DiNuzzo shot this photograph on the third day of the airport protests. "This was at O`Hare airport – terminal 5, which is the international terminal," he says. "There were protests on Saturday and Sunday [when] up to 1,500 people showed up." But yesterday, when the Tribune sent DiNuzzo on assignment, there were only about three dozens protesters and lawyers present. That was at 3:00 PM. Three hours later, after taking some photographs of the protesters` signs and the lawyers waiting to assist arriving foreigners, DiNuzzo filed his images.
"All of a sudden, I saw two girls holding signs. They were wearing hijabs," he says. "I always have an eye out for children in protests like that. That was my first picture. I asked their dad for their names. They had baked some cookies to bring to the attorneys. I thought that was great."
Then, the father grabbed one of the girls and put her on his shoulders. "I started shooting pictures of that," says DiNuzzo. "And then, I see this other boy with a signed to the left of one of the girls. It kept getting better and better. The boy`s father picked him up and put him on his shoulders."
That`s when DiNuzzo`s instinct kicked in. "It was just a matter of waiting for the moment where I could see them looking at each other. I got maybe one frame of that and that was it. I knew I had the picture."
DiNuzzo filed the picture back to his editors, and while it was too late for the paper, it made it on the Tribune`s website and on Twitter, where it went viral.
"A lot of things that I post on Twitter, from sporting events and news events, [I] get a few re-tweets and a few likes. It’s rare that it gets in the thousands," he says. "I had a Bruce Springsteen photo last year that he re-tweeted out to his fans and that was the most I ever got – over 2,000."
But his photograph of the Muslim girl and Jewish boy has already amassed more than 7,000 re-tweets and 10,000 likes.
For DiNuzzo, who has been a staff photographer with the Tribune for the last 25 years, the image has a universal message. "It makes people feel good," he says. "It’s affecting people emotionally." And that`s what photography is all about, he adds. "You want to get right to their heart."
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