
time I learned that his wife lay in bed seriously ill
in their hut. I asked if I could go visit her. He
hesitated a bit and consented out of respect for me.
I
had not visited any of the huts up to this time. This
was to be my chance for a perfect picture. May be,
I could get a story from her too. I went with excitement.
He went in ahead of me. The conical roof of the hut
came over the round wall to about four feet above ground.
He was not a small man. He bent down low and walked
in to almost the center of the hut before he was able
to stand erect. He invited me in. The lady was on
her side on a wooden bed with some grass matting. I
tried to talk to her. Though she was awake she seemed
too weak to talk. I told her who I was and that I wanted
to take her picture. I told Gurmu to sit her up for
me so I could get a good picture. He started prepping
her up for a picture. He got wet cloth and wiped her
face. He tried to comb her hair making her very uncomfortable.
It was then that I started to question my role.
His
initial hesitation to let me visit his wife in the hut
was because he did not feel that they were presentable.
They were used to providing acceptable accommodations
for a guest. They were used providing their guests a
decent place to sit in a decent house, decent food and
drink along with relaxed conversation. Now there is
none of that. Though I might have been sympathetic,
it was a painful reminder of what they had lost. They
were fully aware that you had your picture taken fully
groomed and in your best cloths. They are human beings
first and destitute refugees next. I had no business
further degrading them by exposing them to such humiliation.
They could have told me to get the hell out of their
place. Instead they chose to show me respect, thereby
maintaining the last bit of their humanity. The least
I could do was to respect them as much. I told Gurmu
that I did not have enough lighting to take the picture.
Understandably, he was not upset. I wished the patient
well and Gurmu walked me back to the big tent.
That
was the end of my hunt for a good picture. But what
about other photographers. Do they face the same dilemma?
Do they get a written permission from the subject?
Do thy somehow try to compensate their subjects in proportion
to the income they draw from the pictures? After all,
they copyright the pictures they take. But copyright
is a property right. Is property right worth more than
human rights? How heroic is the action of our heroes?
Would these subjects consent to having their pictures
taken if they had a choice? What’s more important,
their dignity or the monies raised on their behalf?
My views have been changed since the trip. I am angrier
that there still are conditions that force human beings
into such indignity. I am more compassionate for the
victims. I am less impressed with the fund raising
tools that exploit the victims. Finally, I am glad
I am not a photojournalist.
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