March 12, 2007

« Go to previous entry | Home | Go to next entry »

Shakira + Samir = true?

Geert Van Kesteren


While working on a new book about Iraq, I came across this image, taken by a family, only a few months ago in Baghdad. This is, let's call him 'Samir', in his bedroom. His niece told me that Samir loves to listen to Western music. Shakira is his number one favourite.

Geert van Kesteren/Magnum PhotosPosters of Jennifer Lopez, Angelina Jolie, Britney Spears and Shakira are tacked to Samir's bedroom wall in Baghdad, Iraq in this family photograph.

Samir never leaves his parents’ house; he always stays in, most of the time in his room. No one leaves their house in Iraq, unless it is really necessary. Abduction, roadside- or suicide bombs, car accidents, robbery, torture and murder are daily occurrences. The kidnapping business is booming. A year ago, a ransom of between $8,000 and $180,000 was good enough to get your son or father back alive. Today, people pay that amount of money just to collect the body. Areas, villages and regions are ethnically cleansed, a term politicians do not like to use. Showing sympathy for Shakira will not be appreciated by any radical sectarian militia, the mujahedeen or al-Qaeda. Anyone who shows sympathy for America is a target of their rage.

But Samir loves to listen to and watch Shakira. At his age you dream about girls like Shakira. In that dream you talk to her, you gently kiss her while you dance all night. In the second week of last February, Samir awoke from his dream and stepped into the cruel nightmare of war's reality. When American soldiers raided his father's house in search for weapons at noon, a soldier kicked the door of Samir's room open with his boot. On the now broken door, Samir had pinned a larger poster of Shakira and when the American soldier saw this he began shouting in ecstasy, "Guys! It's Shakira! It's Shakira! I want this picture!" Samir is a clever guy and gave his poster away immediately. Then he invited them to play on his X-box, which they did. Three heavily armed soldiers in camouflage and bullet proof vests played his new game "Larry" for about 15 minutes. Then they got an angry call on their Motorola Walkie Talkies. "Where the hell are you guys?" the voice of their commander crackled over the radio. The soldiers took their Shakira trophy, thanked Samir and left.

They say the world becomes smaller and in a way that is true and not true. Most people have no idea what horror on a daily base is going on in Iraq, but on the other hand, yes, the world is small. The Shakira poster was made by Dutch pop photographer Paul Bergen who has been my closest friend for more than 15 years! I had seen the poster before in a shoe shop in Dhaka, Bangladesh and now it saved a young Iraqi boy from a lot of trouble. Being arrested by the Americans is no fun. They put you in an orange overall in a dusty cold jail among others. There you wait about two weeks before being questioned. If you have bad luck they suspect you of doing something wrong and you can easily be kept in jail for several months or even up to two years.

My friend, the pop photographer Paul, was excited. "Dear Geert," he wrote me, "I am honoured to hear that music, my photograph and a good looking girl can bring people so close together in our world. Music and love is what we all share."

I just wish that was true.

Posted in Behind the image | RSS feedCategory RSS feed

E-Mail this | Print | Add to Add this post to: del.icio.us Furl digg Spurl Yahoo MyWeb

« Go to previous entry | Home | Go to next entry »

To top


Reader comments (9)

RSS feedSubscribe to this article's comments via RSS

Thanks so much for this post, and for your book Why Mister, Why?

We Americans are completely obsessed with celebrity, which is why this photo of "Samir" and the Shakira pictures gets to me so much. If he were reading a sports magazine or playing a video game, it wouldn't be the same. Instead, he is posing with his obsession/fantasy. Which is absolutely so American.

Comment posted by Charley Gallay on March 14, 2007

Through iconography a western cultural invasion is happening since the begining of 20th cent. and is changing the non-yet-westernized world by wearing the friendliest smile.
This pre-military invasion does its work by spreading the numb.
The western cultural products being exported from the west, is only what the west wants to throw - its thrash - making (and) the rest of the world a huge dumb.

Comment posted by Ph. M. on March 14, 2007

Unfortunately, those soldiers were glad to see that THEIR culture (Shakira and Xbox) is present abroad. But did they show any interest in Samir's parents' culture ??

I wish they had...

Comment posted by pierreyves on March 14, 2007

I find it odd that the invasion of Samir's country and his affection for a Colombian popstar are being conflated.

Comment posted by Charley Gallay on March 15, 2007

Yes Geert, thanks for this. We need to be reminded what it’s really like out there. Your work in Iraq, Jan Grarup’s work in Darfur & Tchad, Stanley Greene’s work in Chechnya and Paolo Pellegrin’s recent work in Lebanon are what great photojournalism is all about. And great photojournalism DOES make a difference & DOES help to change opinions.

Comment posted by James Cox on March 15, 2007

I'm afraid that one day we may only have one idol, one type of music and one game...

Comment posted by gaozheng on March 15, 2007

What is even more arrogant, is the way the soldier claimes this boy's picture. "Oh hey that picture I like, I want that, Give it!" The boy probably loved the picture, that's why he put it on his wall in the first place. This also states the IQ-level of the American soldier. *Kick in the door* "Roaaarrr. Snif Snif. Heeee, familiar ass and tits, now you are O-kay."

Comment posted by JH on March 16, 2007

The Iraq contingent of photographers is having a hard time. Nachtwey's pics of wounded American soldiers are marketable but Iraqis killing Iraqis has limited 'news' appeal.

Comment posted by Peter on July 19, 2007

The hips dont lie....pun intended. I dont know how the soldiers can kick in your door and play your xbox...thats very disturbing

Comment posted by zamambo on December 23, 2007

Post a comment

(required)

(required but not published)

(required)

RSS feedSubscribe to this article's comments via RSS

Or browse the Archive for all articles and sections.

Notifications:

Sign up to get notified via E-Mail of every new article posted on the Magnum Blog.

RSS feedSubscribe to the Magnum Blog RSS feed



Access To Life

The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and Magnum Photos teamed up to produce a major photographic commission.
In Access To Life, eigth Magnum photographers portray thirty people in nine countries around the world before and four months after they began antiretroviral treatment for AIDS.

Visit the Access To Life website

More articles:


Cornell Capa 1918-2008
Martin Fuchs

Cornell Capa was born Cornell Friedmann to a Jewish family in Budapest. In 1936 he moved to Paris, where his brother Andre (Robert Capa) was working as a photojournalist. He worked as his brother's printer until 1937, then moved to New York to join the new Pix photo agency. In 1938 he began working in the Life darkroom. Soon his first photo-story - on the New York World's Fair - was published in Picture Post.


The Khmer Chronicles / Issue Nr 9: About ethics and corruption rankings
John Vink

There was a time when Cambodia was not even listed on Transparency International's Corruption Perception index. But Cambodia is more and more part of the...


Larry Towell's Indecisive Moments Documentary
Martin Fuchs

Larry Towell is a photojournalist who travels reluctantly and only when the subject really matters. But if he travels he does so to really follow his subjects around for a long time, he tells a story from a very humanistic point of view adding his own unique perspective. From 1993 to 2006 he photographed in Israel and Palestine, producing an immense body of work. Two amazing books, "Then Palestine" and "No Man's Land", arose out of this work.


Auto Crazy
Martin Parr

China. Beijing. The Beijing Motor Show. 2008. © Martin Parr/Magnum Photos I am in a taxi, stuck in a big traffic jam. I am...


Find more articles in the Archive.

Categories:

Behind the image
What happened as the shutter clicked

Behind the project
The bigger story behind a project

Conversations
A loose series of conversations with photographers, editors and industry professionals

Educational
Educational content concerning Magnum workshops and other offers

From the field
Stories from around the world

Inside Magnum
Stories from the people who work at Magnum

Magnum Books
Stories around Magnum books

Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous blog articles and announcements

Photo of the week
One photo every week and almost no text

Understanding the trade
From magazines to galleries, photographs' many lives

Recent Comments:

A short conversation with the new Magnum nominees Olivia Arthur and Peter van Agtmael (21)
Comment by tomé

Cornell Capa 1918-2008 (29)
Comment by Alexander Kouznetsov

The Access to Life Campaign (15)
Comment by bram antareja

Larry Towell's Indecisive Moments Documentary (10)
Comment by glenn capers

Magnum Magnum: Chien-Chi Chang by Bruce Davidson (8)
Comment by gerard crewdson

Authors:

Alec Soth, Ann Tornkvist, Ben Shneiderman, Bjarke Myrthu, Bruce Davidson, Bruce Gilden, Chien-Chi Chang, Chris Steele-Perkins, Claudia Guadarrama, Claudine Boeglin, Constantine Manos, Daniel Power, Elliott Erwitt, Frank Smyth, Geert Van Kesteren, Inge Bondi, Jörg M. Colberg, Jessica Dimmock, John Vink, Jonas Bendiksen, Magnum Photos, Malaria No More, Martin Fuchs, Martin Parr, Martine Franck, Matthew Murphy, Meagan Young, Pablo Inirio, Paolo Pellegrin, Patrick Zachmann, Peter Marlow, Pia Frankenberg, Reiner Holzemer, Simon Wheatley, Stephen Bulger, Stuart Franklin, Artprice.com,

For more information on every author visit the Authors page.

Blog Home | Archive | Authors | Links | Blog Policy

© 2008 Magnum Photos. All rights reserved.
Duplication of any material on this site without author's consent and attribution is expressly prohibited.

RSS feedSubscribe to the Magnum Blog RSS feed