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After so many days being away (due to the trip to Frankfurt and my final examinations at the Faculty of Fine Arts), I resume my publications…
I like this picture so much that I’ve been trying to find the right moment to publish it since the beginning. Many times have I almost showed it, but I think I never found the right words to go with it…
… I feel like that… holding to a string, trying to stand… to save what’s left. This final phase of the school year is harder on me than I had pictured it to be and what I didn’t want to happen has already happened: I have to do a subject in September…
The wire where we hang our clothes is, for me, an incredible synonym for equality. It is where we hang that t-shirt we like so much, the trousers we put on for a special occasion and so many other clothing items… everything with no distinction… it is also where we hang our old t-shirts and the dust cloths, the panties and the socks we rarely show to someone… all on the same wire…
… isn’t it a great synonym for equality?
It is with great pity that I verify that the DEL8 winning group won’t be travelling to Guinea. The political instability spoke louder and it has become too dangerous to travel there right now as the elections take place…
The alternative is Mozambique. It is not certain yet that the group will go there, but the opportunity of spending 15 days with a reality which is completely different from ours seems to me to be the best possible alternative.
The money that the “amnesties” have collected for Safi will be sent through the missionary Sisters (so it is granted it will get there). By the way, I take the opportunity to tell you that we have already received the money and that the total up until now is: 454,38€. It is a great help!
About the picture, I just want to say this:
Stepping on a mud where our feet get buried, do we stay focused or unfocused relative to what surrounds us? Do we only see what’s right in front of us or do we try harder to see farther, even if it means not understanding everything… to see everything in an unfocused way?
Este andar, que ao mesmo tempo carrega os instrumentos de trabalho, diz-me muito. Cada uma destas mulheres está ali a pescar para si, mas se não estivessem juntas o peixe fugia pelos lados.
Há melhor exemplo de como, ao trabalharmos juntos, conseguimos resultados muito melhores e maiores?
É tudo muito bem coordenado: levantam-se para caminhar e baixam-se para apanhar o peixe ao mesmo tempo... é tudo muito harmonioso...
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This walk, that carries the work instruments at the same time, means a lot to me. Each one of these women are there fishing for themselves, but if they weren’t together, the fish would escape through the sides.
Is there a better example of how, working together, we can achieve better and bigger results?
It is all very well coordinated: they stand up to walk and duck down to catch the fish at the same time… it is all very harmonious…
As we walked through the river mud, crabs would bite our legs and shells would tear our feet skin...
Meanwhile, Helena and the women held the fishing net, bent down, stood up, walked, grabbed the fish that got stuck in the net, balanced the basins on top of their heads and still managed to find the time to laugh along with us!
If I was asked to do what they were doing, I would surely starve! I could barely walk, let alone balance a basin with my head with fish jumping inside it!!
I still have many pictures of fishing left which I would like to publish, so I will dedicate a new photographic cycle to this activity.
However, I won’t add a long text, because although I do not believe a good picture is worth a thousand words, I also believe a thousand words can ruin quite a few good pictures!
What truly amazes me about this picture is not Franca’s pleasant look as she eats, which would be perfectly normal, since she is having the best meal of her day at the Nutritional Recuperation Centre.
What fascinates me is the fact that this picture shows the African people so well… that watery eye can’t take away her joy of another meal, the joy of her day!
That’s what the african people have that we don’t have! We are depressed because we’ve lost buying power and so we can’t satisfy our blistering consuming needs imposed by our society. The pressure to be trendy is unbelievable! The Nokia I own is the brand‘s cheapest phone and I’ve stopped counting the times I’ve heard comments about my technological dinosaur…
Thank you Franca, for that look with a tear that insists on not falling, along with your splendid smile and that happiness look!
If there is a thing i’ve learned with the guineans is to appreciate life’s little details, to be happy with little, because that “little” is actually a lot…
The “lot” we desire gets us to so little that I don’t understand how we get so easily taken by it…