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Featured Photos

Reduced To Rubble by James Nachtwey

Reduced To Rubble General News, third prize stories 1996 Kabul's main street is reduced to rubble after years
Published May 22, 2017

Reduced To Rubble

General News, third prize stories

1996

Kabul's main street is reduced to rubble after years of civil war. After 4,5 years of civil war in Afghanistan, the fundamentalist Taliban movement conquered Kabul in October 1996. They were hailed as peace-bearing heroes. Immediately after their victory, the Taliban started to impose strict Islamic law on its one million inhabitants, in order to transform Afghanistan in a devout Islamic state. During their first week in power, the Taliban shut girl out of schools and ordered women workers from offices and hospitals. Men were given a month to grow beards, and the depiction of human figures became forbidden. At the first Friday prayer, Taliban soldiers forces passersby into mosques at gunpoint.

Commissioned by

Magnum Photos for Time

 

Photo Credit: James Nachtwey

American photojournalist James Nachtwey (Massachusetts, 1948) graduated cum laude from Dartmouth College in 1970, where he studied art history and political science.

Photographs of the Vietnam War and the American Civil Rights movement inspired him to become a photographer. While teaching himself photography, he worked as truck driver and as an apprentice news film editor.

In 1980, after working for several years as a newspaper photographer in New Mexico, he moved to New York to begin a career as a freelance magazine photographer. His first foreign assignment was to cover civil strife in Northern Ireland in 1981 during the IRA hunger strike. Since then, Nachtwey has devoted himself to documenting wars, conflicts and critical social issues, photographing ordinary peope in the cause of history. He has worked on extensive photographic essays in El Salvador, Nicaragua, Guatemala, Lebanon, the West Bank and Gaza, Israel, Indonesia, Thailand, India, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, the Philippines, South Korea, Somalia, Sudan, Rwanda, South Africa, Russia, Bosnia, Chechnya, Kosovo, Romania, Brazil and the United States.

James Nachtwey has been a contract photographer with Time magazine since 1984. He was associated with Black Star from 1980 until 1985 and was a member of Magnum between 1986 and 2001. In 2001, he became of the founding members of the photo agency VII. He received numerous awards including two World Press Photo of the Year awards, five Robert Capa Gold Medals, the ICP Infinity Award and the W. Eugene Smith Grant in Humanistic Photography. He is a fellow of the Royal Photographic Society and has an Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts from Massachusetts College of Art.

 

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