Photographer Jeremy Cowart learned about their story while in Rwanda this summer. Each of Cowart’s photos shows a pair of people: one a victim, the other an oppressor in the Rwanda genocide, a mass killing of members of the Tutsi tribe led by members of the Hutu tribe. The subjects of the photos have since made peace and are shown displaying powerful messages. One says, “Truth restores trust.” Others include “Forgiveness releases fear” and “We restored our humanity.”
“My favorite moment with every photo is seeing the moment when they laugh and you can tell these people really have reconciled,” Cowart said. “It's not a front. There is true friendship that has been rebuilt after genocide.”
Cowart traveled to Rwanda with filmmaker Laura Waters Hinson after being inspired by her documentary “As We Forgive.” He wanted to photograph the reconciliation that has taken place with the help of the As We Forgive Rwanda Initiative. Within each frame, one person directly hurt the other, either by killing members of his family or stealing his property. Each victim has expressed forgiveness, and many have befriended the men who tore their lives apart.
“In America, we can't even forgive someone if they take our parking spot,” Cowart said. But these individuals have forgiven the people who ripped away some of the most precious things in life – family, security, innocence.
Cowart said he was personally affected by their willingness to forgive. Through these images, he hopes to tell their stories of conquering fears and embracing forgiveness.
– Elizabeth Johnson, CNN
Innocent, left, killed Gasperd's brother during the 1994 Rwandan genocide. Now they stand together, reconciled, where the murder took place, holding hands. "Love is a weapon to destroy evil" is written across their arms.
LOVE HEALS
Friendship built after genocide in Rwanda.
Via: CNN
EVERYTHING.
When writing the story of your life
Don't let anyone else hold the pen.
Apple Store
Apple users and customers paying their final respects to Steve Jobs at the San Francisco Apple Store. This pretty much happened all over the country. Amazing how one man can change the world. Photo was taken at 10:06pm on October 5th, 2011
Via: Patrick Gibson
San Francisco
Remembering Steve Jobs
Guess Who?
It's baby Bjork!
She has not changed one bit!
Illustration by Enea Riboldi from "Gli sport con l'Uomo Ragno", an italian handbook for kids about sports introduced by the Spidey character, 1979.
Via: Tonto Kidd
Just remember to have fun and be safe at the end of it all, and most importantly trust that gut!
Online Dating Safety
Here are some online dating safety tips you can and should stick to:
Tips
Via: Buzzle
Tenax Vitae remake, originally by Rinaldo Carnielo, 19th century
I love the expression on the guys face. It has a total realistic quality to it. Also, the way the skeleton of death is holding the figure. Creepy!
TANIA
GAZ
As usual friends, just sipping on some coffee at 3am...and came across some funny photos by Tania Gaz. Super Mario eating ramen noodles? That's funny. Anyway if you would like to see her musings check out some photos right here.
There is a moment in the 1956 film Bus Stop that is a striking testament to the worth of Marilyn Monroe as a serious actress. It doesn’t last long–a few seconds at most–but like all great screen moments, it seeds itself into your subconscious, rendering it impossible to forget.
Via: KittyPackard
"Nothing can stop the man with the right mental attitude from achieving his goal; nothing on earth can help the man with the wrong mental attitude."
- Thomas Jefferson
The front of his shirt was emblazoned with a grammatically incorrect message: "NO REAL THAN YOU ARE." The name "Ego Leonard" was written on the back of his shirt.
Initially, some wondered if the Lego Man was a publicity stunt put on by Legoland, which recently opened a new theme park in Orlando.
But a spokeswoman for the company said that Legoland takes no credit for the stunt and is not behind it. "I wish we could say we did it, it was a brilliant guerrilla PR stunt," said Julie Estrada, the spokeswoman. A more likely explanation is that it's all part of an anonymous Dutch artist's experiment.
Google "Ego Leonard," and you'll find he has his own website, written in Dutch with some English translation.
"I am here to discover and learn about your world and thoughts," he writes. "Show me all the beautiful things that are there to admire and experience in your world. Let’s become friends, share your story with me, take me with you on a journey through beautiful meadows, words, sounds and gestures." --- Keep reading this article
The Lego Man's arrival in America was like something out of a 3-year-old's dream.
The 8-foot-tall, 100-pound fiberglass statue that resembles the little plastic guys that come in a Lego set was discovered bobbing gently in ankle-deep surf at the Siesta Key Beach in Florida, just before dawn on Tuesday.
How and why did a huge Lego Man find its way to a Florida Beach?
Via: LA Times
It's about time.
Best street art piece I've seen in a long time. It's so relevent. ;-)
...meanwhile in Taco Hell...