For nearly ten years, the Syrian photographer Serbest Salih has been main free images workshops in southern Turkey, driving a caravan that serves as a cell darkroom from city to city and handing out autofocus cameras and movie to the native youngsters to doc their lives. In 2021, Salih printed a guide of his college students’ pictures. Final yr, he was named one in every of GQ’s “Males of the 12 months”. And this summer time, Salih launched his personal organisation, Fotohane Darkroom with the Turkish photographer Amar Kılıç—persevering with to work in southwestern Turkey so as to “deliver hope and sweetness into the lives of kids affected by battle and conflict”.
Like Salih himself, lots of his younger college students are refugees—a few of the hundreds of thousands who’ve fled Syria for Turkey ever because the civil conflict broke out in 2011. Salih is initially from Kobanî, Syria, proper subsequent to the Turkish border. He crossed the border in 2014, finally settling in Mardin, a historic metropolis about 250km to the east.
Fotohane Darkroom’s lessons deliver collectively kids of various ages and from quite a lot of backgrounds. The workshops begin with classes on composition and images as a method of documenting social points, then the youngsters are let unfastened to {photograph} no matter they need. After a pair weeks, they study to develop their very own movie and make prints within the black-and-white darkroom. Thereafter, they work independently, with Salih and Kılıç performing as mentors.
“We’re all the time attempting to alter the programme and technique of the workshops,” Salih says. “We’re additionally studying from the youngsters. It’s an alternate of studying between us.”
The workshops not solely give college students an opportunity to precise themselves and study the fundamentals of images, but in addition to get to know one another. It’s as a lot an artwork class as a community-building train—one thing that’s more and more essential, since tensions have been rising within the area because of financial hardship and political strife. Salih and Kılıç train the lessons in Turkish, Kurdish and Arabic. They encourage the youngsters’ households to get to know one another as effectively.
A part of Fotohane Darkroom’s mission is “nurturing childhoods and combating stereotypes, offering alternatives for youngsters to develop, study and embrace their youth at their very own tempo”. That is evident within the photos the scholars create—of their associates, households, pets and environment. Maybe surprisingly, given their proximity to conflict, the pictures are sometimes joyful. Simply youngsters being youngsters.
Fotohane Darkroom is all the time in search of used cameras to supply its college students. Donations could also be mailed on to Şar, 224 Sarısu Sokak No: 3, 47100 Artuklu/Mardin, Turkey. Or contact information@fotohane.org.