Testimony from a Colleague: Looking Back at Tim Hetherington’s Liberia

3 minute read

Although Tim Hetherington will best be remembered for his brave, nuanced and sensitive account of the war in Afghanistan, his first book, Long Story Bit By Bit: Liberia Retold, is an overlooked masterpiece. I saw Tim’s work for the first time when I was just discovering photography. I’d been feeding myself with classic frontline imagery — photographs dramatic and powerful, but which often hit me all at once and rarely required further meditation. Tim’s pictures were different. They were taken in the same places, but with a stately sense of quiet and purpose that I initially found confusing. Soon afterward, I moved to South Africa for the year and traveled extensively around the continent documenting similar subjects as Tim. When I returned home, I was frustrated with my photos. Experiences that had been very personal and intimate were visualized as foreign, exotic, clichéd. I revisited Tim’s pictures, and the depth of his vision crystallized. The simple portrait of a thoughtful-looking young man with a still life of a grenade. Two women at the front lines, one carrying a baby on her back and an ammunition canister on her head. A worker loading scrap metal onto a ship, a spoon stuck into his waistband and somehow dominating the frame.

When Tim released Long Story Bit by Bit several years later, I bought it immediately. There are many great books of photography on Africa, but Tim’s is one of the most important. It builds a narrative in pictures and words that discards easy melodramatics in favor of personal stories, a deep knowledge of history, a firm context, emotional honesty and nuance and an overriding sense of compassion. The collective weight of those images comes closest to that most elusive ideal of photography: the other becomes ourselves, a distant and abstract conflict becomes personal and relatable, and the great complexity of our troubled species is laid bare without judgment or pretense.

I last saw Tim a few weeks ago at my birthday party. He was surrounded by friends, Idil clutched close. He had just returned from Libya and was planning to go back. I asked why, and he said he’d “know what to do with it” this time. Important words, coming from him. At the end of the night, I hugged him goodbye and said the usual clichés. “Stay safe, man. Good luck.” We all know the risks, but they simultaneously seemed abstract. Now he’s gone, his ghostly voice floating out of video clips and interviews posted on Facebook by friends mourning his passing. He leaves us his work, a great gift to the historical understanding of some of the critical events of our time. For me, his work also contributes to that more abstract hope: that photographs, words, the collective weight of testimony changes us, makes us better people, gives hope that one distant day, there can be peace. My friend James Pomerantz put it best in describing the passing of Chris Hondros and Tim: “If everyone lived as they lived, nobody would die as they died.”

— Peter Van Agtmael

Peter Van Agtmael is a regular contributor to TIME. He is represented by Magnum Photos and author of 2nd Tour, Hope I Don’t Die.


Abandoned hospital. Tubmanberg, Bomi County, 2003.Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
LURD fighter, Tubmanberg, Bomi County. 2003. Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
Grafitti. The name above the helicopter, “Dragon Master,” refers to Mandingo frontline commander Mohammad Konneh, known as k-1. Sergeant Killi Town, Bong County, 2004. Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
Women bring rocket-propelled grenades and ammunition to an UNMIL disarmament point during the UN-sponsored DDRR (disarmament, demobilization, rehabilitation and reintegration) program. Tubmanberg, Bomi County, April 2004. Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
Jacques Klein's shoes. Monrovia. 2004. In 2003 Jacques Paul Klein, a retired Major General of the US Air Force, was appointed Special Representative and Coordinator of UN Operations in Liberia. Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
Following the comprehensive ceasefire, supporters of Sekou Conneh bring a portrait of painting of the faction leader to his temporary headquarters. The image of him is taken from a picture found in a magazine. At this time, Guinean bodyguards protect Conneh since the country remains divided between the warring parties. Tubmanberg, Boni County. 2003Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) staff arrive at the inauguration of Gyude Bryant as chairman of the National Transitional Government. Monrovia, 2003..Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
Cyril Allen, former Chairman of the National Patriotic Party (NPP) and executive member of the NPFL at the inauguration of Gyude Bryant as Chairman of the NTGL. Capitol Hill, Monrovia, 2003.Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
Wedding. Centennial Pavilion, Monrovia, 2005. Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
Graffiti on the walls of the abandoned Ducor Palace Hotel, which is home to thousands of internally displaced people (IDPs). Ducor Monrovia. 2007.Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
A squatter climbs the stairs of a darkened stairwell in the dilapidated Ducor Hotel. The former hotel provided shelter for both government fighters and internally displaced persons (IDPs) during the recent civil war. Although the conflict officially ended two years ago, many IDPs are still living in derelict buildings around the city. Ducor. Monrovia, 2007.Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
Dawn. Broad Street, Monrovia, 2005.Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
A fisherman passes a shipwreck near the port of Greenville. In the mid 1990s, a vessel arrived carrying an aid cargo of rice and fuel. The captain and crew left the ship when it developed a problem and was in danger of sinking. They returned the next day to find that the whole cargo had disappeared and the ship had been ravaged. Greenville, Sinoe County, 2005. Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
Scrap metal is shipped from Buchanan to China as part of the NTGL’s business deals. Buchanan, Grand Bassa County, 2005.Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage
Rainforest, Fishtown, River Gee. 2004. Tim Hetherington—Panos/Courtesy of Umbrage

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