4. Michel duCille (January 24, 1956 – December 11, 2014) was an
American photojournalist who won three Pulitzer Prizes.
He shared the 1986 Pulitzer Prize for Spot News Photography with
fellow Miami Herald staff photographer Carol Guzy for their coverage
of the November 1985 eruption of Colombia's Nevado del Ruiz
volcano.
He won the 1988 Feature Photography Pulitzer for a photo essay on
crack cocaine addicts in a Miami housing project ("photographs
portraying the decay and subsequent rehabilitation of a housing
project overrun by the drug crack").
As "du Cille" he shared the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service
with Washington Post reporters Dana Priest and Anne Hull, for
"exposing mistreatment of wounded veterans at Walter Reed
Hospital, evoking a national outcry and producing reforms by federal
officials."
6. Michel du Cille died while on assignment in Liberia.
He collapsed while returning on foot from a village
where he was working on a project; he was taken to a
hospital but was declared dead upon arrival of an
apparent heart attack.
Du Cille, who documented international and domestic
crises for the past four decades, wrote about his
experience covering Ebola in October. He stated that
it was "profoundly difficult not to be a feeling human
being while covering the Ebola crisis... sometimes,
the harshness of a gruesome scene simply cannot be
sanitized. [...] But I believe that the world must see
the horrible and dehumanizing effects of Ebola."
7. Moses Tarkulah stands by as colleagues enter the suspected Ebola case ward in Monrovia, Liberia, on Sept. 16, 2014.
8. People in Liberia are traveling more by buses and taxis on Nov. 3, 2014, in Monrovia, Liberia.
9. Sept. 13, 2014 The body of a man is unattended while peo ple move through a courtyard in New Kru Town. The man died early in the morning, but his body was not
picked up until after 3 p.m.
10. Sept. 20, 2014 A 17-year-old boy was in a room for two day s before a team of Liberian health workers could retrieve his body. Health workers are overwhelmed with
a constant stream of new patients since the Ebola outbreak.
11. Sept. 16, 2014 Two people suspected of grand theft get sprayed down by a health worker after the man vomited in the West Point Magisterial court during his
arraignment. An ambulance took the couple to an Ebola Treatment Unit, at which time the two promptly escaped.
12. Sept. 21, 2014 A scene photographed from the top of a house that overlooks a beach along the Atlantic Ocean from the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Monrovia.
Monrovia is the most populated city in Liberia and the capital of the country.
13. Jatu Zombo and her 5-year-old son, who fell ill outside the JFK treatment facility on Sept. 13, 2014, in Monrovia.
14. Sogbondo Raylo carries a bundle of freshly harvested rice on her head on Nov. 6, 2014 in Foya, Liberia.
15. Members of the ambulance team rest after retrieving two suspected Ebola patients to the Bong County Ebola Treatment Unit on Sept. 17, 2014.
16. A woman lays dead outside the Redemption Hospital on Sept. 20, 2014, in Monrovia, Liberia.
17. Two people lay dead on the floor inside the critical ward of the Redemption Hospital, in one of the poorest neighborhoods of Monrovia, on Sept. 20, 2014.
18. Standing at the screen door on Sept. 21, 2014, in Monrovia, Liberia.
19. Mamie Harris holds Agnes Sandee on Sept. 15, 2014, in Unification Town, Liberia.
20. People load bags of Bulgur-wheat and cooking oil after they received a share of foof items from WFP's food distribution on Nov. 6, 2014 in Kolba City, Liberia.
21. Workers at the new Ebola Treatment Unit, now called MOD, which is located on an old unfinished Ministry of Defense property on Nov. 1, 2014, in Monrovia, Liberia.
22. Sept. 13, 2014 A team of MSF (Doctors Without Borders) h ealth workers at ELWA3 Ebola Treatment Unit take a break from caring for Ebola patients.The team
handles severe cases, including body removal.
23. Alexander Morris faints from the heat inside a protective suit, while the Lofa County Health Department team buries his sister on Nov. 7, 2014, in Voinjama, Liberia.
24. Sept. 16, 2014 The body of a 12-year-old boy is buried without ceremony near the Bong County Ebola Treatment Unit in Liberia. The boy died shortly after arriving by
ambulance.
25. Sept. 13, 2014 Workers put a man on a stretcher upon arriving at a Doctors Without Borders treatment facility in Monrovia. The man was too weak to walk and
showed symptoms of Ebola.
26. Sept. 13, 2014 Doctors Without Borders workers spray disinfectant inside a taxi used to transport a man to their facility.
27. Wencke Petersen, a Doctors Without Borders health worker, talks to a man through a chain link gate in September, when she was doing patient assessment at the
front gate of an Ebola treatment unit.
28. Esther Tokpah, 11 an orphan, weeps as Dr Jerry Brown tries to console her before she was released from care in Monrovia
29. A sick child that health workers called Cynthia waits for dead bodies to be removed before she can enter the Redemption Hospital
30. Ebola survivor, Makula Dunor a nurse, poses for a portrait on Nov. 7, 2014 in Monrovia, Liberia.
31. Klubo Mulbah, a survivor from the ELWA 2 Ebola Treatment Unit-- directed by Dr. Jerry Brown, from poses for a portrait on Nov. 9, 2014 in Monrovia, Liberia.
32. Decontee Davis, an Ebola survivor, spends a moment alone pondering during a music video launch party to raise awareness on Ebola, Nov. 12, 2014 in Monrovia,
Liberia.
33. Sept. 21, 2014 A scene photographed from the top of a house that overlooks a beach along the Atlantic Ocean from the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Monrovia.
Monrovia is the most populated city in Liberia and the capital of the country.
34. The eruption of Colombia's Nevado Del Ruiz volcano
By Carol Guzy and Michel duCille The Miami Herald
Carol Guzy and Michel duCille's photos document the
devastation caused by the eruption of the Nevado del Ruiz
volcano in Colombia in 1985. They were awarded the Pulitzer
Prize in Spot News Photography in 1986.
35. Two rescue helicopters pull survivors of the mudslide to
safer ground. The Miami Herald, Michel du Cille
36. People try to identify their relatives the day after the mudslide. The Miami Herald, Michel du Cille
37. An arm frozen in time, as if the victim was trying to swim to safety, caught in the mudslide in Armero. The Miami Herald, Michel du Cille
38. More than 25,0000 people were killed in the mudslide after
an eruption of the volcano Nevada del Ruiz, which covered
the town of Armero Columbia. Although rescuers tried to
aid survivors, the devastating tragedy of 1985 claimed most
of the town, which later became a cemetery of sacred
ground. The Miami Herald, Michel du Cille
39. A man carries another away from the wreckage left in the aftermath of the massive mudslide that struck Armero. The Miami Herald, Michel du Cille
40. More tha n 25,0000 people were killed in the mudslide afte r an eruption of the volcano Nevada del Ruiz, which covered the town of Armero Columbia. Although
rescuers tried to aid survivors, the devastating tragedy claimed most of the town, which later became a cemetery of sacred ground. The Miami Herald, Michel du
Cille
41. Omayra Sanchez looks up from her watery grave.
The 13 year old girl was trapped in the mudslide
which covered her town of Armero Columbia, killing
more than 25,000 people. Although rescuers tried to
free her, they were unsuccessful. After 59 hours,
she died, becoming a sad symbol of the devastating
tragedy. The Miami Herald, Michel du Cille
42. A woman cries after identifying one of her
relatives the day after the mudslide. The Miami
Herald, Michel du Cille
43. Rescuers use whatever means they could to get survivors of the mudslide to safety, including this wheelbarrow. The Miami Herald, Michel du Cille
44. Helping hands try to wash the mud and sand from the face of a survivor of the disaster. The Miami Herald, Michel du Cille
45. Photo essay on crack cocaine addicts in a Miami
By Michel du Cille The Miami herald
Michel duCille's photos document the calamity of crack addiction in
Miami. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography
in 1988.
46. The scen e at night at the apartment complex turned crack cocaine supermarket on the corner of Northeast Second Avenue and 71st Street. As the crack cocaine
epidemic spiraled around the country Miami became ground zero for crack addiction. One public Housing project was dubbed the Graveyard by local residents.
47. A construction worker, who had just left work, smokes crack using a soda can as his pipe.
48. A woman holds a crack pipe made
from a small plastic liquor bottle.
49. A woman named Pat says she turned to prostitution to feed her crack habit.
50. A man climbs through the window of an empty
apartment.
51. A man lo oks through a broken window of an empty apartm ent. Unoccupied apartments became the crack den for many of the addicts at the apartment complex
turned crack cocaine supermarket on the corner of Northeast Second Avenue and 71st Street
52. A crack addicted prostitute sleeps on an old mattress in an empty apartment.
53. A woman who had been using crack most of the night, sleeps in an abandoned car.
54. Rudy, a resident with small children, found herself
addicted to crack cocaine. As the crack cocaine
epidemic spiraled around the country Miami became
ground zero for crack addiction.
55. Miami Police perform a sting operation to arrest users and
dealer of crack cocaine at a public housing project, dubbed
the Graveyard by local residents.
56. A line of people are under arrest for buying crack during a Miami Police a sting operation to bust users and dealers of crack cocaine at a public housing project,
dubbed the Graveyard by local residents.
57. Walter Reed Hospital
The Washington Post
By Dana Priest, Anne Hull and Michel duCille
The 2008 Pulitzer Prize Winners
Public Service
The Washington Post
Dana Priest, Anne Hull and Michel duCille for their series on the
treatment of military veterans at Walter Reed Army Medical
Center in Washington.
58. U.S. Arm y Spc. Jeremy Duncan indicates mold on the wall of Building 18, an outpatient facility at Walter Reed Army Medical center. "Building 18 was like the
ghetto," he said, but it had television and video games. The Washington Post
59. Josh Cal loway, left, says goodbye after visiting his friend Denver Rearick for a weeekend. Rearick says that multiple deployments to Iraq are taking their toll on
soldiers. "The good things is, you'll relax in a year," he said. "The bad news is, in a year they'll send you back."
60. Wounded soldiers are required to attend early morning fo rmation where they report to the brigade commanders of Walter Reed Medical Center's new Warrior
Transition Brigade. These soldiers spend the rest of the day in treatment or dealing with bureaucracy. The Washington Post/Getty
61. Robert R iddle, dying of melanoma that spread to his brain , falls into a drug induced sleep a few days near the end of his life. Family friend Dan Baggio comforts
Riddle’s wife, Rebecca. They are pictured in a special room at Walter Reed in 2007 The Washington Post
62. Lt. Gen. Kevin C. Kiley, the surgeon general of the Army, listens to opening statements at a U.S. Senate hearing on Department of Defense's medical programs at
Walter Reed. Kiley later was forced to resign as surgeon general. The Washington Post
65. cast In Memoriam: Michel du Cille (1956 – 2014)
images and text credit www.
www.washingtonpost.com
www.theguardian.com
media.miamiherald.com
time.com
Music Hans Zimmer
created olga.e.
thanks for watching