20 moments that make you feel the fickleness of fate
Copyright Source:
Yueke
Sun, Aug 11, 2024
PHOTO: Yueke
#1。 In 1976, Guatemala was hit by a powerful 7.5-magnitude earthquake. Amidst the chaos, a small aircraft carrying relief supplies collided with a truck near the city of Guatemala City in a split second. The boy in the photo, driven by a surge of adrenaline, harnessed his instinct for survival and made an astonishing 5-meter leap!
PHOTO: Yueke
#2. In 2022, the last photograph of Emma, a girl from Texas, USA: her father is teaching her how to use a gun, but she turns around and shoots her father in the abdomen, then shoots herself. The father survived, but Emma did not survive... And the motive for her murder was a pact with a friend of hers; they had planned to kill their families and then run away together.
PHOTO: Yueke
#3. In 1972, the Andes Air Disaster occurred, and this was the last photograph taken of the Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 before it crashed into the Andes Mountains. The passengers in the photo were laughing and chatting… However, the truly terrifying events were yet to come… The survivors of this air disaster were forced to consume the bodies of their deceased relatives, friends, and classmates in order to survive on the snowy mountain. Although they managed to survive, they had to endure lifelong mental torment… In 1993, their harrowing experience was also adapted into the film "Alive: Survival in the Andes."
PHOTO: Yueke
#4. In 1944, a group of Jews had just been transported to the Auschwitz concentration camp, and one innocent child was giving a flower to another, creating an idyllic scene of tranquility... However, hours later, everyone in the photograph had died...
PHOTO: Yueke
#5. On December 8, 1980, at 4 p.m., John Lennon, the lead singer of The Beatles, left his home in New York to sign an autograph for a fan outside. However, the fan had a gun hidden in his pocket, but hesitated. Hours later, when Lennon returned home, he was shot and killed by this avid Christian, with the motive being: he could not tolerate anyone being more popular than Jesus.
PHOTO: Yueke
#6. On May 18, 1980, the Mount St. Helens volcano in the United States experienced a catastrophic eruption, releasing energy equivalent to 1,600 times that of the Hiroshima atomic bomb. The "direct impact zone" within a radius of 13 kilometers saw its artificial and natural structures flattened and swept away... The photographer who captured these images, Robert, was only a few kilometers away from the summit. It was not until 17 days after the eruption that his body was found. He knew that he would not survive, so he placed his camera in his backpack and lay on top of it...
PHOTO: Yueke
#7. In 1973, Spanish politician, Francisco Franco's car was blown up into the sky, a powerful explosion lifting the president and his vehicle to 20 meters in the air before they were killed... Due to the immense hatred the Spanish people had for this politician, they gave him the nickname: Spain's First Astronaut...
PHOTO: Yueke
#8. In 2012, in New York City, USA, a Korean man named Han Ji-suk was pushed onto the subway platform and subsequently crushed to death by a train after a dispute with a black man. The photographer who took the photo sparked significant controversy, as people questioned whether the photographer's first priority was to save the victim or to take photographs...
PHOTO: Yueke
#9. In 2013, in the Netherlands, a wind turbine caught fire due to a fault. The intense blaze engulfed the escape routes, forcing two maintenance workers to retreat to the top of the turbine. In their final moments, they embraced each other... Ultimately, one of the workers jumped off to safety but was killed in the fall. The other worker remained on top and was burned to death...
PHOTO: Yueke
#10. In 1990, in Illinois, USA, 14-year-old Regina was kidnapped and held captive by serial killer Robert Berdella in a barn.
The photograph in question was taken under duress by the killer. Robert Berdella had cut Regina's hair, dressed her in a black dress and high heels, and then strangled her with a clothes hanger a few minutes later, killing her...
# This is a deeply disturbing account of a tragic and violent crime
PHOTO: Yueke
#11. On January 1, 2011, Filipino politician Ronaldo M. Dagosta had his life taken from him while he was taking a photograph with his family...
As Ronaldo pressed the shutter button on his camera, the killer was aiming a gun at him. His relatives had sensed the danger, but it was too late; the tragedy unfolded before their eyes. The photograph he took captured the moment of his own death and serves as a haunting testament to the events that unfolded.
PHOTO: Yueke
#12. The last backflip, Pavel Kashin was a Russian free runner known for his death-defying stunts and exceptional agility. In 2013, he performed a backflip off the edge of a 16-story building in St. Petersburg. However, he failed to land on his feet properly and ended his life as a result... His family posted his last photo on the internet as a reminder to cherish life.
PHOTO: Yueke
#13. This photograph hides a tragic story: it captures the 1998 Omagh bombing in Northern Ireland. The explosion, carried out by the Irish Republican Army (IRA), occurred on August 15, 1998. It resulted in the deaths of 29 people, including six teenagers, six children, and a woman pregnant with twins. The blast was devastating, causing significant damage to the town of Omagh.
The photograph was taken just before the explosion. It was later found among the ruins, with the camera hidden inside a red car. The man in the photograph and his children miraculously survived. However, the photographer was not so fortunate and lost his life in the explosion.
This photograph has become a symbol of the tragedy brought about by terrorism and violence during the Northern Ireland conflict, and it also serves as a reminder to cherish peace and life.
PHOTO: Yueke
#14. The Falling Man: The 9/11 attacks, a man fell from a high floor of the North Tower of the World Trade Center... It is still unclear whether he accidentally fell, or jumped to avoid the fire and smoke,
And even his identity was not confirmed at the end, ultimately becoming an anonymous victim of history, like a grain of dust, forever suspended in the air...
PHOTO: Yueke
#15. Another famous photograph from the 9/11 attacks is that of a fire truck named "Engine 118" crossing the Brooklyn Bridge for the last time, which also became the final photograph of the truck. The six firefighters on board did not survive.
The oldest firefighter among them had been serving for 30 years and was scheduled to retire at the end of the year.
PHOTO: Yueke
#16. In 1970, 14-year-old rebellious teen Keith Sapsford, upon learning that he was to be sent to a boarding school by his parents, decided to flee Australia. He sneaked into Sydney Airport and climbed into the undercarriage of an airplane...
As the plane took off, an amateur photographer was testing his telephoto lens. While checking his film at home, he discovered this shocking and heart-wrenching photograph...
PHOTO: Yueke
PHOTO: Yueke
#17. In July 2023, 71-year-old Steve Curry was resting in the shade of an informational sign in Death Valley National Park, USA. Later in the afternoon, Curry collapsed while walking to the restroom due to the extreme heat.
The highest temperature that day reached 49.4 degrees Celsius (120.9 degrees Fahrenheit). Because of the intense heat, helicopters were unable to be deployed for rescue, and unfortunately, the outcome was tragic.
PHOTO: Yueke
#18. In 1975, two brothers were playing in Sequoia National Park in the United States when they noticed their hair suddenly stand on end. Finding it amusing, they decided to take a photograph...
Unfortunately, they were unaware that this was a sign of lightning approaching, and they had been targeted by the thunder god. This photograph later became widely used to warn of the dangers of lightning strikes.
PHOTO: Yueke
PHOTO: Yueke
#19. This is the last photograph of Hakan Aysal, the husband of Semra Aysal, a Turkish couple. In June 2018, Semra, who was pregnant, was lured by her husband to the edge of a cliff. He then pushed her off the cliff, from a height of over 300 meters. She and her unborn child died as a result of the fall...
There was also a passerby who filmed them climbing the cliff and said in the video: "It's either that this man wants to dump this woman, or this woman wants to murder her husband..."
PHOTO: Yueke
PHOTO: Yueke
#20. This could be Kobe Bryant's last photograph... Thirteen-year-old Brady Smith had a photo taken with Kobe Bryant after a game at the Mamba Sports Academy.
Kobe was in a hurry, and he told the young man that he would set up for a better photo the next day. However, tragedy struck the very next day...
PARIS (AP) — Ever wondered why French is spoken during medal announcements at the Olympic Games? The truth is that while the ancient Olympics originated in Greece, its modern incarnation is very much a French affair.
The Games were revived in the 1890s by a French nobleman, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, who now holds a questionable legacy. As Paris prepares to host the 2024 Olympics, 100 years since it last held them, here’s why so much about the modern Olympics is fundamentally French.
It’s connected to a French nobleman’s efforts
Born in Paris in 1863, Coubertin dedicated his life to rejuvenating the ancient Greek tradition. His heart, fittingly and rather gruesomely, rests in the Coubertin Grove in Olympia, Greece. Coubertin envisioned the Olympics as a pacifist exercise that could foster international cooperation and peace, especially after France’s defeat in the Franco-Prussian War.
The modern Olympics were officially relaunched from Paris at the Sorbonne University in 1894 — marked by a ceremony 130 years later there on June 23 — and for many years, French was the sole language of the Games. English was added only decades later, though French remains a language of the Olympics, preserving the legacy of its founding.
While the first modern Olympics were held in Greece in 1896 to honor their ancient roots, the second Olympiad in 1900 was hosted in Paris.
“At the start of the 20th century, France was the world center of art and sports,” says Patrick Clastres, a sport historian at the University of Lausanne.
The French influenced the connection between arts and the Olympics
Coubertin also believed in the combination of “muscles and mind,” seeing the blending of sports and art as a cornerstone of the Olympic ethos. It was inspired by the ancient Greeks, who celebrated both physical and artistic excellence.
Coubertin introduced arts to the Olympics in 1912 with the “Pentathlon of the Muses” — athletics-inspired competitions in literature, painting, music, sculpture, and architecture.
For Paris 2024, Coubertin’s legacy is being evoked in arts competitions like the “Pentathlon of the Arts” at the Versailles Palace, and similar initiatives at the French National Sports Museum in Nice. Some 1,000 French towns and cities are taking part in the Cultural Olympiad, which promotes cultural events with an Olympics theme.
“The Ancient Greeks saw sports and the arts linked under the umbrella of the humanities. It’s important for Paris in particular as a culture capital to celebrate this,” says Dominique Hervieu, head of the Paris 2024 Culture Olympiad.
Coubertin’s intentions are questioned by some experts, however, as less than noble. He introduced arts to the Olympics “aiming to counteract what he thought was the vulgarization of the Games by American commercialization,” Clastres says. “Baron Pierre de Coubertin,” he says, “was a bit of a snob.”
The French Olympic legacy includes a questionable figure
Perhaps one reason why the French connection to the Olympics isn’t more widely recognized is that its founder is a persona non grata for many. Coubertin’s vision for the Olympics was inherently exclusionary, says Nicolas Bancel, a contemporary historian at the University of Lausanne. For example, he opposed the participation of women.
“He thought female Olympians would bring shame on the Games,” Bancel says.
Yet the worst charge against Coubertin was a personal letter he sent to Adolf Hitler praising the Nazi dictator and the Third Reich. Clastres notes that in the missive, Coubertin complimented Hitler on the 1936 Berlin Olympics.
The Coubertin family association says Hitler and Coubertin didn’t maintain regular correspondence. “Exchanges took place through third parties or were limited to a few polite letters,” a spokesperson for the association wrote in a statement to The Associated Press.
This week, an homage was held at the Sorbonne University in Paris to commemorate the speech Coubertin gave in 1894 to initiate the first modern Olympic Games.
International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach took part, along with dignitaries including Coubertin’s fourth-generation niece, Alexandra de Navacelle de Coubertin, and Monaco’s Princess Charlene.
“What is sometimes missing in discussions about Coubertin is to put him into the context of his time. Every person is entitled to be judged only according to their time,” Bach asserted. “France can be really proud of Coubertin and of his legacy.”
Are the Olympics a pioneering tool of French soft power?
France has long understood the potential of the Olympics as a tool of soft power, arguably making it one of the first modern examples of this concept. Soft power refers to the ability of a country to influence others through cultural or ideological means rather than military force.
Clastres points out that the 1924 Paris Games were the first modern Olympics to use media and propaganda to project national prestige. The French government used newspapers, radio, and even military resources to broadcast the Games, establishing a press center in the stadium for the first time.
In a pioneering move, France created a Sports Bureau within the French Foreign Ministry in 1920. “It was a French tool for sports propaganda for further French interests,” says Clastres. This initiative marked the first time bureaucrats were recruited to promote national interests through sports.
“The French sports power took the image monopoly. All images were produced by the French sports authority and sold to the press. The photographers were paid by the French Olympics committee,” Clastres explains.
France, devastated by World War I but retaining the prestige of a victor and considerable influence, sought to use soft power to further its international standing. “France was largely destroyed because of the war but was a victor, so had great influence in Europe. They also had control of the League of Nations and wanted to celebrate this new era in the Games in 1924,” Clastres notes.
Copyright Source: Yueke