Ryszard Kapuściński

Pisarz · Reporter · Poeta 1932–2007 Kim był? Od czego zacząć? Oś czasu

Biography

Ryszard Kapuscinski, a legend of Polish and world reportage, was often described as a writer with an exceptional instinct for information, atmosphere, and historical change. He stood out for his extraordinary power of observation and his ability to notice what remained invisible to others. Guided by a reporter’s instinct, he reached places where something important was happening. He analyzed reality with unusual precision, quickly became part of the world he was observing, and at the same time kept enough distance to describe it with clarity. Ryszard Kapuscinski was, in the fullest sense, a reporter by vocation.

He was born on March 4, 1932, in Pinsk in Polesie, now in Belarus. Between 1952 and 1956 he studied history at the University of Warsaw. After graduating, he returned to the newspaper Sztandar Mlodych, with which he had already collaborated before finishing school. That newsroom became an important training ground for his journalistic craft. His talent was recognized early. His reports from Nowa Huta earned praise from the authorities, who awarded him the Gold Cross of Merit. Soon afterward he was sent to Beijing, but returned early in solidarity with his editorial team during the political upheavals of 1956, a decision that led to his dismissal from the paper. Not long later he began working for the weekly Polityka as an editor of domestic affairs. He traveled intensively and published widely, gaining popularity through his reports from Poland. His real breakthrough, however, came with his dispatches from war-torn Congo in 1958. That was when he discovered his lasting fascination with societies undergoing deep political and social transformation.

Kapuscinski’s book debut came in 1962 with The Polish Bush, a collection of reports about Poland. In the same year he joined the Polish Press Agency, which sent him to Africa for six years. It was a period of intense reporting on a continent undergoing abrupt change. Kapuscinski found himself at the center of revolutions, coups, and conflicts. His deep understanding of local realities allowed him to anticipate events with unusual accuracy. He always insisted that he wrote only about what he had personally experienced. These years led to books such as Black Stars (1963) and If All Africa… (1969).

In 1968 he returned to Poland for treatment after a serious illness, but before long he set off again, this time to the Caucasus and the southern republics of the Soviet Union. The result was The Kirghiz Descends from His Horse (1968). He then spent five years as a correspondent in Latin America, working in Chile, Brazil, and Mexico among other places. There too he witnessed revolutions and political upheaval. These experiences produced Christ with a Rifle on His Shoulder (1975) and The Soccer War (1978). In the following years he traveled across Asia, Africa, and the Middle East, while his stay in Angola found expression in Another Day of Life (1976).

Particularly important in his body of work are The Emperor (1978) and Shah of Shahs (1982). In these books Kapuscinski joined reportage with literary construction, creating a new quality in nonfiction writing. The Emperor, a study of power at the court of the Ethiopian ruler Haile Selassie, brought him international recognition and was translated into many languages. Stage adaptations of the book were successful in theaters across the world.

In the 1980s Kapuscinski reduced his field reporting and turned more toward literary reflection. He published the poetry volume Notes (1986) and the reflective series Lapidarium (1990). He returned to reportage with Imperium (1993), a book about transformations in the former Soviet Union. In 1998 he published Ebony, a summation of his many years of African experience. Subsequent years brought further volumes of Lapidarium, the photographic album From Africa, and Self-Portrait of a Reporter (2003).

In 2004 he published Travels with Herodotus, while in 2006 he released the poetry volumes Laws of Nature and The Other.

Ryszard Kapuscinski died on January 23, 2007, leaving behind a body of work that has become a permanent part of the history of world reportage.

source: kapuscinski.info