Requiem (cont'd)
The exhibition, "Requiem The Vietnam Collection", paid tribute
to all 135 photojournalists, from all sides of the conflict, who died or went
missing during the war in Vietnam and neighboring countries. "The Vietnam
Collection", consisting of more than 300 photos, was the work of a group
of Kentucky civic leaders and executives, most Vietnam War veterans, together
with the Office of the Governor and financial sponsorship from individuals and
corporations across the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
The photographs came from the award winning book Requiem By The Photographers
Who Died in Vietnam and Indochina, published in 1997, and compiled by Horst
Faas and Tim Page. Both covered the war. Page was a photographer for UPI who
also freelanced for Time and Life magazines. Faas, a two-time Pulitzer Prize
winner, was the Saigon photo editor for the Associated Press from 1963 to 1972.
What originally began as a memorial by Page to two friends, photographers Dana
Stone and Sean Flynn who died in Cambodia, became a much bigger project to collect
the works of all the photojournalists who died in the line of fire. Many of
the photos were done by men and women from Vietnam, North and South, which had
not been seen before by the public. While it may not be the most complete collection
of photographs from the Vietnam War, many have said that it may be the most
important.
"Requiem The Vietnam Collection" was assembled by the Kentucky
Requiem Project Steering Committee, initially, as a tribute to the lost photojournalists
and to the men and women who served in Vietnam from that state. Kentucky had
the second highest participation in Vietnam, on a per capita basis, of any state
in the country. The Committee was Chaired by F. Richard Lennon, a former US
Marine Corps officer who served in Vietnam in 1968 and who initiated the Kentucky
exhibition along with Faas and Page.
A second objective of the Kentucky Steering Committee was to create a one-of-a-kind
outreach program by arranging to donate the entire collection of photos to the
people of Vietnam and to sponsor a similar exhibition in Hanoi.
Upon the closing of the exhibition in Kentucky, the collection of photos was
conveyed by Governor Paul E. Patton to representatives of Vietnam as a gift
from the citizens of Kentucky. It was donated as a gift of "Hope, Healing
& History" with the wish that we never forget the sacrifices of the
photojournalists who took these amazing photos and the men and women who are
captured in them.
Said Lennon, at the subsequent opening of the exhibition in Hanoi in March 2000,
"these photos are a tribute to and some of the best works of the 135 photojournalists,
from all sides, killed or missing while covering the conflicts in Vietnam and
Indochina. This exhibition is a tribute to their artistry, their professionalism
and their dedication to their craft".
"This Kentucky-sponsored exhibition is also dedicated to the men and women,
from both sides of the conflict, who served their respective countries so honorably
and admirably. The photos communicate, better than can words, the conditions
under which these men and women served. Irrespective of individual political
views and differences, their sacrifices can never be minimized nor forgotten".
The exhibition, opening to large crowds in Hanoi in early 2000, was accomplished
in cooperation with the Vietnamese Ministry of Culture & Information, the
Vietnam News Agency and the Vietnam Association of Photographic Artists. The
opening received broad coverage in the media, with reporters from CNN, Reuters,
the Associated Press, the Vietnam News Agency, the China News and a German film
crew in attendance. More than 50 Vietnamese reporters and/or photographers covered
the story.
At opening ceremonies, Horst Faas remarked " the photographs have now come
home to remain in Vietnam and to be a permanent memorial to the men and women
who took them and died here". Said Tim Page, "I think it is one of
the most incredible bodies of photographic work ever assembled
the fact
is that so many of these frames are the last ones retrieved from inside cameras,
the last roll of film, its like touching the spirit of the people who
recorded those images".
Following a highly successful showing in Hanoi, Vietnamese officials decided
to transport the collection to Ho Chi Minh City, calling the exhibition an act
of remembrance and a highlight of events intended to mark the 25th anniversary
of the end of the war on April 30, 2000. There, the
"Requiem The Vietnam Collection Exhibition" was put on display
initially for two weeks. However, it remained open for almost three months as
a result of unexpected and unusually large crowds. For most of the visitors
it was the first time to see these photos both those from the Western
photojournalist as well as from the Vietnamese. Emotional moments were visible
virtually every day as veterans, friends and family members visited the exhibition
to remember their KIA and MIA loved ones.
Following the closing in Ho Chi Minh City in late summer 2000, "Requiem
The Vietnam Collection" became two exhibitions, with Faas and Page
donating their private collection of another set of the photos to the Vietnamese.
This was done to accommodate Vietnamese officials who, realizing the power and
interest of these photographs, made a decision to create permanent displays
in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City after the collection of photos complete
tours of other major cities in Vietnam in 2001.
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