Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Keeping focus on human consequenc­es of conflicts

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Steve McCurry, the photograph­er behind the iconic “Afghan Girl” image that appeared on the cover of National Geographic magazine, says he was always more interested in the human consequenc­es, and not the fighting, in war zones he has covered.

And the man known for his simple photos full of graceful beauty that usually capture people going about their daily lives is a confessed fan of camera phones, saying he uses his mobile phone every day, and that he would “never” go back to using film.

“I never thought of myself as a war photograph­er, although my work in Afghanista­n is, I think, some of the most dangerous times in my life,” McCurry said during a conversati­on with photograph­er Raghu Rai at a session on “The Magic Moment” at the 16th Hindustan Times Leadership Summit.

“I never really was interested in the actual combat or the fighting. I was always interested more in the human consequenc­es, the refugees, the people who were caught in the middle of these conflicts — suddenly they’re living a very peaceful life and then find they are between these warring factions.

“I remember hundred of villages were destroyed in Afghanista­n and they [the villagers] were all forced to flee for their lives. For me that was the important story, it wasn’t the combatants or the fighting,” said McCurry, who started his career in India.

It was this focus on victims of conflicts that led to the photograph of the “Afghan Girl” — identified many years later as Sharbat Gula — that appeared on a 1985 cover of National Geographic.

During the Soviet occupation of Afghanista­n, McCurry was working in 1984 on the Afghan-Pakistan border, where there were hundreds of refugee camps.

“I was at a camp one morning, I was on my way to lunch and I heard these voices coming from a tent, which was a girls’ school. I walked in and, before I had a chance to ask permission, I saw this little girl in a corner who had these incredible eyes,” he said. “I knew instantly this was the only picture I wanted to make that day. The light was perfect, the background was perfect, her expression was perfect and I literally didn’t have to do anything. I just had to make sure the picture was in focus and sharp and it turned out to be something that changed my life.”

Though McCurry traced Sharbat Gula in 2002 and subsequent­ly helped her with financial aid and a home, she was forced to leave Pakistan after it emerged she had fake identity documents. After she moved to Kabul, her family had limited her contacts with the outside world, he said.

As for the future, McCurry is content shooting with his smartphone, besides his camera. “I’m actually a big fan of cellphones and…I’ve published these pictures in books, they make sizeable prints. Photograph­ers are doing very serious work with cellphones. I think that the quality of this is probably as good as the camera I was using 40 years ago.”

 ??  ?? Visual storytelle­r Steve McCurry during the session ‘The Magic Moment’ at the 16th Hindustan Times Leadership Summit on Saturday. KUNAL PATIL/HT PHOTO
Visual storytelle­r Steve McCurry during the session ‘The Magic Moment’ at the 16th Hindustan Times Leadership Summit on Saturday. KUNAL PATIL/HT PHOTO

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