The Tank Man

ByrnzieByrnzie Posts: 21,037
edited August 2013 in A Moving Train
Good little piece this:

http://lightbox.time.com/2012/06/05/tiananmen/#1

Tank Man Revisited: More Details Emerge About the Iconic Image
By Patick Witty
Tuesday, June 5, 2012


Tiananmen-Square-Tank-Man.jpg
Jeff Widener—AP
A Chinese man stands alone to block a line of tanks heading east on Beijing's Changan Avenue in Tiananmen Square on June 5, 1989. The man, calling for an end to the recent violence and bloodshed against pro-democracy demonstrators, was pulled away by bystanders, and the tanks continued on their way.


Twenty-three years ago today, Jeff Widener ran out of film during the most important assignment of his life.

The brutal crackdown at Tiananmen Square was underway and Widener, a photographer for the Associated Press, was sent to the square to capture the scene. “I rode a bicycle to the Beijing Hotel,” Widener says. “Upon my arrival, I had to get past several Chinese security police in the lobby. If they stopped and searched me, they would have found all my gear and film hidden in my clothes.” But there, in the shadows of the hotel entrance, he saw a long-haired college kid wearing a dirty Rambo t-shirt, shorts and sandals. “I yelled out, ‘Hi Joe! Where you been?’ and then whispered that I was from AP.” Widener remembers. He asked to go to the young man’s room. “He picked up on it,” says Widener, “and out of the corner of my eye I could see the approaching security men turn away, thinking I was a hotel guest.”

The young man was an American. His name was Kirk Martsen.

Martsen told Widener that he was lucky to arrive when he did. Just a few minutes earlier, some hotel guests had been shot by a passing military truck full of Chinese soldiers. Martsen said hotel staff members had dragged the bodies back in the hotel and that he had barely escaped with his life. From a hotel balcony, Widener was able to take pictures with a long lens—but then he ran out of film. So he sent Martsen on a desperate hunt for more, and Martsen returned with one single roll of Fuji color negative. It was on this film that Widener captured one of the most iconic images in history, the lone protester facing down a row of Chinese tanks.

“After I made the image, I asked Kirk if he could smuggle my film out of the hotel on his bicycle to the AP office at the Diplomatic Compound,” Widener says. “He agreed to do this for me as I had to stay in the hotel and wait for more supplies and could not risk being found out. I watched Kirk from my balcony, which was right over the area where the security was. In what seemed to be an eternity, Kirk unlocked his bike and started to pedal off, although a bit awkwardly because all my film was stashed in his underwear. Five hours later, a call to Mark Avery at the AP office in Beijing confirmed that the film had arrived and been transmitted world-wide. What I did not know until 20 years later was what actually transpired after Kirk pedaled the bicycle away.”

On the 20th anniversary of Tiananmen Square, I wrote an article detailing each story behind the four different versions of the iconic scene on the Lens blog of the New York Times. At the time of publication, Widener wasn’t sure if the young man’s name was Kirk or Kurt. Soon after, Widener says, that changed: “I was on the computer and that familiar ‘You’ve Got Mail’ rang out on AOL. I could not believe who it was from. After 20 years, Kirk had found me because of the article in the New York Times.”

Widener discovered that Martsen encountered gunfire and more soldiers after he left with the precious film and that he became lost trying to navigate back streets to find the Associated Press office. Martsen went to the U.S. embassy and handed over the film to a U.S. Marine at the entrance, and told the embassy to forward the film to the AP office.

“Kirk risked his life,” Widener says. “If not for all of his efforts, my pictures may never have been seen.”

The next day, the image appeared on the front pages of newspapers around the world.

Years later, the BBC flew Widener back to China to revisit the Square where he made the iconic photo. While walking down Changan Avenue toward the square, Widener met a German teacher sitting on the sidewalk smoking. Widener introduced himself and they had lunch. They were married in July 2010. “If anyone had told me that I would return from that bullet-riddled street 20 years later to meet my future wife, I would have thought them nuts,” Widener says. “Fate has a strange sense of humor.”
Post edited by Unknown User on

Comments

  • ByrnzieByrnzie Posts: 21,037
    edited July 2012
    Also, if you haven't seen the documentary 'Tank Man', you can see it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CYtCy60Ky0M
    Post edited by Byrnzie on
  • ByrnzieByrnzie Posts: 21,037
    Check this out; a separate photograph taken by Stuart Franklin (Magnum Photos) who was on the 5th floor of the Beijing hotel. (Widener's - more famous shot, for Associated Press - was from the 6th floor of the Beijing hotel). Franklin's roll of film was smuggled out of the country by a French student, concealed in a box of tea.


    http://i.minus.com/iHHVQwK8L6s3u.jpg

    This shot gives you a much wider perspective and let's you see just how big this dudes balls were, as he was actually blocking a line of about 20 tanks.


    Also, another photographer, Charlie Cole, working for Newsweek and on the same balcony as Stuart Franklin, hid his roll of film containing Tank Man in a Beijing Hotel toilet, sacrificing an unused roll of film and undeveloped images of wounded protesters after the PSB raided his room, destroyed the two rolls of film just mentioned and forced him to sign a confession. Cole was able to retrieve the roll and have it sent to Newsweek.
  • brianluxbrianlux Posts: 42,055
    Byrnzie wrote:
    Check this out; a separate photograph taken by Stuart Franklin (Magnum Photos) who was on the 5th floor of the Beijing hotel. (Widener's - more famous shot, for Associated Press - was from the 6th floor of the Beijing hotel). Franklin's roll of film was smuggled out of the country by a French student, concealed in a box of tea.


    http://i.minus.com/iHHVQwK8L6s3u.jpg

    This shot gives you a much wider perspective and let's you see just how big this dudes balls were, as he was actually blocking a line of about 20 tanks.


    Also, another photographer, Charlie Cole, working for Newsweek and on the same balcony as Stuart Franklin, hid his roll of film containing Tank Man in a Beijing Hotel toilet, sacrificing an unused roll of film and undeveloped images of wounded protesters after the PSB raided his room, destroyed the two rolls of film just mentioned and forced him to sign a confession. Cole was able to retrieve the roll and have it sent to Newsweek.

    An amazing photo, Byrnzie. That is (or was) one brave dude!
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • mickeyratmickeyrat Posts: 38,624
    but what happened to the guy IN the picture. To me thats the story. I can appreciate the photographers and all, but they were just witnesses to this. They arent the story, that guy in front of the tank is.
    _____________________________________SIGNATURE________________________________________________

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  • ByrnzieByrnzie Posts: 21,037
    mickeyrat wrote:
    but what happened to the guy IN the picture. To me thats the story. I can appreciate the photographers and all, but they were just witnesses to this. They arent the story, that guy in front of the tank is.

    Nobody knows.

    Watch the documentary I linked to above for the full story.
  • brianluxbrianlux Posts: 42,055
    Byrnzie wrote:
    mickeyrat wrote:
    but what happened to the guy IN the picture. To me thats the story. I can appreciate the photographers and all, but they were just witnesses to this. They arent the story, that guy in front of the tank is.

    Nobody knows.

    Watch the documentary I linked to above for the full story.

    Yeah, that's what I've read. Lots of theories but no one really knows.
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • gimmesometruth27gimmesometruth27 Posts: 23,303
    that is one of the iconic images of our time.

    i think Anthrax wrote a song about that guy called "one man stands"...
    "You can tell the greatness of a man by what makes him angry."  - Lincoln

    "Well, you tell him that I don't talk to suckas."
  • ByrnzieByrnzie Posts: 21,037
    24 years ago today.
  • brianluxbrianlux Posts: 42,055
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













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