
May 22, 2009, Jim Nachtwey and Anne Goldfeld at the exhibit "Struggle for Life" in Berlin, Germany
Publicizing the impact of tuberculosis on people around the world has become the passion of award-winning war photojournalist James Nachtwey, who has spent the last several years documenting the suffering and human toll taken by the disease. His photos, including images of GHC/CHC workers and patients in Cambodia, will be on view again at two upcoming events.

Nachtwey will share the photos with United States lawmakers on June 4, at an invitation-only Congressional Reception at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC.
In 2002, Goldfeld first asked Nachtwey to join her in a project that would document, through photos and words, the human toll taken by tuberculosis and AIDS worldwide, and the valiant efforts being made by people on the ground in Africa and Asia to fight the diseases.
Since then, Nachtwey has mounted major exhibits at the United Nations in New York and in Paris that included images of TB patients in Cambodia and other countries. Last fall, he launched a media campaign to educate the world about drug-resistant tuberculosis, beginning with a slide show that premiered simultaneously in outdoor venues in major cities around the world. That work, funded by a TED Prize, also included the work of the CHC/GHC.
Nachtwey’s images are graphic and disturbing, and aimed at opening the eyes of the world to the suffering caused by tuberculosis, a preventable and treatable disease. As he puts it, "I have been a witness and these pictures are my testimony.”
See Nachtwey’s TED Show at http://www.ted.com/pages/view/id/165
See Nachtwey’s 2004 award winning photo essay of CHC/GHC’s work “TB in Cambodia
Max Planck of Infectious Diseases at http://www.mpiib-berlin.mpg.de/nachtwey/nachtwey1.htm



