ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Kristen Ashburn - Photographer
Kristen Ashburn's photographs bring us face-to-face with real people in desperate circumstances. Taking us to the intimate spaces of her subjects -- the victims of war, disaster, epidemic -- she elicits the sublime sadness and resolve of human beings in suffering.

Why you should listen

Kristen Ashburn's poignant photographs bring us into close contact with individuals in the midst of enormous hardship -- giving a human face to struggles that much of the world knows only as statistics and blurbs on the news. She has photographed the people of Iraq a year after the U.S. invasion, Jewish settlers in Gaza, suicide bombers, the penal system in Russia, victims of tuberculosis and the aftermath of the tsunami in Sri Lanka and Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. One of her more recent works, BLOODLINE: AIDS and Family, looked at the human impact of AIDS in Africa.

Her unflinching photographs from the Middle East, Europe, and Africa have appeared in many publications including The New Yorker, TIME, Newsweek, and Life. She has won numerous awards, including the NPPA's Best of Photojournalism Award and two World Press Photo prizes.

More profile about the speaker
Kristen Ashburn | Speaker | TED.com
TED2003

Kristen Ashburn: The face of AIDS in Africa

Foto-foto AIDS yang memilukan dari Kristen Ashburn

Filmed:
461,648 views

Dalam ceramah yang mengharukan ini, Fotografer dokumenter Kristen Ashburn membagi gambar-gambar yang tidak dapat dilupakan mengenai dampak AIDS pada manusia di Afrika.
- Photographer
Kristen Ashburn's photographs bring us face-to-face with real people in desperate circumstances. Taking us to the intimate spaces of her subjects -- the victims of war, disaster, epidemic -- she elicits the sublime sadness and resolve of human beings in suffering. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
When I first arrivedtiba in beautifulindah ZimbabweZimbabwe,
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Ketika saya pertama kali tiba di Zimbabwe yang indah,
00:15
it was difficultsulit to understandmemahami that 35 percentpersen of the populationpopulasi
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menyulitkan bagi saya untuk memahami bahwa 35 persen dari populasi
00:20
is HIVHIV positivepositif.
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positif terjangkit HIV.
00:23
It really wasn'ttidak untilsampai I was inviteddiundang to the homesrumah of people
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Pada saat saya diundang ke rumah-rumah penduduk,
00:27
that I starteddimulai to understandmemahami the humanmanusia tollkorban of the epidemicwabah.
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barulah saya mulai memahami jumlah korban dari epidemik tersebut.
00:32
For instancecontoh, this is HerbertHerbert with his grandmothernenek.
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Sebagai contoh, ini adalah Herbert dengan neneknya.
00:36
When I first metbertemu him, he was sittingduduk on his grandmother'snenek lapputaran.
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Ketika saya pertama kali berjumpa dengannya, dia sedang duduk di pangkuan neneknya.
00:40
He has been orphanedyatim piatu, as bothkedua of his parentsorangtua diedmeninggal of AIDSAIDS,
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Dia menjadi yatim piatu, karena kedua orangtuanya meninggal karena AIDS,
00:43
and his grandmothernenek tookmengambil carepeduli of him untilsampai he too diedmeninggal of AIDSAIDS.
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dan neneknya merawatnya hingga ia (Herbert) juga meninggal karena AIDS.
00:47
He likedmenyukai to sitduduk on her lapputaran
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Dia suka duduk dipangkuan neneknya
00:49
because he said that it was painfulmenyakitkan for him to lieberbohong in his ownsendiri bedtempat tidur.
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karena dia berkata bahwa menyakitkan baginya untuk berbaring di ranjangnya sendiri.
00:54
When she got up to make teateh, she placedditempatkan him in my ownsendiri lapputaran
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Ketika neneknya berdiri untuk membuat teh, dia menaruh Herbert dipangkuan saya
00:58
and I had never feltmerasa a childanak that was that emaciatedkurus.
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dan saya tidak pernah merasakan seorang anak yang sekurus itu.
01:05
Before I left, I actuallysebenarnya askedtanya him if I could get him something.
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Sebelum saya pergi, saya bertanya apakah saya bisa memberikan dia sesuatu.
01:09
I thought he would askmeminta for a toymainan, or candyPermen,
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Saya pikir dia akan meminta sebuah mainan, atau sebuah permen,
01:11
and he askedtanya me for slipperssandal,
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dan dia meminta saya sandal,
01:14
because he said that his feetkaki were colddingin.
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karena dia berkata bahwa kakinya dingin.
01:17
This is JoyceJoyce who'ssiapa -- in this picturegambar -- 21.
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Ini adalah Joyce yang dalam foto ini berumur 21.
01:20
SingleTunggal motheribu, HIVHIV positivepositif.
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Seorang ibu tunggal, positif HIV.
01:23
I photographeddifoto her before and after
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Saya memotretnya sebelum dan sesudah
01:25
the birthkelahiran of her beautifulindah babybayi girlgadis, IssaIssa.
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kelahiran anak bayi perempuannya yang cantik, Issa.
01:28
And I was last weekminggu walkingberjalan on LafayetteLafayette StreetStreet in ManhattanManhattan
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Dan saya minggu lalu sedang berjalan di Lafayette Street di Manhattan
01:31
and got a call from a womanwanita who I didn't know,
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dan mendapat telepon dari seorang wanita yang saya tidak kenal,
01:34
but she calledbernama to tell me that JoyceJoyce had passedberlalu away
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tapi dia menelepon untuk memberitahukan saya bahwa Joyce telah meninggal
01:37
at the ageusia of 23.
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pada umur 23.
01:39
Joyce'sJoyce motheribu is now takingpengambilan carepeduli of her daughterputri,
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Ibu Joyce sekarang merawat anak perempuan Joyce,
01:42
like so manybanyak other ZimbabweanZimbabwe childrenanak-anak
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seperti kebanyakan anak-anak Zimbabwe lainnya
01:44
who'vesiapa been orphanedyatim piatu by the epidemicwabah.
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yang telah menjadi yatim piatu oleh karena epidemik ini.
01:46
So a fewbeberapa of the storiescerita.
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Jadi beberapa dari cerita-cerita.
01:48
With everysetiap picturegambar,
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Tapi dengan setiap foto,
01:50
there are individualsindividu who have fullpenuh liveshidup
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Ada individu-individu yang punya hidup yang penuh
01:55
and storiescerita that deservepantas to be told.
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dan cerita-cerita yang patut untuk diceritakan.
01:57
All these picturesfoto-foto are from ZimbabweZimbabwe.
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Semua foto-foto ini adalah dari Zimbabwe.
03:42
ChrisChris AndersonAnderson: KirstenKirsten, will you just take one minutemenit,
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Chris Anderson: Kristen, dapatkah anda menyediakan satu menit,
03:44
just to tell your ownsendiri storycerita of how you got to AfricaAfrika?
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untuk menceritakan bagaimana anda sampai di Afrika?
03:49
KirstenKirsten AshburnAshburn: MmmMmm, goshAstaga.
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Kristen Ashburn: Mmm, astaga.
03:50
CACA: Just --
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CA: Hanya --
03:51
KAKA: ActuallyBenar-benar, I was workingkerja at the time, doing productionproduksi
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KA: Sebetulnya, saya sedang bekerja pada waktu itu, melakukan produksi
03:55
for a fashionmode photographerjuru potret.
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untuk seorang fotografer mode.
03:57
And I was constantlyselalu readingbacaan the NewBaru YorkYork TimesKali,
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Dan saya terus menerus membaca New York Times,
04:00
and stunnedtertegun by the statisticsstatistik, the numbersangka.
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dan tertegun dengan statistik-statistik, angka-angka.
04:04
It was just frighteningmenakutkan.
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Benar-benar menakutkan.
04:06
So I quitberhenti my jobpekerjaan
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Jadi saya berhenti dari pekerjaan saya
04:08
and decidedmemutuskan that that's the subjectsubyek that I wanted to tacklemengatasi.
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dan memutuskan bahwa itulah subjek yang ingin saya kerjakan.
04:12
And I first actuallysebenarnya wentpergi to BotswanaBotswana, where I spentmenghabiskan a monthbulan --
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Dan saya sebetulnya pertama pergi ke Botswana, dimana saya menghabiskan sebulan --
04:16
this is in DecemberDesember 2000 --
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ini pada Desember 2000 --
04:18
then wentpergi to ZimbabweZimbabwe for a monthbulan and a halfsetengah,
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kemudian pergi ke Zimbabwe untuk 1½ bulan
04:21
and then wentpergi back again this MarchMaret 2002
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dan kemudian balik kesana lagi pada Maret 2002 ini
04:24
for anotherlain monthbulan and a halfsetengah in ZimbabweZimbabwe.
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untuk 1½ bulan lagi di Zimbabwe.
04:27
CACA: That's an amazingmenakjubkan storycerita, thank you.
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CA: Cerita yang sangat mengagumkan, terima kasih.
04:29
KBKB: ThanksTerima kasih for lettingmembiarkan me showmenunjukkan these.
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KB: Terima kasih untuk membiarkan saya menunjukkan --

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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Kristen Ashburn - Photographer
Kristen Ashburn's photographs bring us face-to-face with real people in desperate circumstances. Taking us to the intimate spaces of her subjects -- the victims of war, disaster, epidemic -- she elicits the sublime sadness and resolve of human beings in suffering.

Why you should listen

Kristen Ashburn's poignant photographs bring us into close contact with individuals in the midst of enormous hardship -- giving a human face to struggles that much of the world knows only as statistics and blurbs on the news. She has photographed the people of Iraq a year after the U.S. invasion, Jewish settlers in Gaza, suicide bombers, the penal system in Russia, victims of tuberculosis and the aftermath of the tsunami in Sri Lanka and Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. One of her more recent works, BLOODLINE: AIDS and Family, looked at the human impact of AIDS in Africa.

Her unflinching photographs from the Middle East, Europe, and Africa have appeared in many publications including The New Yorker, TIME, Newsweek, and Life. She has won numerous awards, including the NPPA's Best of Photojournalism Award and two World Press Photo prizes.

More profile about the speaker
Kristen Ashburn | Speaker | TED.com