Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
India

Delhi's Slum Children Portray The City Through Photographs

Darpan News Desk IANS, 31 Aug, 2016 12:13 PM
    Slum children of Delhi are showcasing some of the critical urban challenges they face in their everyday lives, through an exhibition of pictures they have clicked.
     
    The exhibition titled, 'My City Through My Eyes', organised by "Habitat Photosphere" and "Save The Children", is on at Mandi House Metro Station till September 30.
     
    Launched along with "Save the Children's new global campaign "Every Last Child", the exhibition captures the city as seen by its most vulnerable children from the slums of Jahangirpuri, Sriniwaspuri and Madanpur Khadar (North and South East Delhi).
     
    The exhibition showcases problems like lack of clean drinking water, risks emerging from industrial waste for resettlement colonies, status of education and health and lack of safe play spaces for children.
     
    "The key theme of the "Photosphere" festival is sustainable development and this exhibition ties in beautifully with it," said the artistic director and curator of Habitat Photosphere, Alka Pande. 
     
    "This exhibition highlights that the environmental hazard affect everyone, however the most vulnerable are those children and families who are living on the streets and unauthorized slums," she added.
     
    "Behind The Smoke", clicked by a child photographer from Sriniwaspuri slum, is a photo of the smoke that surrounds the area. 
     
    A photograph titled, "Dangerous Colours" shows a worker of a small parchun (departmental store), resting after a laborious day of painting the shop in Jahangirpuri in North Delhi. According to the census 2011, there are 55.5 million marginal workers in India. Most of them work in unsafe and hazardous conditions.
     
    "One of the key pillars on which "Save the Children's theory of change rests upon is being the voice of the children and ensuring that the voice of every last child is heard," said the Senior Manager of Save the Children, Avinash Singh.
     
     
    "Forums such as this exhibition not only serve this purpose but also highlight the creative ability of portraying reality as seen from the eyes of the children," he added.
     
    A photograph titled, "Delhi The City of Dreams", portrays a boy standing in front of a moving train, representing the fact that the city continues to attract migration. This often acts as a barrier for continuous education for many children from migrant families. This is a photograph taken by a child photographer from Sriniwapuri.
     
    "Salaam Dilli!" is a photograph of a child in front of a pile of garbage in Sriniwaspuri slum to highlight the need for a better waste disposal system.
     
    These child photographers are a part of Save the Children's state level Children's alliance in Delhi. This alliance has been trained on child rights, life skills and media communication skills so as to aptly raise their voice against child rights violation in their surroundings.
     
    Save the Children is a child rights organization that works to improve the lives of children by addressing their education, health, protection and their needs in humanitarian emergencies to achieve immediate and lasting change. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    World Leaders Hail Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, David Cameron Invites Him To House Of Commons

    World Leaders Hail Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, David Cameron Invites Him To House Of Commons
    British Prime Minister David Cameron invited Ravi Shankar to address the House of Commons, the lower house of parliament, while Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull invited AoL to Australia for the next World Culture Festival.

    World Leaders Hail Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, David Cameron Invites Him To House Of Commons

    Time Not Right For My Return: Indian Business Tycoon Vijay Mallya

    Time Not Right For My Return: Indian Business Tycoon Vijay Mallya
    Mallya told the Sunday Guardian in an email interview that he had done no wrong and that he was being victimised. 

    Time Not Right For My Return: Indian Business Tycoon Vijay Mallya

    Cars And Bikes You Fancy Can Be Yours - On Rent In India

    Cars And Bikes You Fancy Can Be Yours - On Rent In India
    DRIVEN, floated by the city's largest and oldest car-rental companies, Noori Travels and 4Wheels Travels, offers a one-stop solution for all transportation needs in the self-driven and self-ride segment.

    Cars And Bikes You Fancy Can Be Yours - On Rent In India

    Why Mysore Beat Chandigarh As India's Cleanest City

    Chandigarh’s 1.05 million people generate 370 tonnes of solid waste every day. The city employs 4,085 sweepers, which is 2.65 sweepers per km of road.

    Why Mysore Beat Chandigarh As India's Cleanest City

    Refusing Skimpy Clothes Could Cost Waitresses Their Jobs, Labour Groups Warn

    Refusing Skimpy Clothes Could Cost Waitresses Their Jobs, Labour Groups Warn
    Labour groups and some restaurant owners say the Ontario Human Rights Commission's recent report on sexualized dress codes is not entirely in touch with the realities of life in the industry.

    Refusing Skimpy Clothes Could Cost Waitresses Their Jobs, Labour Groups Warn

    Kanhaiya Kumar Was Fined By JNU For Misbehaving With Female Student

    Kanhaiya Kumar Was Fined By JNU For Misbehaving With Female Student
    The incident had occurred on June 10, 2015, when the girl student asked Kanhaiya, who at the time was not the students' union president, to not urinate in the open inside the campus.

    Kanhaiya Kumar Was Fined By JNU For Misbehaving With Female Student