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The unfolding events in the run up to the Iraq war had given Tom
Hurndall, a 21-year-old British photojournalist, an increased
curiosity and desire to journey to the Middle East. In February
2003, initially as an observer alongside the Human Shields, he left
with a passion to make a difference, to record and photograph the
truth for himself. We follow his journey first from Baghdad, then
to Amman and the Al-Rweished refugee camp in Jordan, and finally on
to the town of Rafah in Gaza close to the Egyptian border, where US
peaceworker Rachel Corrie had been killed just weeks previously, On
April 11th, unarmed and wearing and internationally recognized
orange peacekeeper jacket, he was severely wounded while carrying
Palestinian children to safety. He died nine months later in a
London hospital. The book follows Tom's life and thoughts in the
final weeks leading up to the shooing. Motivated by a sense of
injustice and striving to remain objective we are drawn into his
increasingly serious photographs and words, through extracts from
his diary, emails and poems. It is realised through collaboration
with the Hurndall family on the sixth anniversary of the fateful
day, and with the recent Channel 4 film-documentary 'The Shooting
of Thomas Hurndall'.
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