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Refugee school bus project Volvo G622 BPH seen in Ringmer yesterday afternoon. This bus is soon to be taken to France to be used as a mobile classroom.
copyright: © FSUBF. All rights reserved. Please do not use this image, or any images from my photostream, without my permission.
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
A little refugee appeared on the doorstep. Must have got caught in the rain. He made a bee-line for a more comfortable spot :-)
Tarek Alsayed Yahya - Oud
We were proud to help sponsor this initiative from Muziekpublique with our groups AHHA & True Colours (helping LGTB refugees) - Rick & Bart
The Initiative:
The album is released on May 13th 2016 at Muziekpublique (Brussels)!
We have been moved by the recent scenes of migrants arriving in Europe. That’s why we have decided to bring together around twenty musicians who are refugees from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Tibet. We have assembled a group of virtuoso performers from different regions of the world who have put down roots in Belgium and who hope to make their voices heard through their music. Our objective is to reveal talents and cultural treasures that have become virtually invisible in Belgium. These are experienced musicians who have been trained at some of the most prestigious music academies in the Middle East (Damascus, Baghdad, Aleppo) and who have passed through a string of musical centres dotted along the former Silk road.
These talents form the basis of the project that we are launching with them. Together, we aim to develop a project that will help them to find their place and reconstruct their lives in Belgium. Their CD builds bridge between the musicians and the different traditions they represent, in order to produce an album that is rich, innovative and a mark of diversity and cultural exchange
just found this old flik amungst a bunch.
- sumink else 2 get angry about!
jeebz i need 2 go 4 a proper paint agen soon!!
An old acquaintance from Almuñecar. He spoke good English so he was the one who mediated the contact with the other refugees from Senegal. There were some good portraits of the acquaintance.
He and the other refugees had set off from Senegal to the Canary Islands. A few hours before they arrived, they ran out of gas.
- What did you do then, I asked.
- We called 113, he replied. .
This photo was shot in a refugee camp in southern Chad. The residents of the camp are mostly Fula (Peuhl) refugees from Central African Republic. They had fled into Chad to escape widespread violence and intimidation by armed groups and general lawlessness in CAR. The Fula are mostly nomadic or semi-nomadic and travel with their cattle across much of the Sahel region of Africa. They are also an extremely photogenic group. I was working on a mosquito net distribution campaign in the camp and noticed this beautiful girl with a colorful scarf and a stoic expression on her face. As I snapped a few photos, her gaze never moved and the serious expression on her face never changed.
In the city of Athens many refugee families try to make a new start or find a way and power to continue.
The war images, will never be forgotten
Nice / Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur / France
Album of France: www.flickr.com/photos/tabliniumcarlson/albums/72157626038...
Algeria, 2015
Every my visit, I ask my husband to go to Casbah of Algiers, he resists as he can but sometimes I win. Casbah, unkile other parts of Algiers, is quite famous to be unsafe place especially for a rare tourist. However, it is extremely attractive. Unfortunately, as a tourist I cant assess all risks reasonably and have just to follow my husband.
Last time, when I ve been taking this shot, two youngsters run from behind and proposed to show us some nice hidden places to take a photograph. At that moment, my husband immediately took me away from Casbah, he said that probably it was a trap organized by their elder friends to pick my camera, at best... Almost 2 months passed after this moment, but I still wonder - what was the chance that it was so? May be my hasband just overestimated the risks? Would I follow them if I was alone? In Bangladesh I ve done almost the same and really enjoyed it, is Bangladesh safer then Casbah of Algiers or am I just lucky? At least for the last question I'd prefer to think - no...
A little refugee appeared on the doorstep. Must have got caught in the rain. He made a bee-line for a more comfortable spot :-)
I think these are Chionodoxas, also known as glory-of-the- snow. They grow in my garden although I have never planted them there. My neighbour had many of them years ago and some of them decided to settle down on my side of the fence. That was shortly before the neighbour redesigned his garden and all of these flowers disappeared but the refugees still flower every year in early spring.
This photo was taken during the March Against Racism in central London on Saturday on 18 March. Many activists were furious at the new anti-immigration legislation which is clearly in breach of international law.
Although there are no legal routes available to refugees from many Asian and African countries suffering from conflict and murderous repressive regimes, the Home Secretary, Suella Braverman, is overseeing legislation which will criminalize refugees risking their lives at sea to reach relative safety. They will now have their asylum claims denied as inadmissible.
As marchers reached Downing Street, Braverman was thousands of miles away in Rwanda, reaffirming the UK's commitment to illegally expelling refugees to the impoverished country, which itself has a poor human rights record.
I asked ChatGPT to write 10 reasons why welcoming refugees is beneficial to society. Although I share many people's concerns about what the impact of this technology might be, I was fairly impressed by its reply -
1. Boosts economy: Refugees have the potential to contribute to the economy by starting businesses, creating jobs, and adding to the workforce.
2. Increases cultural diversity: Refugees come from different cultural backgrounds and can enrich society's cultural diversity by sharing their traditions, customs, and experiences.
3. Fosters empathy and understanding: Welcoming refugees can help increase empathy and understanding among people from different backgrounds, leading to harmony and greater social cohesion.
4. Strengthens our humanitarian values: Taking in refugees is a reflection of our commitment to human rights and humanitarian obligations, and it demonstrates solidarity with those who are suffering and seeking safety.
5. Tackles brain drain in developing countries: Some refugees may have high levels of education and skills that are needed in their home countries. By providing opportunities for them to work and contribute in host countries, they can then return and help rebuild their communities.
6. Reduces conflict: By providing a safe haven for refugees, host communities can play a role in reducing the levels of conflict and instability that can lead to forced displacement.
7. Brings new perspectives and ideas: Refugees can bring fresh perspectives, ideas, and expertise that can help drive innovation and progress in various fields.
8. Strengthens global solidarity: By welcoming refugees, host countries demonstrate a commitment to global solidarity and cooperation, which can help build bridges across borders.
9. Helps to maximize their potential: Providing support and resources to refugees can help maximize their potential and enable them to contribute to their host communities in meaningful ways.
10. Enhances international relationships: Building positive relationships with refugees and their home countries can lead to new opportunities for cultural exchange, trade, and diplomacy, which can facilitate greater cooperation between nations.
Apologies if some of the photographs in this series are clearly overexposed, which is due to my own stupidity and negligence as I forgot to reset the white balance after some indoor photography.
A little refugee appeared on the doorstep. Must have got caught in the rain. He made a bee-line for a more comfortable spot :-)
Yn 2016, ar gyfartaledd, bu farw 14 o bobl bob dydd ym Môr y Canoldir wrth geisio diogelwch neu well bywyd yn Ewrop.
✦●✦●✦
E 2016, well-wazh, e varvas 14 den bemdez er Mor Kreizdouarel o klask pe ar surentez pe ur vuhez well en Europa.
✦●✦●✦
In 2016, on average, 14 people died every single day in the Mediterranean trying to find safety or a better life in Europe.
www.theguardian.com/world/2016/dec/23/record-migrant-deat...
Standing by a bus stop, having nowhere to go...
(Nikon F75
Ilford Delta 400
Nikkor 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6
70mm, f6.7, 1/750s
Scanned from Negative, unedited)
texture by Skeletalmess
i spent an afternoon taking photos in the Tibetan refugee camp in the lovely town of Pokhara . which is the base camp area for trekking in the Annapurna mountains . on that trip i started in Goa then Gujarat and Rajasthan and Varanasi and lastly Nepal , then i emigrated to Canada
NIkon FE2 and 80mm f2 lens , slide film
Hassan Ali Shaker - Qanun
We were proud to help sponsor this initiative from Muziekpublique with our groups AHHA & True Colours (helping LGTB refugees) - Rick & Bart
The Initiative:
The album is released on May 13th 2016 at Muziekpublique (Brussels)!
We have been moved by the recent scenes of migrants arriving in Europe. That’s why we have decided to bring together around twenty musicians who are refugees from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Tibet. We have assembled a group of virtuoso performers from different regions of the world who have put down roots in Belgium and who hope to make their voices heard through their music. Our objective is to reveal talents and cultural treasures that have become virtually invisible in Belgium. These are experienced musicians who have been trained at some of the most prestigious music academies in the Middle East (Damascus, Baghdad, Aleppo) and who have passed through a string of musical centres dotted along the former Silk road.
These talents form the basis of the project that we are launching with them. Together, we aim to develop a project that will help them to find their place and reconstruct their lives in Belgium. Their CD builds bridge between the musicians and the different traditions they represent, in order to produce an album that is rich, innovative and a mark of diversity and cultural exchange
From the website:
Add Color (Refugee Boat) (1960/2019) is an interactive installation conceived of by visual artist Yoko Ono. Upon opening, the work will be comprised simply of a boat placed within an empty space. The public will then be invited to paint their thoughts, ideas and hopes on the walls, floor and boat. As the installation progresses, messages will be written in support, contrast and literal obfuscation of one another, moving the space from visual calm to a layered visual chaos – a beautiful sea of color from afar, a more restless reality upon closer inspection. Freely imbued in this way with a multiplicity of thoughts, each time Add Color (Refugee Boat) is shown it both shares in the memory of past iterations, while taking on a life and a meaning of its own - acutely reflecting the time, place and people that come together to create it.
Segunda imagen de la serie "Refugees"
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