The photo was taken by Turkish photographer Osman Sağırlı in 2014 |
Those sharing it
were moved by the fear in the child's eyes, as she seems to staring into the
barrel of a gun. It wasn't a gun, of course, but a camera, and the moment was
captured for all to see. But who took the picture and what is the story behind
it? BBC Trending have tracked down the original photographer - Osman Sağırlı -
and asked him how the image came to be.
It began to go viral
Tuesday last week, when it was tweeted by
Nadia Abu Shaban, a photojournalist based in Gaza. The image quickly spread
across the social network. "I'm actually weeping", "unbelievably
sad", and "humanity failed", the comments read. The original
post has been retweeted more than 11,000 times. On Friday the image was shared
on Reddit, prompting another outpouring of emotion. It's received more than
5,000 upvotes, and 1,600 comments.
Accusations that the
photo was fake, or staged, soon followed on both networks. Many on Twitter
asked who had taken the photo, and why it had been posted without credit. Abu
Shaban confirmed she had not taken the photo herself, but could not explain who
had. On Imgur, an image sharing website, one user traced the photograph back to a newspaper clipping,
claiming it was real, but taken "around 2012", and that the child was
actually a boy. The post also named a Turkish photojournalist, Osman Sağırlı,
as the man who took the picture.
BBC
Trending spoke to Sağırlı - now working in Tanzania - to confirm the origins of
the picture. The child is in fact not a boy, but a four-year-old girl, Hudea.
The image was taken at the Atmeh refugee camp in Syria, in December last year.
She travelled to the camp - near the Turkish border - with her mother and two
siblings. It is some 150 km from their home in Hama.
"I
was using a telephoto lens, and she thought it was a weapon," says
Sağırlı. "İ realised she was terrified after I took it, and looked at the
picture, because she bit her lips and raised her hands. Normally kids run away,
hide their faces or smile when they see a camera." He says he finds
pictures of children in the camps particularly revealing. "You know there
are displaced people in the camps. It makes more sense to see what they have
suffered not through adults, but through children. It is the children who
reflect the feelings with their innocence."
The image was first
published in the Türkiye newspaper in
January, where Sağırlı has worked for 25 years, covering war and natural
disasters outside the country. It was widely shared by Turkish speaking social
media users at the time. But it took a few months before it went viral in the
English-speaking world, finding an audience in the West over the last week.
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