The latest edition of Qatar Foundation’s Education City Speaker Series featured an award-winning photographer, humanitarian, and activist who lost an arm and two legs in an Afghanistan blast. He spoke about the constant challenge people with disabilities face to make people realize what they are capable of.
In collaboration with the World Innovation Summit for Health (WISH), the event highlighted Giles Duley’s journey on coping with the mental struggles he faced, along with the physical injuries he suffered in 2011.
During the WISH 2020 virtual summit, Duley told his story through his own black-and-white photographs, and those taken of him in the moments, weeks, and months after he lost both legs and an arm when he stepped on an improvised electronic device while on patrol with a US regiment in Afghanistan.

He told the online audience who tuned in to QF’s global dialogue platform that those with disabilities are often treated as victims. Resilience, strength fortitude, and even humor are what he finds instead.
“I’m not a war photographer. My job is to document love. For people with disabilities, our injuries are often the only focus of the story, but the things that should instead be focused on are our love stories.
“I realized my greatest disability is in the eyes of others, and when people see me missing my limbs, they make assumptions about what I can and can’t do. And it is hard, and there are days when it is overwhelming because we live in a society that makes it harder for us. But, equally, I do believe that people with disabilities can live a full life – and that, most importantly, we can love and be loved.”
Duley explained that one of the greatest obstacles people with disabilities face is the perception of not being able to live a normal life in comparison to those without disabilities.
“Everyone fights this in their own way but, for me, it’s about showing what I can do. There are very few photographers with injuries like mine. We are often the subject, not the storyteller. I tell people I’m just an angry man with a camera, who wants to make sure that someone sees a photograph I take and that something positive happens from it. I couldn’t go home and feel I was leaving the people I photograph behind without anything changing.

Speaking about the need for progress in the way people with disabilities are perceived, Duley said, “There is still a long way to go; look at the representation of people with disabilities on television.
“They make up a very small percentage of people on screen and they tend to be portrayed as villains. Every James Bond villain, for example, seems to have a facial disfigurement or be missing a limb. It’s actually quite hurtful and we have to stop representing people with disabilities in this way.”
Duley also revealed that his battle to overcome depression after his injuries were “a greater battle than dealing with losing three limbs”, saying, “When people trivialize mental health and say ‘pull yourself together’, I can tell you that regaining my mental health was harder than the physical injuries, but what got me through it was finding purpose, and through dealing with depression I built the resilience that gave me strength.
“People around the world have gone through incredibly difficult things, but still see more joy than anyone. Resilience is life’s gift for dealing with suffering.”
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