From Bosnia
Some of you know, I think, that last week I headed off to Bosnia for couple of weeks. The catalyst for the trip was being invited (and offered a free flight) to run a weeks worth of photography workshops as part of a participatory youth festival in the Prejidor area of northeast Bosnia. The aim of the festival was to get kids from the different communities, aged 5-15, to come together and work together over a week and finally produce an arts festival based on their own ideas and initiatives. The whole thing was held in a Muslim village called Kevljani, but in a Serb owned field making it as neutral as possible. This area had seen some terrible atrocities during the war, with many Muslim villages being completely destroyed and much of the Muslim population being interned at the notorious Serbian camps such as Omarska (a mere 5 km away). This included Kemal one of the main organisers who had grown up in Kevljani and spent 7 months in Omarska.
After some initial shyness the children grasped the challenge and produced some wonderful work leading the way for their parents and the adults around them. Kemal said that as the festival came to an end things had happened between members of the different communities (such as communication) that hadn’t happened since before the war. The kids in our workshops had the responsibility to document the whole thing and we displayed their work on the last day. Photography in action?? Obviously photography was only part of the picture but the photography produced (by the kids) over the week, and the process of making it probably had more of a social impact than any of the work I’ve produced myself in my short photography career. I found it quite a nice reality check.
Here are a couple of their pics:



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