NOS News Photo | @1MEMO 20240517

NOS News Photo | @1MEMO 20240517_1

NOS News • today, 10:09
French police shot dead man who wanted to set fire to Rouen synagogue…

The visible caption on this photo here is ‘ANP’, the in Holland well known almost 100 year old press agency (similar to eg Reuters) distributing news to other professional media like newspapers and our national tv broadcaster .

Annoying … (knowing) you now need to check every news item image (photo/still) of the Dutch national news broadcaster NOS to find out whether that image really is a news photo or actually fake … just an illustration from some archive.

Archive image – ANP | https://www.anp.nl | NOS News Photo | @1MEMO 20240517_2

You need to click this image in the post to be able to read the small print additional caption, this is just an archive image (dutch: archiefbeeld) … no news.


I appreciate the excellent NOS public national news broadcaster in the Netherlands. And, using archive footage may help storytelling in documentary work. However, here, watching the NOS site on an iPad or desktop PC, it’s obvious the design of the site creates a problem , since posting a news item requires using at least one image. With no news photo available , the best alternative here appears to be using text for the featured image.

Else, best, show the notice ‘Archive image’ clearly visible at first glance in the post’s image… (?)

Citation info : NOS News Photo | @1MEMO 20240517

Update

Update 20240517 – 1546 CET minor text changes

Update 20240517 – 2224 CET : Noticed that (i) NOS site post has been updated last at 16:18 CET ; and image has been replaced with actual news image (caption : Police investigations at the Rouen synagogue | dutch : Politie doet onderzoek bij de synagoge in Rouen )

Update 20240517 _ 2237 CET : screenshot new image

Refugee Night | @1MEMO 20240516


Night of the Refugee, Jun 15/16, 2024. The Netherlands Refugee Foundation ( dutch : Stichting Vluchteling) provides humanitarian aid in the world’s most serious humanitarian crises. In the event of an acute emergency, they work with local partners to provide life-saving aid such as medical care, shelter, food and clean drinking water. We are walking the Night of the Refugee to raise money for this aid. Together we show our solidarity with refugees. Citation info : Refugee Night | @1MEMO 20240516

Resistance | Miracles Moment #2 | 20240515

Faces of the attackers and escapees of Transport XX reflecting in the windows of this train leaving Boortmeerbeek station direction Mechelen, during the commemoration May 15, 2011 of Transport XX to Auschwitz.

The night of April 19, 1943, the 20th convoy left the transit camp Kazerne Dossin in Mechelen, with 1631 jewish deportees in circa 33 cattle cars heading for Auschwitz.

After passing the Boortmeerbeek train station, the three young Brussels’ heroes Youra Livschitz, Robert Maistriau, and Jean Franklemon, attacked this 20th convoy, opening one of the cars, and liberating 17 people.

A total of 238 deportees managed to escape from this death train before the Belgian border, by opening the cattle cars from the inside, with the help of some 20 jewish resistance fighters among the deportees, and also a second hold-up shortly after midnight at Korbeek-Lo.

The total number of 238 escapees (data update April 2024) , includes (i) the 17 people liberated during the attack in Boortmeerbeek, (ii) the escape of the 6-year-old boy Aron Luksenberg (a recent finding by Jo Peeters) , and (iii) the escape of Viviane , who escaped in the womb of her three-months pregnant mother Isabella Weinreb-Castegnier, and was born 6 months later in Brussels (Miracles.Media).

Just over half of the number of escapees – a total of 122 – managed to escape permanently — 26 escapees were shot dead when they jumped, and 90 escapees were recaptured and redeported…

Notes

Reflection shows the Transport XX – installation Boortmeerbeek, of four large canvases of three meters high and five meters wide placed ‘wagon-like’ next to each other, parallel to the Mechelen-Leuven railway line, with portraits of deported Jews who managed to escape from the XXth transport on Belgian territory. The first of the four large canvases also features the three young men who stopped the train, Youra (Georges) Livschitz, Jean Franklemon and Robert Maistriau.

The Transport XX – installation Boortmeerbeek was created for the 2007 Boortmeerbeek commemoration of Transport XX, with the theme: ‘Give Them a face’, and later commemoration events, thanks to Marc Michiels (commemoration coordinator) in collaboration with Marjan Verplancke and co-workers of the project “Give Them a Face” of Kazerne Dossin / Jewish Museum of Deportation and Resistance in Mechelen (Belgium) . Portraits of escapees are mostly from the State Archives, Brussels, digitized by Kazerne Dossin. Boortmeerbeek.

Citation info : Resistance | Miracles Moment #2 | Miracles•Media | 20240515 | ISAN 0000-0007-36B4-0002-A-0000-0000-7 | TakeNode bc70ea7c-278e-4f84-982c-4e926030c405

Flow | Miracles Moment #1 | 20240513

Film still : Flow | Miracles Moment #1 | Miracles•Media | 20240513

Brussels, Belgium. February 28, 2009.
Encounter with the TRANSPORT XX installation outside at the Royal park in Brussels, that presented 1200 portraits of Jews deported from Mechelen (Belgium) to Auschwitz, April 19, 1943.

That Saturday morning, Michel van der Burg is filmed by his helpmate camerawoman Sonja van der Burg , while he has started filming, in a flow, in one long take of ca 2.5 minutes, close-up all portraits of the bottom row of the installation.

A long moment – a special moment – the first of the new series ‘Miracles Moment’ started today, May 13, 2024.

Notes

Thank you: Marjan Verplancke and co-workers of the Kazerne Dossin / Jewish Museum of Deportation and Resistance in Mechelen (Belgium) of project “Give Them a Face”. Kazerne Dossin digitized the photo’s, that mostly are from the “National State Archives of Belgium. Ministry of Justice, Public Safety Office, Foreigner’s Police, individual files“.

The short film ‘TRANSPORT XX — installation Brussels’ was published two months later, April 19, 2009.

Citation info : Flow | Miracles Moment #1 | Miracles•Media | 20240513 | ISAN 0000-0007-36B4-0001-C-0000-0000-1 | TakeNode ae348296-5e06-4df0-b6ce-e29d236be9dd