- Burst of Joy
"Burst of Joy" is a Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph by
Associated Press photographer Slava "Sal" Veder, taken onMarch 17 ,1973 atTravis Air Force Base inCalifornia . The photograph came to symbolize the end of United States involvement in theVietnam War , and the prevailing sentiment that military personnel and their families could begin a process of healing after enduring the horrors of war.The photograph depicts
United States Air Force Lt. Col. Robert L. Stirm being reunited with his family, after spending more than five years in captivity as aprisoner of war inNorth Vietnam . Stirm was shot down overHanoi on27 October 1967 , while leading a flight of F-105s on a bombing mission, and not released until14 March 1973 . The centerpiece of the photograph is Stirm's 15-year-old daughter Lorrie, who is excitedly greeting her father with outstretched arms, as the rest of the family approaches directly behind her.Despite outward appearances, the reunion was an unhappy one for Stirm. Three days before he arrived in the United States, the same day he was released from captivity, Stirm received a
Dear John letter from his wife Loretta informing him that their relationship was over. In 1974 the Stirms divorced and Loretta remarried. All of the family members depicted in the picture received copies of it after "Burst of Joy" was announced as the winner of the Pulitzer Prize. They all display it prominently in their homes, except Stirm, who says he cannot bear to look at it.About the picture and its legacy, Lorrie Stirm once noted, "We have this very nice picture of a very happy moment, but every time I look at it, I remember the families that weren't reunited, and the ones that aren't being reunited today — many, many families — and I think, I'm one of the lucky ones."
Donald Goldstein, a retired Air Force colonel and a co-author of a prominent Vietnam War
photojournalism book, "The Vietnam War: The Stories and The Photographs", says of "Burst of Joy", "After years of fighting a war we couldn't win, a war that tore us apart, it was finally over, and the country could start healing."ee also
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1974 Pulitzer Prize References
* [http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/Coming_Home.html January 2005 interview with the family, in "Smithsonian" magazine]
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