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Jumat, 04 Desember 2020

Pictures capture the history-defining moments that shaped 2020 - National Geographic

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Taken at the height of Belgium’s COVID-19 outbreak, a black-and-white photograph by Cédric Gerbehaye shows a medical gown and a face shield discarded outside a hospital. The protective gown—shed just moments before by a doctor transporting a patient out of an ambulance and into the ER—still carries the doctor’s form, as if the person inside it had simply vanished.

An image of quiet courage amid crisis, it’s one of 45 photographs selected by National Geographic to represent a year dominated by disaster, unrest, and uncertainty.

Wildfires and cyclonic storms ravaged homes and communities across the world. In Beirut, Lebanon, government mismanagement led to an ammonium nitrate explosion at the capital city’s port that killed nearly 200 people, wounded 6,500, and left 300,000 homeless.

Millions of people rose up against police brutality and systemic racism in the U.S. after several police killings of Black people, including George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. Monuments fell and historical wounds reemerged.

Photographer Kris Graves drove over 3,500 miles in 23 days to photograph more than 250 memorials, monuments, and schools—90 percent of which were dedicated to the Confederacy. In Oklahoma, Bethany Mollenkof documented the unearthing of mass graves in the search for victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. “The moment felt surreal,” she says. “For so long Black people in Tulsa have demanded the city look for bodies in that spot in the graveyard, so to know they found human remains there felt heavy. I felt responsible to show the emotion.”

Unrest convulsed the rest of the world as well. Long-simmering ethnic tensions between Armenian and Azerbaijani groups in Nagorno-Karabakh erupted into a 44-day conflict that ended with a tenuous ceasefire. China cracked down on Hong Kong’s student-led protests by imposing a new security law criminalizing dissent, effectively dismantling the city’s political and cultural identity. “What does it mean for a city to die?” asks photographer Laurel Chor, a Hong Kong native who has documented the city’s upheaval. “How do you mourn the loss of a place in which you are still living?”

There were also major milestones. For the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II, Hiroki Kobayashi documented how Japan remembers the trauma of the atomic bombs, while Robert Clark photographed veterans and survivors in the U.S., Japan, and Europe. In August, Americans celebrated the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment, which granted women the constitutional right to vote.

And in November, eight of our photographers covered a presidential election whose stakes felt more urgent than ever. A record number of Americans turned out to vote for the future of a nation at a crossroads.

Through it all, the coronavirus pandemic touched every aspect of life in every corner of the globe, from how we celebrate to how we grieve. Over 1.4 million people have died. Millions have lost their jobs and struggle to feed their families. But the first doses of a vaccine are expected to be rolled out within weeks, offering hope for the new year.

These are the moments that will be etched into history, seen through the lenses of National Geographic photographers.

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A doctor’s personal protective equipment (PPE) is strewn on the ground outside a hospital in La Louviere, Belgium. The doctor stripped the PPE off to avoid contamination when entering an emergency room from an ambulance.

(From: A world gone viral)

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The coronavirus pandemic pushed people to adapt how they practice rituals. In Tver, Russia, mask-wearing worshippers congregate at a church to celebrate a modified Orthodox Easter, a significant religious holiday in the country.

(From: Surreal scenes inside Russia’s battle against the pandemic)

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Though early warnings about COVID-19 emphasized the risk to older people, the virus can be dangerous for the young people as well. Medical workers prepare to intubate a young man suffering from lung problems in the COVID-19 ward of Moscow’s Hospital No. 52.

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A nurse at Spallanzani Hospital in Rome takes off her protective clothing after visiting a patient with COVID-19.
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In April, after President Uhuru Kenyatta ordered a dawn-to-dusk curfew in Kenya, the country’s highways were largely deserted, including this one in the Kitisuru neighborhood of Nairobi.

(From: In Nairobi, quarantine is a luxury few can afford)

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Indonesia had one of the highest COVID-19 death rates in Asia. In East Jakarta, the Pondok Ranggon Public Cemetery, pictured in late April, cleared land to accommodate the influx of virus victims.
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At a nursing home in La Louviere, Belgium, a nurse restrains and stabilizes a resident so her colleague can perform a COVID-19 test. Nursing homes have been particularly impacted by the pandemic.
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During lockdown in Amman, a young Jordanian flies a kite on a rooftop. Businesses in the city distributed kites to encourage a recreational activity that could be done safely, away from crowds.

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Pedestrians walk past a crumbled building in the Mar Mikhael neighborhood of Beirut, Lebanon after a warehouse containing ammonium nitrate exploded at the capital city’s port. At least 600 historic buildings with heritage status were affected by the blast, according to a UNESCO report.

(From: Why must every Lebanese generation endure violent chaos—and its aftermath?)

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In July, a woman in Hong Kong pays her respects at a makeshift memorial for Marcus Leung, who died in 2019 protesting against China’s proposed extradition bill.
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Medical professionals at the Republican Medical Center tend to an Armenian combatant wounded during the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

(Read more about the history of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict)

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Military planes fly over Moscow’s Red Square on Victory Day to commemorate Germany’s surrender in World War II. Due to the pandemic and stay-at-home orders, the commemoration was not well attended.
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This year, Matilda McCrear was identified as the last known survivor of the last known slave ship. She was brought to the U.S. aboard the Clotilda as a two-year-old in 1860, and is believed to be buried in an unmarked grave at the Martin Station Cemetery near Safford, Alabama.

(From: The last slave ship survivor and her descendants identified)

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Marchers demonstrate against police brutality at a Black Lives Matter Protest in Brooklyn, New York.
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The night before the Commitment March on Washington, a pedestrian stops in front of a mural depicting 26-year-old Breonna Taylor, who was fatally shot by police in Louisville, Kentucky. Her death sparked outrage across the United States.
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The Tuskegee Confederate Monument was erected in 1906 by the United Daughters of the Confederacy. After the monument was vandalized in June, it was covered with blue tarp by the city of Tuskegee, which is looking for ways to remove the monument completely.

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Staff at Lucille’s 1913, a non-profit pop-up kitchen run by owner Chris Williams, prepare free meals for communities in need in Houston, Texas. One in six Americans could go hungry in 2020 because of the pandemic, according to Feeding America.
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Karla González and her mother Mirelis Toro wait in line to purchase materials for Karla’s quinceañera at a bazaar in Havana, Cuba. The country’s economy has been severely damaged by a decline in tourism and a drop in remittances sent from abroad, creating a devastating food shortage.
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As they wait to learn the result of the U.S. presidential election, Trump supporters attend a campaign press conference held by Donald Trump Jr., at the Georgia Republican Party Headquarters in Atlanta.
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Trump and Biden supporters clash on the steps of the Michigan State Capitol in Lansing after the election results are announced.

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Following Joe Biden’s win in the presidential election, Cooper Sherwin and Joan Taylor share a kiss while holding a framed copy of the Declaration of Independence. Sherwin and Taylor canvassed for the president-elect in Pennsylvania.

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Pictures capture the history-defining moments that shaped 2020 - National Geographic
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