Quantcast
Channel: DailyDot twitter Feed
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2522

The tragic selfie that sparked a social media revolution

0
0

There are selfies that make us laugh. There are selfies that make us cry. There are selfies that make us laugh, cry, and kinda throw up in our mouths a little bit. And then there are selfies that start social media revolutions, like the one above.

The dark-haired, bespectacled boy in the red hoodie is 16-year-old Mohammed al-Chaar from Beirut, Lebanon. A few minutes after this group selfie was taken on Dec. 27, al-Chaar was killed when a car bomb exploded in the city plaza. The blast was the latest in a string of similar attacks in Lebanon, thought to be linked to the conflict in Syria.

Photo via Dana Tamim/Twitter

After seeing the photo, a group of Lebanese teenagers took to Twitter and Facebook to organize an anti-violence movement. Resentful of the media’s attempts to classify al-Chaar as a “martyr,” the organizers asked supporters to submit their own selfies, accompanied by a message of peace and the hashtag #notamartyr.  

“We are victims, not martyrs,” the organizers wrote on the Facebook page, which currently has more than 8,000 likes. “We refuse to become martyrs. We refuse to remain victims. We refuse to die a collateral death.”

Over the course of the past few weeks, the #notamartyr campaign has gone viral, with thousands submitting photos of themselves marked with the hashtag. Some of the selfies tell heartbreaking stories of people living against the constant, unrelenting backdrop of war. Others are slightly more light-hearted. But all the selfies contain the same message of resistance: a refusal to let oneself—and one’s country—be defined by violence.

Photo via Facebook

Photo via Facebook

H/T Thejournal.iePhoto via Dana Tamim/Twitter


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2522

Latest Images

Trending Articles





Latest Images