Photo: Sarahbeth Maney/The New York Times

Ketanji Brown Jackson

There was plenty ofpraise, probing questions andeven controversyduring this week’s historicSupreme Court confirmation hearingsfor JudgeKetanji Brown Jackson.

But aNew York Timesphotographer who covered the proceedings is reminiscing about one moment in particular — and the image she captured of it — that reflects thejoy, hope and prideas the first Black woman to be nominated for the high court told her story and experience during 22 hours of testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

The photo is from Monday and shows Jackson out of focus in the foreground with her husband, Dr. Patrick Jackson, and their teenage daughter, Leila, beaming with admiration behind her.

“I just remember seeing Judge Jackson smiling a lot, and I think she was receiving compliments and praise. And then I noticed how proud her daughter was of her,“Sarabeth Maney, 26,told her paperof glimpsing an opportunity to document a mother-daughter moment amid the formality of the first day of testimony.

“It gave me chills when I saw this look that her daughter gave her,” Maney said.

The image is one of the most widely shared from four days of hearings, according to theTimes.

“I did not expect it to gain that much traction,” Maney, a photography fellow, told the paper. “I instantly posted it because I knew what I felt when I took the photo, and I really gravitated toward it.”

Maney is the first Black photography fellow for theTimesand said she was eager to cover Jackson’s confirmation a month ago when PresidentJoe Bidennominated the federal judge,keeping a campaign promiseto select a Black woman for the Supreme Court.

It was important, Maney told theTimes, “to provide the representation.”

“On my average day, when I’m in the D.C. press pool, I am the only Black woman or Black photographer in general,” she said. “And during these hearings, it was the first time in my career where I worked alongside more than one other Black photographer, which is major to be able to share that space with people who understand the Black experience.”

When the image began to circulate on social media, Maney said she heard from a colleague who suggested she post it to her own account on Twitter, where users were sharing it without acknowledging her as the photographer.

“I had just got done with the long workday and I got a text from aTimesreporter who was like, ‘Hey, you need to tweet this photo out yourself because other people are like tweeting it and not crediting you,’ " Maney said. “And I was kind of on the fence about whether to tweet it or not because it had already gained so much attention. But I just did it anyway. And then that tweet kept going on and on from there. So I’m really glad I decided to do it.”

During a day off from covering the hearings on Thursday, Maney told theTimesthat being a part of a “roller coaster of events” this week has been wonderful.

source: people.com