Obituaries
Former Detroit Free Press Photographer David Gilkey 1st American Journalist Killed in Afghanistan
"He did it simply, with such beauty," says Gilroy's NPR colleague Ari Shaprio.

“Look at his photos and in each face you can see a story,” NPR’s Ari Shaprio says of the work of his colleague David Gilkey.
A native of Portland, OR, like Shapiro, Gilkey was killed in Afghanistan while on assignment. He and his translator were traveling with an Afghan army convoy when they were ambushed. Gilkey is the first American journalist killed there since the conflict started 15 years ago.
Find out what's happening in Birminghamfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
“I was with him in India a couple of weeks ago,” Shapiro says. “It was 115 degrees and he was tireless. He knew he would be going back to Afghanistan in a couple of weeks. ‘At least we’re not wearing flak jackets and helmets,’ he said.
Shapiro says Gilkey had been going to Afghanistan since before September 11th.
Find out what's happening in Birminghamfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
“The first time he went was on a Taliban passport because they were the ones in charge,” says Shapiro. “He knew the country better, had a deeper understanding, than any reporter in any medium - print, radio, television, any medium - that I’ve ever met.
“He had a compassion, a calmness, the ability to make people comfortable. That’s the most important quality a reporter, especially a photographer, can have.”
Shapiro says that while Gilkey could be “physically imposing, he was as sweet and gentle, and thoughtful as a person could be. He was the kind of person who could be in an area like we were in India where men and women were not often together and be with a mother and daughter and make them feel at home.”
Gilkey, who was 50, grew up in Oregon, going to Wilson High School and then Oregon State University.
Gilroy’s career included 11 years at the Detroit Free Press. He won the George Polk Award and a national Emmy award. He was the first multimedia journalist to win an Edward R. Murrow award. In 2011, the White House News Photographers Association named him Still Photographer of the Year.
Shapiro said that what made his work memorable, powerful, was “his ability to bring a story home to people. For so many people, war is something far away geographically, emotionally. It was not something they could relate to.
“His photographs, his work, made it easier for people to understand, to relate. He would go to places no one else wanted to - war zones in South Sudan, Afghanistan — to Sierra Leona to cover Ebola — and produce work that showed people why they should care.
“He was able to show people that it didn’t matter where people are, they are worth caring about. A person caught in a war zone, a person caught in a hurricane. It didn’t matter where they were or who they were. David made sure that people understood they were worth caring about.”
Shapiro said that was true of his work whether it was in Toledo, Ohio where the two covered the resettling of Syrian refugees, or at a Doctors without Borders camp in South Sudan.
“Look at the galleries of his pictures from South Sudan,” says Shaprio. “There is one grid of portraits. All kinds of people. White, black, doctors, refugees. All sorts of people. And in each face, there is a story. “
Shapiro says he saw the magic Gilkey could weave just a few weeks ago when they were together in India.
“He filmed a series of short videos that would go with the stories,” Shapiro says. “They were about 30 seconds, he called them video postcards.
“There was one. We were at a dock and there was a man standing at the tip of the boat. And David never said a word to the man but the man seemed to understand that David just wanted him to stand still. And he remained perfectly still. And the boat slowly moved away from the dock and the man slowly turned the boat into the wide open expanse of water. In 30 seconds of video, David captured the story of the journey that I would need much longer to tell.
“He did it simply, with such beauty.”
Image: Photo courtesy of Ari Shapiro
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.