Please leave your feedback for Tahir Amin in the [comments] section of this post for this image.
Show & Tell: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14.
Tahir Amin is a lawyer from the UK currently working with the Alternative Law Forum in Bangalore, India on intellectual property issues and its affect on the public domain. Following his departure from the corporate legal world he has been an activist in the U.K Stop the War Coalition, the International Solidarity Movement as an international peace activist/observer in the West Bank, Palestine and currently working on legal issues for the Affordable Medicine Treatment campaign in India.
Activism/protest or simply disseminating information for a cause can be done in many ways, though usually in the form of writing or actual physical protest. However, Tahir believes the power of visuals through photography are equally relevant forms of activism and protest, as images rarely fail to have at least some impact on the neutral observer. From images of the millions of people protesting in London, to the destruction and conflict in Palestine, to protests against patents and the right to medicine, the camera is not only able to tell a story, but it also acts as an instrument of awareness, protest and activism.
He is currently preparing to carry out photography projects around India, in particular, raising awareness about rural India's intersection of art and activism to empower local artists, a project for an NGO in Bombay working on placing homeless children in schools in order to raise funds, a look into the lives of refugees from Tibet living in one of the largest Tibetan settlements in India, as well as the Tsunami relief effort in the eyes of the dalits in Tamil Nadu. He is also planning to return to Palestine in the future.
Mahm. says
You’d think such powerful images such as this would halt terrorists from doing this to their mothers. Wow — keep shooting!
BTW I don’t think I’ve ever seen a photo story on beautiful Palestinian kids in classrooms reading the books that teach about the “evil Jews who drink Arab blood.”
Such a story might help place powerful death images into journalistic context (and might sell really well).
And if there are racist teachings in Israeli textbooks being propogated to Israeli kids that prompts them to attack non-Jews, images of that process could be compelling.
Mahm. says
You’d think such powerful images such as this would halt terrorists from doing this to their mothers. Wow — keep shooting!
BTW I don’t think I’ve ever seen a photo story on beautiful Palestinian kids in classrooms reading the books that teach about the “evil Jews who drink Arab blood.”
Such a story might help place powerful death images into journalistic context (and might sell really well).
And if there are racist teachings in Israeli textbooks being propogated to Israeli kids that prompts them to attack non-Jews, images of that process could be compelling.