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" 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
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" As a photographer who is constantly in violent, bloody situations where the instinct is to turn away, I am always trying to figure out how to make people not turn away. "
Lynsey Addario
Always
Turn
Trying
" If people really saw what was happening in Iraq and Afghanistan, then they might be marching in the streets to end wars. But you know, I think that no one ever sees because we're not allowed to see, and we're not allowed to publish what we do see. So it's quite difficult. "
Lynsey Addario
See
People
Think
" The fact is that trauma and risk taking hadn't become scarier over the years; it had become more normal. "
Lynsey Addario
Normal
Risk
Trauma
" Obviously I am a photographer and I believe in my medium: I do think that powerful photographs can force change. It doesn't take long to look and be engaged in a strong image whereas, with a story, you have to actually sit down and pause and be involved in it. "
Lynsey Addario
Powerful
Think
Change
" 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
" I'm not very religious at all - I was raised Catholic, but probably haven't gone to church since my Holy Communion when I was about 6 or 7. "
Lynsey Addario
Religious
Holy
Gone
" I didn't know a single female photographer who covered conflict who even had a boyfriend, much less a husband or a baby. "
Lynsey Addario
Conflict
Baby
Husband
" 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 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
" You have two options when you approach a hostile checkpoint in a war zone, and each is a gamble. The first is to stop and identify yourself as a journalist and hope that you are respected as a neutral observer. The second is to blow past the checkpoint and hope the soldiers guarding it don't open fire on you. "
Lynsey Addario
Hope
Past
Fire
" Sometimes when I am photographing a major news event, I am suddenly overwhelmed by helplessness. "
Lynsey Addario
News
Am
I Am
" As a war correspondent and a mother, I've learned to live in two different realities... but it's my choice. I choose to live in peace and witness war - to experience the worst in people but to remember the beauty. "
Lynsey Addario
Mother
Live
Peace
" 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
" 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
" Look, I would say that anyone who does this work and doesn't have a strain of idealism is an adrenaline junkie or completely narcissistic. There is no other justification. You're risking your life, and if anything happens, it's our families who suffer tremendously. "
Lynsey Addario
Life
You
Look
" I got rejected from journalism school! "
Lynsey Addario
Got
Journalism
Rejected
" The first time I visited Afghanistan in May 2000, I was 26 years old, and the country was under Taliban rule. I went there to document Afghan women and landmine victims. "
Lynsey Addario
Old
Time
First Time
" 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
" My strength is looking for composition and light, and I think those things come in the quieter times of war or photographing people affected on the margins of war - civilians, refugees; that is where I really excel. "
Lynsey Addario
Strength
Light
War
" When I first started out, I really felt like, 'I'm a journalist; I will be respected as a neutral observer.' And I don't feel like that holds true anymore. I don't think people respect journalists the same way they once did. "
Lynsey Addario
Way
People
Respect
" Most people, when they meet me, one of the first things they say is, 'Why would you voluntarily subject yourself to war? Why would you go into these places where you know there's a risk of getting killed?' "
Lynsey Addario
Yourself
Me
Know
" I would never think of myself as a role model. "
Lynsey Addario
Role
Think
Myself
" I'm a very open person, very self-deprecating. I accept my flaws. "
Lynsey Addario
Accept
Flaws
Open
" With each assignment, I weigh the looming possibility of being killed, and I chastise myself for allowing fear to hinder me. War photographers aren't supposed to get scared. "
Lynsey Addario
Myself
War
Fear
" 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
" 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
" As a woman, I have tried to take advantage of the extra access I have in the Muslim world: with Muslim women, for example. Many people underestimate women in that part of the world because, typically, they don't work. "
Lynsey Addario
Work
People
Take
" A lot of women act like it's the easiest decision, and I'm just going to have a baby and put my life on hold and not be worried about it. Well, I was worried. "
Lynsey Addario
My Life
Life
Baby
" 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
" In a place like Afghanistan where the society is completely segregated, women have access to women. Men cannot always photograph women and cannot get the access that I get. "
Lynsey Addario
Society
Like
Place