Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - 30 extremely rare historical photos, you will have a deeper understanding of human nature after reading them

30 extremely rare historical photos, you will have a deeper understanding of human nature after reading them

Thousands of years from now, how will our descendants know us? Perhaps these rare historical photos are the best reference. These scratches are not from a horror movie, but from the walls of the Auschwitz concentration camp, showing the desperate struggles of the victims before their death. These bloodstains are not from horror movies. During the Rwanda genocide, a group of Tutsi children tried to climb over the wall with injuries in order to avoid being hunted by the Hutu. A group of Soviet soldiers stand at the Majdanek concentration camp in Poland, looking at the mountain of ashes. This is not the Fallout series, but a primary school in Liverpool during World War I. During the war in Britain, the environment in many places was severely damaged. During the Liberian Civil War, an unknown street in the capital Monrovia. Photographed by TIME photographer Carolyn Cole. This was discovered on the battlefield after the Battle of Gallipoli in World War I in 1915. You can imagine the intensity of the hail of bullets. In 1993, a group of Palestinian children provoked patrolling Israeli troops with toy guns. A real-life version of "The Pianist". A Russian soldier plays a piano among the ruins of the Chechen War in 1994. Photographer Patrick Farrell captured a scene after Hurricane Hanna passed through in Haiti. It was also a natural disaster. After the Indian Ocean tsunami, a woman in Tamil Nadu was heartbroken when she faced the bodies of her relatives. Photo by Reuters reporter Arko Datta. In 2008, after the Wenchuan earthquake, a man burst into tears looking at photos of his family members in the ruins. In Somalia in 1992, a skinny mother held her starved child. This work by James Nachtwey became the Jose Award Photo of the Year. This time it was a man-made disaster. A man buries his child after the 1984 chemical gas leak in Bhopal, India. This was the worst industrial disaster in India's history, killing 15,000 people. Photographed by famous Indian photojournalist Pablo Bartholomew. A man rescued three kittens trapped in the water after the Indian Ocean tsunami. Photos of the Israeli government evacuating illegal settlements in 2006. Civilians who were driven out of the settlement tried to fight the police. Photographed by journalist Oded Balilty. A mother and her son watch the mushroom cloud rising after a nuclear explosion in Nevada. Well, I know you're thinking of Bruce Banner. When the atomic bomb hit Nagasaki, the body was evaporated, leaving the only and eternal trace left. Coach, I want to play basketball. 12-year-old Luca, who suffers from congenital muscular dystrophy, took his first shot with the help of photographer Matej Peljahn. A Filipino official poses for a photo with his family. After this moment, they all fell into a pool of blood. On October 12, 1960, at a lecture in Tokyo, Inajiro Asanuma, the first secretary of the Socialist Party of Japan, was assassinated by 17-year-old Futaya Yamaguchi, a member of the Japanese Patriotic Party, on the podium. The latter committed suicide in a juvenile detention center. In the late 1980s, a father took his son for a photo in front of the White House. Maybe photos like this are common? Oh, by the way, that father’s name is Pablo Escobar. Who is this trendy guy who is so awesome? His name is Dmitry Medvedev. Mark Twain played happily in Tesla's laboratory, while Tesla looked on with interest. The giants have explained what it means to be independent of arts and sciences. The Mona Lisa rediscovered. After World War II, this world treasure finally returned to the Louvre, although the way it was preserved seemed quite shabby. The Stockholm Communications Tower built in 1887, thanks to the development of wireless technology, was finally burned down 70 years later due to the anger of citizens. After Prohibition in the United States in 1924, the collected wine barrels were piled into a skyscraper pyramid. The huge quantities of wine were later burned. Well, you can call it a "carriage" if you like. In a gravity-free test in 1958, humans used a kitten as a research subject. However, it did not turn into a ball of floating fur as imagined. Instead, he kept waving his paws in the air... The real version of Hachiko. A dog stayed at his owner's grave for a passionate kiss 2800 years ago on the third day after he was buried. A pair of skeletons found in the Teppe Hasanlu ruins in Iran. Oh, both are men.