
I believe the argument trying to be made here is that Dominique challenges us to climb out of our comfort zone of protection and security we feel in our own country and to try and experience the lives and hardships that others around the world feel and experience everyday of their lives. The ethos of the photo lies with the photographer, Dominique, an eighteen year old boy who was orphaned because his parents and family were killed by rebel forces. On account of the fact we know that he lives in this country, this country that is torn apart by war; the audience may feel compelled to trust him, trust him to depict the truth in a genuine and personal way because he in fact, lived through it. When you look at the photo the woman in the shadows looks scared and I feel as though you want to help these people. I want, as an audience member, to be able to take away their pain and suffering and to make them and their country whole again.
The history of Rwanda begins with Tutsi and the Hutu. The Tutsi, a tall cattle-rearing people, infiltrate the area and win dominance over the Hutu, the people who already habitat the land and are living by agriculture. It starts with the reign of Rwabugiri; he comes to the throne and gains control over the land. His area is comprised of a feudal system; with the Tutsi as the aristocracy and the Hutu their vassals. When Belguim finally takes rule over the land from the Germans they further the racial conflict by making everyone wear race identification cards and force the Hutu into labor.
Like any repressed people, the Hutu rebeled and killed some 14,000 Tutsi(HistoryWorld). After the travesty the Tutsi form a group the Rwandan Patriot Front (RPF) to try and infiltrate Rwanda. There are many unsuccessful attempts and shortly following was the issuance of the Hutu Ten Commandments under the rule of Habyarimina; because of this, extremist supporters formed groups, Interhamwe,

With this new found information there are several new ways one can interpret and analyze the photo. The woman in the shadows could be representative to the Hutu in the beginning under the Tutsi rule (who are represented by the woman out in the open). The dark hue of the sky and background suggests the dark future they will soon endure. The fact they are standing in green land and not around houses is symbolic to the agricultural start on which the land was founded. Another viewpoint one could take on this photo would be that the woman in the shadows is actually the Tutsi and the other group is the Hutu because they greatly outnumbered

For the fact that Rwanda is still struggling to rebuild itself that could be the reason as to why there are not any houses or buildings in the photo. Also, with only showing women and children I believe the author was trying to convey that the initial rebuilding of a land begins with women and children.
Women because they bear the children and raise the children as well. so one must start with them, and the children because children are usually representative of purity and the future so perhaps by incorporating them into the photo they want the audience members to know that in a ailing country there may be hope for the future because the stronge women who bear and raise these children can do so in a way to tear down racial barriers and walls; the way their parents before them could not.
The way that the two groups in the photo are arranged shows that perhaps the photographer is demonstrating two sides of the people in his community. The woman on the left is the part of his people that is sad and disparaged, the Hutu; and the groups on the right in the brightly colored clothes and in the sunlight symbolize the happiness the group on the left is trying to obtain. However, because of "the land" in the middle (rebel forces) the happiness she yearns for is further than it appears.
At first glance you see the woman and children in the shadows, the colorful group on the left, and then the greenery and the sky. The photographer uses the contrasting groups and the sky not only as a visual hierarchy but also as vectors of attention. As aforementioned the group in the shadows could be representative of the sadness of the people while the group on the right is the happiness they could be a part of, while the sky emits an imminent danger to both.
At first glance you see the woman and children in the shadows, the colorful group on the left, and then the greenery and the sky. The photographer uses the contrasting groups and the sky not only as a visual hierarchy but also as vectors of attention. As aforementioned the group in the shadows could be representative of the sadness of the people while the group on the right is the happiness they could be a part of, while the sky emits an imminent danger to both.

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