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PHOTOS OF WOUNDED IRAQ VETERANS SHOW ONGOING
DEBILITATION -- One of the things that
distinguishes her
photographs is their home setting. They could
almost be candid snapshots.

Spc. Sam Ross, 21, of Dunbar,
Fayette County, was blinded and made an amputee when a bomb blew
up during a munitions disposal operation in 2003. |
Story here...
http://www.post-gazette
.com/pg/07250/815292-42.stm
Story below:
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Preview: Photos of wounded Iraq vets show
ongoing debilitation
By Mary Thomas, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Images of the Iraq war shown in the media early on didn't ring true to
Nina Berman, an award-winning documentary photographer. "The coverage
seemed very unrealistic to me," she explained by telephone Tuesday from
New York.
One of the viewpoints missing was that of the badly wounded soldiers
whose experiences and losses were such an essential part of the war, she
says. So in 2003 Berman entered the world of veterans, and their
families, who were adjusting to civilian life while coping with serious
physical and/or mental disability.
Berman will be here today for the opening of an exhibition of 12 of her
penetrating photographs, "Purple Hearts," at Pittsburgh Filmmakers
Galleries in North Oakland.
One of the things that distinguishes her photographs is their home
setting. They could almost be candid snapshots, like any of the other
thousands taken daily around the world, except for the disfiguring scar,
the distant stare, that separates, and now defines, these individuals.
The photographs were taken mainly in the veterans' bedrooms or front
yards, Berman says. She first interviews her subject for a couple of
hours, which helps her to learn about the person, and gives him or her a
chance to develop trust in Berman. For the photograph, "They sit or
stand. Their expressions are their own."
Berman doesn't pose her subjects, nor does she digitally manipulate the
images. "There's nothing fake about them," she says.
The first two photographs she made were in Pennsylvania, and both of the
men were blind. Berman had never photographed a blind person. "You have
a sense of power, that I don't really want to have." One of her
subjects, for example, flinched at the sound of her camera shutter, and
she tried to finish more quickly so as not to continue to "scare him."
"[The photo sessions] were devastating," she says. "I was emotionally
sunk."
Berman made a conscious decision to photograph the veterans in this
exhibition, for the most part, as solitary figures. "They're very alone
in their heads and they're very alone in their bodies," she says.
Another conscious decision Berman made was to photograph away from
hospitals, doctors and the like. Shown in such an environment, she says,
people tend to think that "someone's going to patch them up and things
are going to be fine." In actuality, due to treatment advances, more
people are surviving, but injuries are more massive and they're living
with more complicated problems. Family members would probably say
they're glad their relatives are still alive, she says, "but the
soldiers, maybe not."
"Now it's an economic issue as well as a moral issue," Berman says.
"It's a hard subject. We can fix things -- but what does that mean? We
can fix these soldiers like we can fix Iraq, but what does that really
mean?"
When she began photographing, there were 1,000 wounded, she says. The
number has risen to 27,000 to 28,000 wounded in action. Those numbers
swell to 60,000 to 70,000 if those not wounded in action -- described in
Berman's book as having incurred "combat support or non-hostile
injuries," and therefore not eligible to receive a Purple Heart -- are
included.
"This is the big hidden story, because these people are really damaged
as well."
Berman says she was surprised that most of the veterans she contacted
agreed to be photographed. "I was getting them at this moment of
transformation, when they go from soldier and marine to veteran." Our
culture doesn't treat those going through that change very well, she
says, and thinks that they appreciated her interest. In some instances,
Berman has connected a person with an organization, such as the Veterans
Administration, when they needed help and were unable to pursue it on
their own.
"It's not like I need to rescue the world," but it tugs at her when she
encounters someone living alone with no resources. "I live in New York
with lots of resources."
Another surprise was that many would liked to have stayed in the
service.
"There is this great ambivalence and a sense of loss. ... For many of
them this was their whole future, and now it's gone. And, of course, you
want that back. The military was their ticket out, and now they're back
in [their previous] situation ... and worse off."
What this exhibition offers, Berman says, is "a place in which to
contemplate all of these things in a space that is quiet and without
other distractions. My hope is that people don't turn away."
Also at Filmmakers, in the Outer Galley, is "Grave and Deteriorating:
Images of the Iraq War" by another prize-winning, New York-based
photojournalist, Chris Hondros. The images range more broadly than
Berman's, but are as startling, whether of a blindfolded prisoner in a
cell or a crying blood-spattered child in a dark room into which steps a
booted leg, outfitted in camouflage.
The exhibitions continue through Oct. 25 at 477 Melwood Ave. Admission
is free.
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Larry Scott --