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" It was nice to be in my own country, where I didn't need a translator or a driver. Where I didn't need to figure out cultural references or what hijab I needed to wear to cover my hair. "
Lynsey Addario
Hair
Country
Own
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" One day I am at home, watching dramatic images of Iraqi Yazidis fleeing for their lives being aired nonstop on 24-hour news channels. Days later, I am there, staring at tens of thousands of displaced Iraqis and feeling a 35-millimeter frame cannot capture the scope of devastation and heartbreak before me. "
Lynsey Addario
Feeling
News
Me
" I do think my childhood is one of the fundamental reasons that I'm able to do my job. We were raised in this totally nonjudgmental family. We never knew who was going to walk in the front door. And as a journalist and a photographer, you walk into so many different scenes that you have to be open to everything. "
Lynsey Addario
Walk
You
Family
" I had first visited Kurdistan in 2003 before the invasion of Iraq, camping out in Erbil and Sulaimaniya while waiting for Saddam Hussein's fall. "
Lynsey Addario
Before
Waiting
First
" I grew up in Connecticut, going in and out of New York City, and I worked in the city in the '90s. I was freelancing for the Associated Press, and I fell in love with New York. "
Lynsey Addario
City
Going
Love
" I always knew my death would be a possible consequence of the work I do. But for me it was a price I was willing to pay because this is what I believed in. "
Lynsey Addario
Work
Price
Possible
" I was kidnapped by Sunni insurgents near Fallujah, in Iraq, ambushed by the Taliban in the Korengal Valley in Afghanistan, and injured in a car accident that killed my driver while covering the Taliban occupation of the Swat Valley in Pakistan. "
Lynsey Addario
Valley
Car
Car Accident
" I interviewed dozens and dozens of African women who had endured more hardship and trauma than most Westerners even read about, and they ploughed on. I often openly cried during interviews, unable to process this violence and hatred towards women I was witnessing. "
Lynsey Addario
Violence
Hatred
Process
" I think that more often than not, people underestimate me. "
Lynsey Addario
Underestimate
Think
Me
" I'm not the kind of person to sit and dwell for ages on something that happened. I go through something, I experience it, I try to learn from it, and I move forward. "
Lynsey Addario
Kind
Forward
Learn
" You have to believe 100 percent in what you're doing, that some picture or some thing we do is going to change the world in some tiny, minute way. "
Lynsey Addario
Change
World
Change The World
" I didn't want my gender to determine whether or not I could cover breaking news. "
Lynsey Addario
Gender
News
Want
" I think, for me, personally, I try to be sensitive to issues as I learn about them. And I also try to constantly become not only a certain type of person but also become more in tune to the issues I'm covering. As I get older, I think that things just affect me more. "
Lynsey Addario
Try
Person
Me
" Let's get one thing straight: I am not an adrenaline junkie. Just because you cover conflict doesn't mean you thrive on adrenaline. It means you have a purpose, and you feel it is very important for people back home to see what is happening on the front line, especially if we are sending American soldiers there. "
Lynsey Addario
People
Purpose
I Am
" It's very hard to turn your back once you're aware of what's going on, and you're aware of the injustices, and you're aware of the civilian casualties. It's much easier if you have no idea and you've never seen it. "
Lynsey Addario
Turn
Never
Hard
" The truth is, the difference between a studio photographer and a photojournalist is the same as the difference between a political cartoonist and an abstract painter; the only thing the two have in common is the blank page. The jobs entail different talents and different desires. "
Lynsey Addario
Two
Page
Political
" The possibility to mobilize the international community to act on human suffering is what drives me every day as a photojournalist. "
Lynsey Addario
Day
Every Day
Me
" Don't expect things to happen fast. Be empathetic with the people you are photographing. Don't be concerned about money. "
Lynsey Addario
Expect
Fast
Happen
" For a journalist who covers the Muslim world, we have responsibilities to be familiar with that culture and to know how to respond to that. "
Lynsey Addario
Muslim
Know
Respond
" My job is to take the pictures, communicate a message, to bring those images to the greater public through whatever publication I'm working for. My job is really to be a messenger, and that's what I've been doing. "
Lynsey Addario
Job
Pictures
Working
" I wanted the ideal personal life, but I also wanted to keep rushing off, and that doesn't work, not unless you've got an incredibly understanding partner. "
Lynsey Addario
Partner
Life
You
" When I'm documenting, for example, a story on women in Afghanistan, I will do a huge amount of research and a lot of time on the ground just getting to know the women before I even start shooting. "
Lynsey Addario
Start
Women
Time
" Becoming a mother hasn't necessarily changed how I shoot, but it certainly has made me more sensitive, and it certainly makes it much harder for me to photograph dying children. "
Lynsey Addario
Mother
More
Shoot
" Nothing seemed more important to me than to make the world aware of the senseless death and starvation in South Sudan. I wanted people to see through the eyes of the suffering so my photos might motivate the international community to act. "
Lynsey Addario
World
Eyes
Death
" I started freelancing for the Associated Press. I had a great mentor there who sort of taught me everything. "
Lynsey Addario
Everything
Mentor
Started
" For me personally, I'm constantly trying to really re-negotiate how I'm going to make a living because I can't make a living solely off editorial. And I'm also still trying to tell long feature stories that are harder and harder to get assigned, you know. "
Lynsey Addario
Know
You
Trying
" I think when I started going to war zones and started covering humanitarian issues, it became a calling because I realized I had a voice, and I can give people without a voice a voice... and now it is something that sits inside of me every day. "
Lynsey Addario
War
People
Day
" The Taliban rose to power in 1996, vowing stability and an end to the violence raging across the country between warring mujahedeen factions, and to implement rule by Sharia law, or strict Islamic rule. "
Lynsey Addario
Violence
Power
End
" I was lucky because I had parents who have enabled me to do whatever I was passionate about and never held my siblings and me back from anything. But I think a lot of people don't have that experience. "
Lynsey Addario
Experience
Think
Parents
" Since Sept. 11, many of the wars of our generation are in the Muslim world. So as a woman, I have access to 50 percent of the population that my male colleagues don't. "
Lynsey Addario
World
Colleagues
Woman
" I've seen so many photographers rush to do books the minute they start shooting, but one great thing about photography is that the images don't go away, so the more I sit with these images, the more I learn which ones have had the most impact. "
Lynsey Addario
Great
Impact
Start