Tag: balkan wars

The Legacy of Ron Haviv’s Photographs

 

In regards to David Reiff’s quote about Ron Haviv’s photographs, thus far I’ve found that statement to be relatively true. In researching different ways Haviv’s images from Blood and Honey have been written about and interpreted, I’ve come across mostly the same opinions and uses of the photographs. I have not found the photographs to be taken out of context, and most of the responses I’ve read use the images to supplement arguments regarding the war crimes committed during the Bosnian Genocide. I looked at articles written in The New York Times, The Huffington Post, Aljazeera, The Globe and Mail, and BBC News, as well as from Human Rights Watch, Crimes of War, and Balkan Transitional Justice.

I was intrigued by how many of these articles included Haviv’s personal story. A few different articles were as much invested in him as a photographer and how he was given access to take such stories, as they were in the events that took place and the crimes that were committed. I think this is because of Haviv’s unique position to and relationship with Arkan. For example, the article in The New York Times, from 2013, and the one in Canada’s The Globe and Mail, from 2015, both were focused on Haviv, how he was able to take these photographs, and what he wanted to accomplish with them. Centering on Haviv’s own statements, I found many of the writers emphasized how these photographs were testaments to and undeniable proof of the atrocious acts of violence committed in Bosnia. There seems to be much acknowledgment that the photographs did not initiate the change Haviv had hoped for, but still stand as important recordings of the war.

There is also a focus on how Arkan’s men have escaped punishment and justice. Both the article in Balkan Transition Justice, and AlJazeera, both from 2014, addressed how Arkan’s Tigers have not been held accountable or prosecuted for their crimes. His photographs, specifically the one of the paramilitary member kicking the dying civilian, are used as visual evidence to support the claims against Arkan’s Tigers and ask how its possible these men have not been prosecuted.

There was one essay, from 2015 in Human Rights Quarterly, which took a different perspective on the images. The authors, Martin Lukk and Keith Doubt, posed questions regarding if the presence of Haviv’s camera actually provoked Arkan’s behavior. They ask “Was Haviv’s camera a mirror through which Arkan was able to promote his terrifying images to the world and his victims’ community? Was Haviv an unwitting accomplice to Arkan’s massacre of unarmed civilians?” I think the questions posed in this essay are incredibly important to keep in mind when thinking about Haviv’s work because he was invited to photograph by Arkan. Did the camera affect Arkan’s desire to be seen and did he act upon that desire? Also, how did the camera influence the victims? Were they given false hope that the camera could prevent their death or torture? Because these images did not achieve the political change Haviv had hoped they would, I would be interested to hear from the victims of these atrocities, as well as their families, about how they value these images. Do these images function as tools to show how people, and witnesses, must be held accountable and acts like this cannot go unnoticed? Or are they reminders that the world watched as atrocities and massacres unfolded and yet did nothing about it?

 

SOURCES:

http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/04/02/photography-in-the-docket-as-evidence/

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/capturing-a-war-crime/article25016202/

http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/article/arkan-s-paramilitaries-tigers-who-escaped-justice

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/1347218.stm

http://www.aljazeera.com/humanrights/2014/12/arkan-balkan-tigers-escape-accountability-2014127122222470909.html

http://www.crimesofwar.org/a-z-guide/paramilitaries/

http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/human_rights_quarterly/v037/37.3.lukk.html

 

Close Image Analysis – Ron Haviv

Great photojournalism is honest. Rather than present a biased view of conflict, the most effective images choose to show essential truths that ultimately aspire to inform and promote ways to end the conflict at hand. One photographer who has consistently produced meaningful and wide-reaching work is Ron Haviv, who has photographed over 25 conflicts over the span of his career. One of his most renowned works of photojournalism is his coverage of the Balkan Wars, which produced many images that not only showed the atrocities endured by civilian victims, but also used as evidence to indict paramilitary leaders after the fact. One of the many great images from his work in the Balkan Wars is of a Serbian man attempting to put out a fire in his home in the suburb Grabvica outside Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Haviv’s image contains both strong content and aesthetics that makes it effective. What is physically shown in the frame is rather straightforward: a man is tossing water out of his window at the adjacent room in an attempt to stop a large fire. We see the decrepit windows above and below the subject, which tell us that the building has already been ransacked. The muted beige color of the surrounding windows amplifies the saturated colors of the man, the green bucket, and the burning fire. The bright colors of these subjects in contrast with the scale of the surrounding frame contributes to the dramatic tone of the image. In addition, the shutter speed was rather high when the image was taken, completely freezing the water in midair and making the overall frame more jarring. The caption reveals that Serb arsonists have lit this man’s house on fire to force him out of the city in opposition to the Muslim led Bosnian government. Overall, the image tells us exactly who is being affected by the conflict at hand: innocent civilians.

The simplicity of the content of Haviv’s image lends itself to interpretation. One apparent theme within the photograph is futility, not just of the man’s action, but in relation to the Balkan conflict. The focus on a single subject and action within the frame suggests a call to consider the imagery’s symbolism in context of the Balkan Wars. The opposition to the powerful paramilitary groups within the former Yugoslavian region by the UN was entirely outnumbered and unsuccessful, attempting to stop the violence and terrorism might as well be akin to tossing a small bucket of water at a raging fire.

Interpretations of images and the like thereof are an integral part of photojournalism and the effect of images on the overall perception of a conflict. In her book Shooting War, Susan Moeller speaks to this phenomenon, stating that images of conflict “foster certain physical and emotional stereotypes about each war” and subsequently create a “unique history of each conflict.” This was especially apparent in the Balkan Wars, where many powerful and influential images were sometimes taken out of context and used maliciously. Haviv’s famous image of a Serbian paramilitary member of the “Tigers” kicking a dying Muslim woman with a cigarette in hand is one example. While the image was used by Arkan himself to spread fear, it was eventually used as evidence to indict him. However, Moeller’s point rings true, the images that come from war deeply affect individual perception of the conflict, and this does beg questions of the ramifications for conflict photojournalists and their responsibilities in capturing. Yet, Ron Haviv’s image in discussion seemingly rejects any notion of misinterpretation. The photograph is brutally honest, it presents a desperate situation through striking visuals, and the viewer cannot help but empathize with the man and subsequently bringing into consideration the innocent civilian lives being affected by the conflict (perhaps the largest overarching theme of Haviv’s body of work). Regardless if the man becomes a symbol or not, there is no information within the photograph or overly stylized visuals that distract from the true purpose of the image: to show the truth and affect useful change in whatever way possible.

-Tristan Oliveira

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