BOP 2005 Still Photo Winners > Feature Picture Story

1st
Deanne Fitzmaurice, San Francisco Chronicle
2nd
Jim Gehrz, Minneapolis Star Tribune
3rd
Lisa Krantz, SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS
HM1
Carol Guzy, The Washington Post
1st Place
Deanne Fitzmaurice, San Francisco Chronicle
Images within this entry:
1, 2, 3 ... 12 >

On Oct. 10, 2003, as he walked home from school, a 9-year-old Iraqi boy named Saleh Khalaf picked up something on the roadside that looked to him like a toy ball. Seconds later it exploded - ripping open his abdomen, tearing off his hands, blowing out his left eye, and mortally wounding his older brother. Days afterward, Saleh's father, Raheem, persuaded doctors at a U.S. Air Force base to perform emergency surgery to keep his son alive. It marked the beginning of an international mercy mission to save the boy whose indomitable spirit earned him the nickname Lion Heart. The mission would take Saleh and Raheem to Children's Hospital in Oakland, California for treatment. After many months and dozens of surgeries, Saleh's condition began to improve but his heart was still heavy. He prayed that he would one day be reunited with his mother, Hadia and his younger siblings. Raheem and Saleh were granted asylum, and soon afterward their family received permission to join them in the U.S. In December 2004, Hadia and the children left Iraq and made the arduous journey to Oakland and to a new life. Throughout the ordeal Saleh's father, Raheem, stayed at the boy's side, ready with a comforting touch, like this.

Kata Digital Rucksack Photo Mechanic Adobe Creative Suite 2 News Photographer Kata Raincover

NPPA Marketplace:

Join the NPPA
NPPA members receive a wide range of benefits, from educational opportunities to mentoring, exclusive discounts, insurance options, business tips, and much more.