Feb. 23: Week in Photography

 

📸Your lens to the internet's most powerful photographs 📸

 MOST POWERFUL PHOTO OF THE WEEK

King's College Hospital / Reuters

In a beautiful display of the human spirit, this picture shows patient Dagmar Turner, 53, as she plays violin during brain surgery to remove a tumor, at King's College Hospital in London, Jan. 31. 

 

Surgeons encouraged Turner, a classically trained violinist, to perform during the operation to ensure that the areas of the brain that control her ability to play violin would not be compromised. With the operation a success, Turner will continue to serenade others with her talents after this once-in-a-lifetime performance. 

 

Image

📸FOR YOUR 👀 ONLY:

ASYLUM FOR LGBTQ REFUGEES IN EUROPE WITH BRADLEY SECKER

Bradley Secker, a photojournalist based in Istanbul, has previously reported on LGBTQ refugees for BuzzFeed News. He is now working on a long-term project following some of the asylum-seekers to Europe. The Gayropa project, which is supported by the Pulitzer Center, can be seen online here. 

 

How did this project come about?


Gayropa is somehow the natural progression of my previous work, called Kütmaan, which focused on queer migration and sexual minorities claiming asylum on grounds of their identities, mostly in and around the Middle East region and Turkey.


With the generous support of the Pulitzer Center I was able to realize this project, and it’s been in the pipeline for a couple of years now. I just didn’t have the financial means to begin shooting it. 

 

Image

Sitting on his bed at home in his flat in Berlin, Hamoudi now lives in Berlin, Germany, after leaving his Syrian hometown of Raqqa. Hamoudi was an active protestor of the Syrian Regime, ISIS, and other Islamic groups who had control of his city at various points, and was arrested and tortured by both.

 

For Gayropa, I very much wanted to expand the focus and participants to truly reflect the nature of LGBTI migration to the continent, which includes people from all regions of the world. So far I’ve documented the stories of people from 13 countries, living in seven across continental Europe. I’m very keen and eager to include more [people] over 2020.


How has covering LGBTQ issues in the Middle East changed in the past five years since the refugee crisis began?


Covering LGBTQ issues in the Middle East was a mixed bag over the past decade. I began my Kütmaan project in Damascus, Syria, in 2010, and the Iraqi gay men whose stories I highlighted there were dealing with a multitude of psychological and legal issues, mostly the precarity of their daily lives and being in a country where homosexuality was illegal. 

 

Image

Faris (right), 35, from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia identifies as non-binary, and now lives in Vienna, Aurstia, where he was granted political asylum in July 2017. As part of a series of online videos about LGBTI+ rights in Amharic, Faris chats with his co-host Noël during a break in filming in his living room.

Since 2015, when migration flows peaked en route to Europe, I’ve seen a more savvy LGBTQ population in the Middle East, mostly thanks to the internet, social media, and the increased information and resources available. Of course, for many LGBTQ people living across the Middle East region, their lives and the societal situations have remained the same, or got increasingly dangerous with the rise of extremist groups in the Levant region and more restrictive and religious governments taking power in several countries. As always, I think that poverty plays a large role in how freely and openly an LGBTQ person’s life can be in the Middle East and North Africa. Money can buy privacy, which means potentially fewer problems than those who have to live with family, etc.

 

What was the hardest image to take?


Of the recent Gayropa work, I’d say that the most reflective image for me personally was a quiet one, one of Hamoudi’s tattoo of a key to his former home in Syria, prominently on his forearm. This image wasn’t necessarily hard for me to take, but it had special significance to both Hamoudi and myself, as it was the reason we first met in southern Turkey around 2013. I was shooting my Syrian Nakba series, and Hamoudi was introduced to me as one of the willing participants. He later told me he found it quite a reflective experience, and decided to get the tattoo of his key on his arm once he was living in Berlin. 

 

Image

After finishing work at 'Queer Base' in Vienna, Faris has a beer in the queer friendly space Villa Vida in central Vienna, Austria's capital.

What are some challenges that you faced in this work?


A challenge I’ve always faced with this project, from 2010 to now, has been gaining the trust and connection of people involved. From the get-go it was clear that working on this project with a camera was going to be difficult, which is perhaps why there was next to no visual coverage of the issue when I began. 


People were very open and willing to talk and explain their situations, but the camera always brings another level of apprehension, mostly due to very real and very valid security and safety issues. After long discussions, then and now, about the role of the camera, the access needed to document reality, and what will happen with the images, myself and the individual agree on a set of rules and progress. 


What do you hope the viewer will get out of these images?


I hope the viewer realizes amid all the current political sensation and social hype surrounding both LGBTQ issues and migration that these are just a few of the many people who’ve relocated because they want to have a freer, better life. I also hope the photos humanize the diverse faces and personal situations behind everyone’s journey, and [that the viewers] ask themselves what they would do if they were in a similar situation.

 

Image

Bella, from Turkey is currently claiming asylum in Stockholm, Sweden, due to her gender identity. She identifies as a transgender woman, and after having her initial asylum request denied by the Swedish authorities, she went on hunger strike.

 

Image

 📸THIS WEEK'S PHOTO STORIES 📸

Our first photo story comes to us from Canberra, Australia, where researchers and conservationists are continuing the search for animal survivors following a devastating bushfire season that scorched approximately 13 million acres of land and left more than a billion animals in Australia dead. Next, in honor of Black History Month, we've gathered a collection of rare and fascinating pictures that capture the experience of black Americans throughout history.

 

Here are more photo essays published by our friends elsewhere.

HEROES DOWN UNDER: KOALA RESCUES AFTER THE AUSTRALIAN BUSHFIRES

Jennifer Osborne

Researchers and conservationists from the Australian National University embark on a mission to rescue animal survivors of the bushfires.

SEE THE FULL STORY

 

POWERFUL PICTURES FROM BLACK HISTORY THAT DEFINE AMERICA

Smith Collection / Getty Images

"Success is to be measured not so much by the position that one has reached in life as by the obstacles which he has overcome while trying to succeed." —Booker T. Washington

SEE THE FULL STORY

 

Image

📸YOUR WEEKLY PALATE CLEANSER📸

Amanda Perobelli / Reuters

As with the incredible breakthroughs in medical science we featured in our most powerful photo, this picture shows how new technologies are being developed to improve the lives of our animal friends as well. Here, veterinarian Maria Angela Panelli holds a colorful bird sporting a brand-new prosthetic beak after a surgery in Barretos, Brazil, Feb. 14.

 

"That's it from us this time — see you next week!" —Gabriel and Kate

“Twelve significant photographs in any one year is a good crop.” —Ansel Adams

 

Want More? Go To JPG Homepage
Twitter Instagram

📝 This letter was edited and brought to you by the News Photo team. Gabriel Sanchez is the photo essay editor based in New York and loves cats. Kate Bubacz is the photo director based in New York and loves dogs.  You can always reach us here.

💌 Did a friend forward you this email? Sign up to get BuzzFeed News in your inbox!

 

BuzzFeed, Inc.
111 E. 18th St.
New York, NY 10003 

Unsubscribe

Show privacy notice and cookie policy.