Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Where Love is Illegal


Robin Hammond won the POY73 photography contest that was held at Mizzou, with his photo set "Where Love is Illegal." He has documented the struggles of the LGBT+ community around the world. Here are some of their stories: 


"O" (right) and "D" (left), St Petersburg, Russia. Nov. 9, 2014. Lesbian couple O (27) and D (23) were holding hands and sharing a kiss on their way home after a jazz concert late at night on Oct. 19 when they say they were attacked. A stranger accused them of being lesbians, punching and kicking them repeatedly. Although Russia decriminalized same-sex relationships between consenting adults in private in 1993, there are currently no laws prohibiting discrimination towards LGBT people. In June 2013 Russia introduced federal law criminalizing the distribution of LGBT “propaganda” among minors, which prompted international uproar. “Now, in Russia, holding hands is dangerous for us,” says O. “But if the goal of these attackers was to separate us, they failed. They only made our relationship stronger.”




"Joseph Kawesi, Kampala, Uganda. March 6, 2015. Joseph Kawesi, a transgender woman, sits at home in the Ugandan capital of Kampala with her mother Mai, 65. Kawesi still has nightmares about the night in December 2012 when she says police officers dragged her out of her home after a tip-off that she might be gay. She says the officers beat her, and then raped her with a club. Kawesi is now an activist working to support LGBT people affected by HIV/AIDS in Uganda. Uganda's president signed an Anti-Homosexuality Act into law in Feb. 2014, that broadened the criminalization of same-sex relationships, adding to colonial-era laws that already prohibited sodomy. The law was overturned on a technicality in August, but Parliament could pass a new anti-homosexuality bill this year."



"Buje (not his real name), Nigeria. April 25, 2014. Buje spent more than 40 days in prison after being taken from his home by a vigilante group aligned to the Bauchi City Shar'ia Courts in December 2013. After guards beat him in prison with electric cables, Buje confessed to committing homosexual acts. They lashed him 15 times with a horsewhip as punishment. He says his family told him: “God should take your life away so that everyone will have peace because you have caused such shame to our family.” Since Nigeria’s president signed a harsh law criminalizing same-sex relationships in Jan. 2014, arrests of gay people have multiplied and advocates have been forced to go underground or seek asylum overseas."
 The rest of the photo set (and stories) can be found here.
"Where Love is Illegal" website.
More about Robin Hammond:
"Robin Hammond is the recipient of the W.Eugene Smith Fund for Humanistic Photography, a World Press Photo prize, the Pictures of the Year International World Understanding Award and four Amnesty International awards for Human Rights journalism.
He has dedicated his career to documenting human rights and development issues around the world through long-term photographic projects.
Robin has [also] made a wide variety of other photographic bodies from the impact of climate change on Pacific Island communities to rape used as a weapon of war in Congo and Bosnia, to the poisoning of ecosystems by multi-nationals in developing countries, to the rise of Africa’s middle class." -- Robin Hammond's website

Saturday, February 6, 2016

Child Brides


Stephanie Sinclair is a photojournalist and founder of Too Young To Wed. "The organization's mission is to provide visual evidence of the human rights challenges facing women and girls. Too Young To Wed supports local organizations making a difference in the lives of children who are affected by the harmful practice of child marriage."

Article further explaining the issue here.

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

'In Between & Outside'


Monty




Jesse
" I am gender-fluid: I portray whatever aspects of gender I feel are fitting at the time. I am whoever I want to be, and its pretty damn awesome."

These photographs were taken by Sara Swaty, who works from L.A. but is originally from St. Louis. In "'In Between & Outside,' gender is represented as both fluid, relaxed, and creative expression as well as a more tense and exploratory transition."

There are more pictures from this project on Swaty's website.
Pictures with quotes from the subjects can be easily found here.