The
idea of willingly leaving your children is something that most parents will
find hard to imagine. Yet in parts of the world it's a route that many are
forced to take as they struggle to provide for their families and invest in
their children's future.
A
project that recently came across my desk by Carmine Flamminio tackles that
very subject and looks at migration in Europe, with a focus on Moldova, a
country that in recent years may have seen as many as one million people leave
to find work.
Figures
from the Migration Policy Institute suggest remittances to Moldova peaked in
2008 at more than $1,500m and though the flow of money can strengthen the
economy it also creates what Carmine calls social orphans, children
who may only see their parents once or twice a year if they are lucky,
and this is the central focus of Carmine's work.
Many
of the children left behind live with relatives and according to the
Information and Documentation Center on Child Rights in Moldova the number of
children without parental care is growing steadily.
Looking
at Carmine's work you can see he takes a quiet approach and uses his discretion
to ensure he records without intruding.
I
asked Carmine to tell me more about the project and to to outline the way he
approached the story?
"Starting
a new photo-narrative is difficult for me. I have to spend the respectful time
needed to get that first shot that unlocks the rest. I have to calmly imagine
how everything will turn out and quietly let my inspirations wash over me,
calling particularly to heart artists I have met personally. For example, the
words of Francesco Zizola might resonate: 'A
photo-reporter must be ethically correct and respectful of the pain which he
narrates.'
"It
is not enough to just choose when to photograph, but also whether to do so at
all. I am not snap-happy. For my Left Behind project many shots passed through
my mind's eye that I decided not to make. There has to be a clear line between
respect for photographic subjects and the exigencies of the free-press.
"Maybe
my work is too iconic, trying simply and with too much humility to tell the
story of what is happening around me, yet I believe that gradually my language
is taking shape and maturity will come."
This
project requires your subjects to open their lives to you, how did you gain
their trust?
"Despite
all the adversity they face, the Moldovan people are very hospitable. It is not
difficult to be accepted as a photographer and often they will choose a spot
and pose for you.
"Sometimes
I make contact with the families through NGOs, or other charitable
organisations such as the Terres
des Hommes International Federation, or the Italo-Moldovan
Association of Varese. But before meeting with the families I contact them by
phone and carefully explain what I would like to do.
"Having
arrived on their doorstep, I let them welcome me in at their own pace. Besides
taking photos I film interviews and through this language they are able to
understand better my intentions. I use their answers then to write the photo
captions.
"Usually,
I spend at least half a day with the families and some I meet several times,
but generally I do not decide beforehand how much time I am going to be with
them. I prefer to let them dictate my day.
"Perhaps,
just as I am leaving, I will notice something new and will stop to shoot again.
Very often the best pictures are taken when I have finished the interview and
they are offering me something such as a cup of tea."
What
drew you to the story and the angle focusing on the children left behind?
"I
am a father of two daughters and children are to me like water is to the sea.
In my experience as a photojournalist, meeting the protagonists of my stories,
I have got to the point where I firmly believe that each person is affected for
better or for worse by the experiences of their childhood. For this reason we
must do everything we can to ensure children grow up in peace and serenity.
"One
day, I met a young guy from Senegal selling socks in the streets of my home
town Anzio, near Rome. He told me that his only dream was to bring his family
over, but not having a job or regular stay permit he knew that it could never
come true. Looking into his eyes while he spoke made me realize how much pain
and suffering he had in his heart.
"My
mind then came to think about his children. Within a child's heart, growing up
without one or both parents must be even more difficult to carry, and so I
decided to try to tell the story of immigration from the viewpoint of those
children left behind.
"I
chose the Republic of Moldova because, other than it being one of the poorest
nations in Europe, it has a shocking level of emigration, some illegally and
without visas, so returning home is at best arduous. But if young Moldovans
want any kind of future at all for their children they have to go abroad to
work.
"The
average monthly pay of a teacher in Moldova is about $150. In Italy, a good
bricklayer will earn that sum in two days' work. A caregiver will send home
over $1,000 a month. Sadly faced with such inequality, many choose to give up
what we might consider a normal family life to give hope for a better life to
their children. However, in the meantime, Moldova and its abandoned children
seem to be caught in an inescapably downward spiral."
Do
you intend to follow their progress and continue coverage as the children grow
up?
"I
intend to follow these children in the future during their adolescence. But I
have also met many young people who have already reached that age without their
parents. They are a separate chapter; yet part of the same story, as are the
elderly who often live in unimaginable conditions alone in villages.
"The
project has only just started and may never end. But my plans now involve
collecting other testimonies in different regions of Moldova such as the
separatist Trans-Dniester which unilaterally declared independence from Moldova
in 1990.
"The
situation in Moldova makes me question what the real difference is between the
developed and undeveloped worlds. Moldova is located only two hours by plane
from the heart of Europe and yet it seems to be light years away."
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