Why I do what I do
Nineteen
young men. Fathers, brothers, and sons.
Friends
and fiancés, teammates and drinking buddies.
These
are the men who were lost on June 30, 2013 in Yarnell, AZ during an event
labeled the Yarnell Hill Fire.
I
knew most, if not all of these men by sight, some by name, a small handful I
knew very closely, sharing laughs with them and their families over the years.
Over
the past 72 hours or so, I have had the privileged to watch first hand as the
city of Prescott and the state of Arizona has been joined by the world in
remembering and honoring these fallen firefighters.
Over
the years since my first days as a budding photojournalist in the early 80’s,
tragedy has been part of the job. I have covered fires, murders, accidents, and
funerals. In that time I have heard, sometimes by way of a quiet, private
comment, sometimes, like during the ERAU memorial service Monday afternoon, a
loud shout from the crowd of “Enough with the cameras!”
To
those of you who share the sentiments of the person(s) who made these comments,
I’m here to tell you I understand. I too would not like my most personal,
devastating tragedies displayed for all to see. I get that. But please, take a
moment to consider why I do what I do.
When
I look through the lens of my camera, I don’t just see an image. What I see is
a letter, sometimes a word or a sentence in a story. A story of whatever it is
I’m covering.
Many
times that word or sentence becomes part of a big happy story with a great big
happy ending. But sometimes, more often than I would like, those images become
part of a story with a not-so-happy ending, like this week.
Some
people feel pain and pick up a guitar or sit at a piano and write beautiful,
heart rendering ballads that bring tears to the eyes of those who listen. Some
people put brush to canvas and create fantastic paintings that give others an
opportunity to explore their own emotions.
I
can’t paint. I can’t play an instrument.
I
take photographs.
Sitting
through a few press conferences and the memorial service at ERAU, I was moved
to tears by the words spoken and the emotion around me, and the only way I know
how to express that emotion is visually.
While
I don’t put myself in the same category as the greats, I ask you to think about
the iconic images you have in your memory- Graham W. Jackson weeping at FDR’s
funeral, the young man staring down tanks in Tienanmen Square, John Junior
saluting his father and fallen president during the funeral for JFK. And of
course, the scores of images burned into all of our minds from 911 and too many
wars to remember.
These
images are our mental and emotional slide show of history.
They
are there to remind us of those we have lost, those we honor, and those we
celebrate.
Representative Kelly Townsend, who herself knows about mourning, said on Monday that we all
need to mourn in our own way.
With that in mind, let me say on behalf of myself
and several other photographers I spoke with over the past few days, I am
sorry.
To the families of those who have lost, I am sorry
for your pain. I am sorry if it seems as though I was there to exploit or take
advantage, but while looking through my lens, while spending hours editing and
choosing photos that captured the sadness I feel, the tears I shed thinking
about your loss and the loss the community as a whole has experienced. I am
sorry.
But this is how I mourn. This is how I share the
pain and emotion you, the community, and myself are feeling.
As images of this horrible week spread around the
globe, millions of people will be reminded of the lives that were lost and the
bravery of the Prescott 19.