Chandigarh: India mourns the loss of one of its most profound visual chroniclers, Raghu Rai, who passed away on Sunday at the age of 83. His family confirmed the news through his official social media handles, marking the end of a career that spanned over six decades and redefined Indian photojournalism. His son, Nitin Rai, shared that while his father had successfully fought prostate and stomach cancer over the last two years, the illness recently spread to his brain, compounded by age-related complications. The last rites were scheduled for 4:00 p.m. on Sunday at the Lodhi Crematorium in New Delhi.
Raghu Rai’s lens captured the very essence of India, documenting its transition from a young republic to a modern global power. Born in Jhang, undivided Punjab, Rai began his journey with The Statesman in 1962. His work eventually reached the pages of international giants like Time, Life, and The New York Times. He was notably the first Indian photographer to be nominated to Magnum Photos, the world’s most prestigious photographic cooperative, by the legendary Henri Cartier-Bresson. Rai was not just a photographer; he was a storyteller who found dignity in the ordinary and raw emotion in the historical.
His most haunting legacy remains his documentation of the 1984 Bhopal Gas Tragedy. One specific image—a partially buried child with eyes frozen open—became a global symbol of the disaster, forcing the world to confront the human cost of industrial negligence. Beyond tragedy, Rai was a master of the portrait. His intimate photographs of Mother Teresa, compiled in his book Saint Mother, and his powerful captures of Indira Gandhi, remain definitive records of their lives and influence.
He is survived by his wife Gurmeet, son Nitin, and daughters Lagan, Avani, and Purvai. As tributes pour in from across the globe, the artistic community remembers him as a mentor who championed the “humanity of the frame.” Rai’s departure leaves a void in the world of art and journalism, but his vast archive continues to serve as an indispensable visual history of the Indian soul.