in After the Last Sky:
The Palestinian boy in Jean Mohr’s photograph elicits sadness just by looking into his eyes (WOR 623). He is of unknown age, so the caption says, because we are not sure if he is even a child although he is small enough to be a child. His child-sized tummy, poking out from beneath his tight Grease t-shirt is tiny like a child’s. He doesn’t have a man’s beard. Nor is he a toddler. He has a playful half-akimbo pose with his left arm perched on his hip, a boy’s shaved head like a London chimney sweep and his body semi-contrapposto – but his face is veritably adult looking with those sad sad eyes.
The Palestinian boy in Jean Mohr’s photograph elicits sadness just by looking into his eyes (WOR 623). He is of unknown age, so the caption says, because we are not sure if he is even a child although he is small enough to be a child. His child-sized tummy, poking out from beneath his tight Grease t-shirt is tiny like a child’s. He doesn’t have a man’s beard. Nor is he a toddler. He has a playful half-akimbo pose with his left arm perched on his hip, a boy’s shaved head like a London chimney sweep and his body semi-contrapposto – but his face is veritably adult looking with those sad sad eyes.
But how can you justify that kind of statement when you look at this photograph – or any of the photographs in the After the Last Sky? What kind of sloughing off of humanity do you have to do until you reach the point of disregard for human life? Is the point of no return when you can believe that “there are no Palestinians” (623)? Insert any group here for “Palestinian”. When you can strip the Palestinians of identity like, “Non-Jews. Terrorists. Troublemakers. DPs. Refugees. Names on a card. Numbers on a list” (624)? It seems to me, once you strip a people of their sense of place and identity you can then place upon them labels sufficient to your own cause. The Palestinians have nowhere to call Palestine, no stable place to call home (although there has been an attempt by Palestinians like Said to refer to this disposed land as Israel/Palestine). The boy in Mohr’s photograph, ill-fitted in his American style t-shirt – what is he thinking? What is he trying to tell the observer? What can be read in his face? If anything?
Jean Mohr, photographer |