Ryszard Kapuściński Award
The Ryszard Kapuściński Award is a major annual Polish international literary prize, the most important distinction in the genre of literary reportage.
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Image: The Crime and the Silence (22825504442) (cropped)
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Image: Paweł Piotr Reszka, 2019
Ryszard Kapuściński was a Polish journalist, photographer, poet and author. He received many awards and was considered a candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature. Kapuściński's personal journals in book form attracted both controversy and admiration for blurring the conventions of reportage with the allegory and magical realism of literature. He was the Communist-era Polish Press Agency's only correspondent in Africa during decolonization, and also worked in South America and Asia. Between 1956 and 1981 he reported on 27 revolutions and coups, until he was fired because of his support for the pro-democracy Solidarity movement in his native country. He was celebrated by other practitioners of the genre. The acclaimed Italian reportage-writer Tiziano Terzani, Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez, and Chilean writer Luis Sepúlveda accorded him the title "Maestro".
Kapuściński in 1986
House where Kapuściński's family lived in Pinsk in the 1930s (photo from 2009) at Błotna Street (now Suvorov Street 43)
Kapuściński with Julia Hartwig in Warsaw, 2006
Kapuściński commemorative plaque in Warsaw