Saturday, October 19, 2013

Big Brother

I am an older sister, and would do anything to help protect my three younger brothers. I love them more than they know, and I feel a responsibility toward them. I also know that there are many more older siblings out there besides me, all of them trying to help their younger brothers and sisters. What must it be like, then, to know that the best you can do is hold onto them while everyone around you suffers? This is the exact kind of desperate love shown in this week's photo from Sebastio Salgado, and it clearly illustrates just how older siblings (usually still quite young themselves) assume the responsibility of protecting their little ones. Seeing this particular image of a boy carrying a small child amidst the dreary surroundings of a Displaced Indians camp in Polho, Mexico really made my heart ache. It amazes me. These children are so strong. They endure so much, and get so little. Yet, no matter what, they keep on going. They know that they have to be strong for their little brothers and sisters, often in the place of a mother or father. These children are what inspire me to be a better sister to my younger brothers. The whole world can learn from their courageous example of love and strength, even in the darkest of times. 

http://www.pdngallery.com/legends/legends10/

From Salgado's book MIGRATIONS: Humanity in Transition

Friday, October 11, 2013

Space

With only pictures, Sebastio Salgado has made me think of things that I would have never thought of before. In this particular example, he has captured the cramped living space of an African man who is waiting to pass through to the Spanish mainland, Melilla. You can see in the picture just how many others live like him, all packed together in this camp called "Granja Agricola". I simply cannot imagine having to pack all of my livelihood in a car and then live there for days and days on end. It is amazing how so many people could live in such a small area. Of all of the things I often take for granted, space was never included in the list. I now realize just how valuable "space" is. Yet, however poor the conditions, one cannot help but admire the ingenuity seen in instances like this. These people have the creativity and the courage to make do with what they have, a skill I feel the world does not value anymore. 
http://www.pdngallery.com/legends/legends10/
From Salgado's book MIGRATIONS: Humanity in Transition