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A seven-year-old rolling beedis in black-and-white,teenagers cleaning guns with brazen nonchalance,two street-children bathing joyfully in a public toilet these are a few of the images that made up a recent exhibition organised by the National Foundation for India at India Habitat Centre. The names behind the photographs are of award-winning lens people Sucheta Das,Shekhar Soni and Amit Madheshiya.
The works delve into various social issues,unwittingly showing the world through the eyes of children. While Das went into the beedi factories of Kolkata to focus on the young employees,Soni has captured the inside story of the Salwa Judum movement in Nagpur and Madheshiya has documented life on the streets of Mumbai.
In Dass works,the children at work have downcast eyes as they roll the tobacco leaves,their bodies emaciated,their childhood lost in the dark hovels of the factory. She also has shocking images of beedi rollers whose bodies have been wasted by tuberculosis,at the mere age of 16. A single
photograph can tell an entire story, says Das.
These are contrasted well with Sonis images of the Salwa Judum,where boys and men clean their rifles as women in uniform get trained in wielding arms. Charred houses and burnt bodies of goats point at the overreaching violence in Farsegad village in Nagpur,between Maoists and adivasis armed by the local government. I have spent four years documenting the situation in these villages torn by violence,and sometimes I did not know whether I would return home alive, says Soni.
Madheshiya,on his part,has dismissed the notion that lives of street-children is always painful. He has showcased poetic and intimate moments of these children,showing them celebrating life with friends.
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