"As they passed the rows of houses they saw through the open doors that men were sweeping and dusting and washing dishes, while the women sat around in groups, gossiping and laughing. "What has happened?" the Scarecrow asked a sad-looking man with a bushy beard, who wore an apron and was wheeling a baby-carriage along the sidewalk. "Why, we've had a revolution, your Majesty -- as you ought to know very well," replied the man; "and since you went away the women have been running things to suit themselves. I'm glad you have decided to come back and restore order, for doing housework and minding the children is wearing out the strength of every man in the Emerald City." "Hm!" said the Scarecrow, thoughtfully. "If it is such hard work as you say, how did the women manage it so easily?" "I really do not know," replied the man, with a deep sigh. "Perhaps the women are made of cast-iron.""

- L. Frank Baum, "The Land of Oz"
Life Is More Important Than News

Finally, someone understood that.

Two News Teams dug out a little girl in Haiti.

He is the only Australian TV cameraman ever to win the Gold Walkley for journalism but when Richard Moran heard the soft, desperate cry of a baby girl beneath the rubble in Haiti, he put down his camera and started to dig.

"He was up to his waist, lifting out pieces of concrete," says Nine Network reporter Robert Penfold, who was with him.

"And then, out of the ruins came this little girl, and I will never forget it. She did not cry. She looked astonished, almost as if she was seeing the world for the first time".

Confusing local viewers, however, was that both Nine and its rival, Seven, were saying they helped bring the little girl out, and the footage seen around the world was indeed of Seven's Mike Amor, standing above the hole in the ground.

He reaches forward to take the dusty little girl, pours water over her head to clear away dust, and then gives her something to drink.

Nine doesn't have that footage, and its team was yesterday feeling a bit of the kick in the guts that good journalists get when rivals have exclusive footage of something so marvellous but, as Amor himself said: "That moment, it was beyond news.

"The focus of everybody on that hill was the little girl, and as any of us will tell you, it was Deiby who went into that hole, and dug, and dug, until he got that little girl out. He's the hero."

Deiby Celestino is the Nine Network's fixer (interpreter, and sometime security guy).

He had gone "up the hill" (meaning, to an area outside Port-au-Prince, where many homes were destroyed) with the Nine team, because Save the Children promised to make an Australian aid worker available for interviews. Seven was there, too. While they were waiting, locals told them they could hear a baby crying under the rubble. "We walked perhaps 3m across this hillside of completely collapsed homes," says Penfold. "We had to walk over sheets of tin, and then climb up over concrete, and then jump down, on to another slab of concrete, to where four men were standing, pointing, and you could hear crying, from somewhere underneath."

Moran, who won the highest award for journalism, the Gold Walkley, in 2003 for his coverage of the Canberra bushfires, put his camera with a microphone attached into a cavity, and Penfold said: "It was gut-wrenching. "There were slabs of concrete all around, and we couldn't see what we could do, and at the same time, we couldn't walk away."

He said Deiby, "who is this short, wiry, muscly guy", said "I think I can get in there" and down he went. Mr Celestino told The Australian: "I could hear her . . . I had to keep going." He called out in Creole "Come to me?" and then, out of the darkness, the 18-month-old's face emerged.

Of seeing the toddler emerge from the rubble, Amor said: "I haven't seen anything so remarkable since the birth of my own child. "The emotion for all of us has been incredible."
If I understood correctly, two rival newsteams teamed up momentarily to help rescue this girl. But only one got footage, the other cared more about the girl.

When it says that the camera was put into a cavity, does that mean they pointed it so they could see down there where the girl was, not for the purpose of getting news footage, but for the purpose of trying to rescue the girl? That's how I understood it. Channel Nine used its camera to find the girl, and Channel Seven used its camera to capture the whole event while men from both teams helped to rescue her. Am I understanding the event correctly?

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Comments on "Life Is More Important Than News":
1. RobertRe - 01/26/2010 11:37 am CST

It seems that the cameraman and fixer from Nine did the digging, while the reporter for Seven stood at the edge of the hole and recieved the little girl up into his arms. It may be that the Nine camera was used to look deeper into the hole or around a corner or obstacle, fer usre the Seven camera and crew were at the ready for the report! The fixer may have been the only one small enough to fit between broken and disheveled slabs of concrete near to the girl. This is my take!

2. Bill - 01/26/2010 6:29 pm CST

In reading this I was immediately reminded of this post where a photographer maintained a tragic detachment to human suffering . . . just to get a picture (said photographer ended up committing suicide years later, if I remember correctly)

3. Brian in Fresno - 01/26/2010 6:51 pm CST

Yes, the photographer that made that picture did commit suicide. I'm happy to report that journalists, both writers and photographers, have a good history of putting people first even when cameras don't record it. You might recall the photo of the Vietnamese girl burned by napalm running down the road. The photographer was Nick Ut who works for AP in Los Angeles. He won the Pulitzer Prize for that photo. After he made the photo he put the girl in his car and drove her to the nearest hospital. That girl is now a woman living in the US and is good friends with Mr. Ut.
I've also seen horrific, frankly inhuman treatment of people by photographers. May God have mercy on our sins.

4. salguod - 01/27/2010 11:43 am CST

There was video last week of Anderson Cooper (I think) from CNN who was reporting on looting or something in Haiti when some thugs threw chunks of concrete from a roof hitting a boy, hitting him in the head. Cooper immediately drops his camera and grabs the bloody boy and gets him out of harm's way. After setting him on his feet, he's clearly not coherent and Cooper picks him up again (setting his camera down again) and rushes him to a makeshift barrier that the locals had erected and hands him over to someone on the other, 'safe' side. From there, he didn't know what happened to him.

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