‘I just kept shooting and shooting and shooting and that protected me from the horror ofthe thing.’ – MALCOLM BROWNE
Once there he watched as two monks doused the seated elderly man with gasoline. “I realized at that moment exactly what was happening, and began to take pictures a few seconds apart,” he wrote soon after. His Pulitzer Prize–winning photo of the seemingly serene monk sitting lotus style as he is enveloped in flames became the first iconic image to emerge from a quagmire that would soon pull in America.
Quang Duc’s act of martyrdom became a signof the volatility of his nation, and President Kennedy later commented, “No news picturein history has generated so much emotion around the world as that one.” Browne’s photoforced people to question the U.S.’s association with Diem’s government, and soon resulted in the Administration’s decision not to interfere with a coup that November.