They say pictures speak more than a thousand words. Indeed some pictures can have an impact. History, emotions, sport all are static in a picture and they make us want to return to that particular moment. Here are some of iconic pictures that have been seen around the world and a bit of the story behind them.
President Paul Kagame wedding
June 10, 1989, at age 32, President Kagame weds his wife Jeannette Nyiramongi with his best man late Gen. Aronda Nyakairima seen in the photo. Kagame was then serving in the National Resistance Army (NRA) that later became the Uganda Peoples’ Defence Forces (UPDF), as the head of the Directorate of Military Intelligence.
Kagame would later lead a struggle that liberated Rwanda from a genocidal regime.
Muhammad Ali knocks out Sonny Liston
Nearly 143 years after the initial production of Jack Daniels Whiskey, the ex-slave that taught the founder the craft of whiskey distilling is receiving a new honor in the wake of the recent news of his involvement in the Whiskey history. Last year, a New York Times article about Nathan “Nearest” Green, a slave from Lynchburg, TN who taught Daniels the trade, went viral, sparking the interest of New York Times best-selling author Fawn Weaver. After looking into Green’s story, Weaver launched a foundation in his honor.
Shirtless Putin
Tears of power
Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara
The Bliss On Windows Screen
The Titanic
Amin and Mobutu
When it comes to political leaders there are names that are familiar. Here is a picture of the visit of Idi Amin Dada, Uganda’s President, to Zaire to offer his support to president Mobutu in Kinshasa, Congo on April 23, 1977.
Obama wins 2008 Elections
Barack Obama waves on stage with wife Michelle and daughters Malia and Sasha as he walks to give his victory speech at Grant Park after becoming the country’s first black president. Thousands of people attended the historic event at Grant Park in Chicago on November 4, 2008. Photo by Patrick T. Fallon/ZUMA Press. This was undoubtedly the coolest assignment of my life. My spot was staked out early in the morning. I carried a 5ft. step ladder with me that morning and chained it to the fence to mark my spot,” says Fallon.
The Kiss Cam
After the house cameras turned back to the game, President Barack Obama gave his wife Michelle Obama a kiss after NOT kissing her during “Kiss Cam” during an exhibition game against Brazil at the Verizon Center, July 16, 2012. (Photo by Toni L. Sandys/The Washington Post via Getty Images). It is unusual for the first couple to kiss in public but Barack Obama and his wife were pressured into kissing for the cameras as they sat on the sidelines of the men’s USA National Basketball Team game against Brazil. The first couple were joined at the match in the Verizon Center by their daughter Malia who pointed out to her parents that they were finally on the ‘kiss cam’. The crowd cheered and clapped as the President went in for the kiss.
Nelson Mandela (Madiba) before and after jail
Nelson Mandela, with his wife, Winnie, walks to freedom after 27 years in prison on Feb. 11, 1990, in Cape Town. South African National Congress (ANC) President Nelson Mandela (c) and his then-wife Winnie raise their fists 11 February 1990 in Paarl to salute cheering crowd upon Mandela’s release from Victor Verster prison. (Photo credit ALEXANDER JOE/AFP/Getty Images).
Iraqis watching a statue of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein as it is pulled down in Baghdad’s al-Fardous (paradise) square on April 9, 2003. The above picture shows a television crew filming on March 9, 2008 the “Statue of Liberty” which replaced Saddam’s statue in al-Ferdous square, five years after the US-led war on Iraq which toppled the regime of Saddam Hussein. PHOTO/PATRICK BAZ/AFP/Getty Images.
A sailor and a nurse did not know each other, they were just so ecstatic to hear that World War II had ended that they did what instantly came to their mind to do — kiss! Photo by Alfred Eisenstaedt.
The iconic sea stacks, called raukarna, of Langhammars Nature Reserve on Fårö Island are the remnants of Silurian coral reefs. Credit: Naomi Lubick.
August 6th 1945. It was a bright, beautiful morning in Hiroshima. Toshiko Tanaka was six years old and on her way to elementary school. She was walking with her friend when they heard a loud rumbling in the sky. Just as her friend pointed out the B-29 bomber plane overhead a bright white flash blinded them. Toshiko covered her eyes with her right arm which was instantly burnt along with her head and neck. When she opened her eyes she could see straight out to sea through the city center where just moments earlier buildings and homes had stood. A few minutes later, everything went black. Toshiko began to feel the burning on her skin and started crying. She turned back to her home and when she got there she found some timber framing and a bit of roof. Just 30 minutes after Toshiko had left that morning as a clean happy six-year-old, she returned with singed hair, burnt skin and blackened clothes. Her mother didn’t recognize her (www.boat-mag.com).
Thomas Sankara was military captain form Burkina Faso whose revolutionary programs had made him an icon for many poor people of Africa. Many historians refer him to an African Che Guevara. He became the president of Burkina Faso in 1983. He was supported by his nation as he had the goals to eliminate corruption from the former French colonial authorities. What is interesting, he changed the name of the former French colony from Upper Volta to Burkina Faso. He was assassinated on 15 October in 1987. Earlier before his death, he claimed: «While revolutionaries as individuals can be murdered, you cannot kill ideas.”
Please share with us other images and the story behind them. Attach the photo, source and write to us at info@taarifa.rw or taarifarwanda@gmail.com