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Sources

This Happened—December 30: Roaring Lion Captured With A Click

The portrait of Winston Churchill was taken in 1941 by Armenian-Canadian photographer Yousuf Karsh in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, as he was set to address the Canadian members of Parliament following action taken in World War II.

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Why is the Roaring Lion such an iconic photograph?

The portrait shows Prime Minister Winston Churchill with a posture and facial expression which rings very poignant for the time, as the U.K. was battling Germany and its allies during World War II.

Karsh, recounting the events later, said the prime minister had refused to put down his cigar, and its smoke was interfering with the image. Just before taking the photograph, Karsh said, "Forgive me sir," while snatching the cigar from his mouth. According to the photographer, "By the time I got back to the camera, he looked so belligerent, he could have devoured me". Following the photo Churchill stated, "You can even make a roaring lion stand still to be photographed," giving the picture its name.

How did the success of the Roaring Lion affect Yousuf Karsh?

The photo effectively changed the photographer’s life. The Roaring Lion appeared on the cover of major magazine Life in the May issue of 1945. He is quoted as saying, “My portrait of Winston Churchill changed my life. I knew after I had taken it that it was an important picture, but I could hardly have dreamed that it would become one of the most widely reproduced images in the history of photography.”

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Geopolitics

Greek Elections: Will The Left Forgive Tsipras For The “Betrayal” Of 2015?

With the opposition Progressive Alliance ‘Syriza’ trailing in the polls for the May 21 election, they'll need to convince their potential core left-wing voters that they are true progressives. Tspiras' controversial bailout deal of 2015, however, still hangs in the air.

Alexis Tsipras speaks at a podium with a greek flag in the foreground

Leader of the main opposition party SYRIZA, Alexis Tsipras, speaks at a pre-election rally in Syntagma square in Athens, Greece.

Queralt Castillo Cerezuela

ATHENS – Keeping food prices under control, raising salaries, regulating the market, protecting housing and “standing by citizens.” These are the main points of Greek Coalition of the Radical Left’s Progressive Alliance for Sunday's general elections in Greece. Better known by its abbreviation Syriza, the left-wing party has been the main opposition party for the last four years, and now has a chance to return to power.

The latest polls give a lead to the current ruling party, New Democracy (ND) led by conservative Kyriakos Mitsotakis. Against all odds, numerous scandals seem to have left the party unaffected. Neither the news of their illegal wiretapping of journalists and politicians (including within their own ranks) with the Predator software nor the Tempe train crash tragedy that killed 57 people on February 28, 2023, or any of their numerous other scandals seem to have touched their standing.

All these scandals, which should have been the center of the electoral debate, were immediately sidelined with the news of accusations of sexual harrassment against Syriza MEP Alexis Georgoulis. The party vehemently denies having knowledge of the events, but the case is being used against them in the campaign.

Leader of the opposition, Alexis Tsipras, is trying to revive hopes for the return to "a progressive government." But among the left-wing electorate, there is no shortage of mistrust and disappointment after the so-called "betrayal" of 2015, where Tsipras accepted an international debt bailout deal — and his subsequent four years in government.

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