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Arango reports: "Samar Hassan had never glimpsed the photograph of her that millions had seen, never knew it had become one of the most famous images of the Iraq war."

Samar Hassan screamed after her parents were killed by U.S. soldiers in Iraq in 2005. (photo: Chris Hondros/Getty Images)
Samar Hassan screamed after her parents were killed by U.S. soldiers in Iraq in 2005. (photo: Chris Hondros/Getty Images)



Face That Screamed War's Pain Looks Back, 7 Hard Years Later

By Tim Arango, The New York Times

23 September 12

 

ntil the past week, Samar Hassan had never glimpsed the photograph of her that millions had seen, never knew it had become one of the most famous images of the Iraq war.

"My brother was sick, and we were taking him to the hospital and on the way back, this happened," Samar said. "We just heard bullets.

"My mother and father were killed, just like that."

The image of Samar, then 5 years old, screaming and splattered in blood after American soldiers opened fire on her family's car in the northern town of Tal Afar in January 2005, illuminated the horror of civilian casualties and has been one of the few images from this conflict to rise to the pantheon of classic war photography. The picture has gained renewed attention as part of a large body of work by Chris Hondros, the Getty Images photographer recently killed on the front lines in Misurata, Libya.

The photograph of Samar is frozen in history, but her life moved on, across a trajectory that is emblematic of what so many Iraqis have endured. In a country whose health care system has almost no ability to treat the psychological aspects of trauma, thousands of Iraqis are left alone with their torment.

Now a striking 12-year-old, Samar lives on the outskirts of Mosul in a two-story house with four other families, mostly relatives.

The household is a cramped bustle of activity as women cook and clean and children scramble about. Samar's older sister, Intisar, and her husband, an unemployed former police officer, care for her. Two of his sons are policemen, and their salaries support the extended family.

The pains of war have been visited on thousands of Iraqis, but even here Samar's story stands apart. Three years after her parents were killed, her brother Rakan died when an insurgent attack badly damaged the house where she lives now. Rakan had been seriously wounded in the shooting that killed their parents, and he was sent to Boston for treatment after Mr. Hondros's photos were published. An American aid worker, Marla Ruzicka, who helped arrange for Rakan's treatment, was herself later killed in a car bomb in Baghdad.

Intisar's husband, Nathir Bashir Ali, suspects his house was bombed by insurgents as retribution for sending Rakan to the United States. "When Rakan came back from America, everyone thought I was a spy," he said.

Samar left school last year because she was too shy and not doing well, Mr. Ali said, although Samar said she would like to return and hoped to be a doctor when she grew up. She leaves the house only on infrequent family excursions and has two friends who visit to play with dolls and chat. She spends her days cleaning, listening to music on her purple MP3 player and watching episodes of her favorite television show, the Turkish soap opera "Forbidden Love," about lovers named Mohanad and Samar.

"I am Samar," she said, wearing a long red dress and sitting on the couch next to Mr. Ali. Two of her siblings, also in the car when their parents were killed, sat nearby.

"I've taken them many times to the hospital, where they get pills" for emotional problems, Mr. Ali said. "All of them take pills."

He says Samar's 8-year-old brother, Muhammad, talks to himself when he is alone. "When we go out and see a family, they get sad," he said. Sometimes he finds the children in a room together, crying. "When they remember the accident, it's like they just died."

The photo of Samar had far-reaching impact, for it was visual testimony to a particular scourge of this war: the shooting of innocent civilians as they approached American checkpoints or foot patrols, killings made possible by liberal rules of engagement aiming to protect soldiers from suicide car bombers. The image was a point of discussion at the highest reaches of the Pentagon as it considered ways to reduce civilian casualties.

The Iraq war delivered few singular images for the popular imagination, partly because the country was too dangerous for photographers to move around freely, but also because in an age of saturated media coverage and short attention spans, it may be more difficult for news images to take root in the collective memory.

The military also set strict rules for embedded journalists that kept many graphic images from the public eye; the military asked Mr. Hondros to leave his embed assignment after he shot the pictures of Samar.

Liam Kennedy, a professor at University College Dublin, researches conflict photography and uses Mr. Hondros's image of Samar in his class as one of the few photos from the Iraq war that could stand out in history, comparing it to the famous Vietnam image by the Associated Press photographer Nick Ut of a young girl running from a napalm attack.

"It really seems to say something of what's going on at the time," Professor Kennedy said. "All the arbitrariness of the violence that was going on at that time is summed up by that girl."

Sarah Leah Whitson, director of the Middle East and North Africa division for Human Rights Watch, keeps a copy of the photo on a bulletin board in her office in New York. She remembers crying when she first saw the photo in a newspaper, and having to explain the image to her children.

"At the time, I thought it captured perfectly the horrors of the war that was not really understood by Americans," she said. "Everything in that girl's face symbolized what I felt all Iraqis must feel."

She added, "I kept thinking, ‘I wonder what life will be like for this girl?' "

Mr. Hondros spoke about the photograph in a 2007 interview with the syndicated news program "Democracy Now."

"I think one of the reasons the photo had this sort of resonance that it does is because it has a sort of empty feeling," he said. "You know, the poor girl, all alone in the world now, just standing there in the dark."

This week Samar, hugging a pillow to her chest, recalled: "He was taking pictures of me, I remember. Then he stopped, and they brought me a jacket and put me in the truck and treated the wound on my hand. And they gave me some toys."

She had never seen the picture until this week, but she said she understood that it showed the world "the sad thing that is happening in Iraq."

Near the end of the interview, she pointed to a family photograph on the wall. "I always dream about my father and mother and brother," she said.

 

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+52 # PABLO DIABLO 2012-09-23 08:02
So sad. Bush is a war criminal.
 
 
+36 # NanFan 2012-09-23 09:35
Quoting PABLO DIABLO:
So sad. Bush is a war criminal.


Yes, ARREST this man! W. has destroyed the world with his intentional war crimes, crimes against humanity, the planet, and his own nation he swore to protect and serve.

But he sits in the safety of his wealth and fears no recourse for his "sins" against this young girl or any of the Iraqi people, against any of the suffering people of the US and the world, because of his hatred for anything but his own insipid and evil power.

The Hague needs to put W. and his cronies on trial. Other nations than the US have asked for it. It must be done.

It's way past time! ARREST THIS MAN!

N.
 
 
+5 # Activista 2012-09-23 19:20
Quoting PABLO DIABLO:
So sad. Bush is a war criminal.

United States of America is WAR CRIMINAL
 
 
+25 # truthbug 2012-09-23 08:11
I'm too overwhelmed to really comment.
 
 
+44 # humanmancalvin 2012-09-23 08:15
Thank you GW Bush & all the Republican neocons that brought this disaster to this young girl for absolutely no reason. A President Romney may be pushed by the same far right hawks to invade Iran with the same results. Help save America & vote to reelect the only sane man running.
 
 
+13 # soularddave 2012-09-23 19:05
I lay more of the blame on Dick Cheney. He's the one who hosted the oil barons, and he's the one who pushed others to do his bidding and hid behind bush because he's a bigger coward.
 
 
+40 # dick 2012-09-23 08:35
The price of oil profiteering & political pandering: war crimes.
 
 
+38 # Wyntergreen 2012-09-23 08:35
That war was (and is) a hideous tragedy beyond imagining. The arrogance, ignorance, and callowness of George Bush and his cronies to perpetrate this evil will, I hope, at least in the court of History, convict those criminals and imprison them in the cell of ignominy. I hold no faith that any of them will be called to account for their crimes (which, of course, include the theft of an unimaginable amount of money) in this life. Too bad. It would be a good example to like minded fiends.
 
 
+38 # reiverpacific 2012-09-23 08:36
"To the Tower" with Bush Cheney, Blair, Rice and Rumsfeld -and that's just the top of the list.
The "Tower" could be either Gitmo or Abu Grahib.
They all well remember when Saddam H' was "Our bad guy" -I think he was silenced by a patsy Iraqui judge at their behest.
As the late Gore Vidal said in an interview with Amy Goodman -and I echo his feelings- "I'm against capital punishment but not for this crowd"!
I can imagine them being dragged, begging, screaming and shitting themselves, to the foot of the gallows. At least Saddam died with a modicum of courage.
Sorry, this is not like me really but it just blows my outrage-o-meter way past maximum that these bastards are strutting around free and even prospering while their "Collateral damage" as illustrated here continues and so many hundreds of thousands try to live in the shadow of their decisions and the deeds of those they sent to illegal war.
And they are all "Pro-lifers"!
 
 
+21 # Overwhelmed 2012-09-23 09:06
This article made me cry.
 
 
+30 # Billy Bob 2012-09-23 09:12
Just remember this image whenever you hear people talking about how badass our military is and what brave heroes, how the military is "a force for good", and all the bullshit about "honor".

IT'S A BIG FAT F***ING LIE!!!
 
 
+20 # Virginia 2012-09-23 09:35
I hope Obama, Romney and every Congressional member read this story. It should be mandatory before voting on war.
 
 
+19 # Glen 2012-09-23 10:22
Obama already went to school on this subject and made his decision to send in the drones. By the time it is over, if it will ever be over, Obama will have as much blood on his hands as a number of presidents. It is doubtful that there will ever be another declared war.

We'll be fortunate if that punishment doesn't extend throughout the U.S., as well.
 
 
+4 # mdhome 2012-09-24 06:27
Obama may be doing wrong with the drones, but Rawmoney will do 10 times worse in Iran if he gets his fingers on the button.
 
 
+1 # Glen 2012-09-25 07:28
Are you certain of that, mdhome, that Romney would be worse? Obama is doing more than just sending in the drones. Romney will simply carry on. That's how it's done now.
 
 
+9 # soularddave 2012-09-23 19:09
Yes, and also review the video that Wiki Leaks released to the public. I salute everyone who had a hand in producing the video and getting it to the public.

Hopefully that helped bring that war closer to its conclusion.

Free Bradley Manning (accused of doing what true heroes do.)
 
 
+22 # Adoregon 2012-09-23 09:51
When I consider the horror and terror that have been inflicted in our name against a people who have never harmed us, I shudder and am ashamed.

On April 4, 2008, Senator Barack Obama, speaking on the 40th anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, declared:

"Dr. King once said that the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends towards justice. It bends towards justice, but here is the thing: it does not bend on its own. It bends because each of us in our own ways put our hand on that arc and we bend it in the direction of justice...."

If this is so, let justice rain down on those who are responsible for the crimes this article describes and the myriad others it does not [describe]. Let the Bushes, Cheneys, Rumsfelds, et al experience what their decisions have wrought.
 
 
+20 # Glen 2012-09-23 10:24
Don't rely on Obama et al. to allow that rain to fall. He continues to protect war criminals while his agenda continues to bomb many other innocents.
 
 
+16 # Lawrence 2012-09-23 14:06
People are talking about the politicians responsible for outrages perpetrated abroad and at home. But politicians, all of them, are just front men, song and dance men, and they all work for the same people: The .001% Elite, the 400 families that own just about everything in the United States. The politicians are fools. Look beyond them to see who the real monsters are.
 
 
+6 # mdhome 2012-09-24 06:29
True, the real monsters are the war profiteers that have the money to threaten the politicians. Money is power and it is evil in such vast quantities.
 
 
+7 # speedboy 2012-09-23 18:44
How war mongers can ignore the consequences of their actions, totally mystifies me---but then, neither can I comprehend why a serial murderer derives pleasure from his killing.
 
 
+8 # Activista 2012-09-23 19:17
Looking at the picture and understand the military slogan:
BOOT ON THE GROUND ..
Please NO more US boots on the ground ...
 
 
+1 # RMDC 2012-09-25 16:38
The people who run the US don't care at all about the suffering they cause to so many people. Probably the soldier who shot up the car has committed suicide by now. Before that, he probably beat his wife or girlfriend. Ten million Iraqis have had their lives destroyed. but the Amerikkkan ruling class goes on with their happy lives as if nothing has happened. They brought freedom to the world -- raise another glass of champagne.
 

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