4/22/2012

Puerta de Hierro for Amnesty International Madrid

Last week I began documenting the roma community of Puerta de Hierro in Madrid for Amnesty International Madrid. Puerta de Hierro is one of the oldest settlements in Madrid, dating back to the early 1960s. In the last months the local administration started tearing down most of the buildings on the areal. For Amnesty International it is a gross violation of human rights, houses are pulled down without any judicial degree, without informing the dwellers, without offering achievable alternatives for the families, and, worst of all, without considering the health of women and children, who are suffering the most. Victims: 300 persons, 70 children, waiting for the next shock seeing police forces and wrecking balls in their courtyards. A few months ago, the UN sent an envoy to evaluate of the situation at Puerta de Hierro, meanwhile, the authorities defend the legality of the operations… The pictures show Facundo, the patriarch of the family, his daughter Milagros, who lost her family house and most of her belongings, the closest family members of Facundo moments before leaving to the hospital where Facundo had to undergo cardiac surgery, children at the “culto”, the evangelical mess celebrated by Justo, the preacherman of Puerta de Hierro, taking place every evening; then Laura with her sick daughter Nayara and Víctor, her father, with his grandson Cristian and one of his beloved little birds…

4/18/2012

The "Empalaos" in Valverde de la Vera

I acumulated a lot of pictures in the last weeks and I did not have time to post anything here, so now I have to do it step by step... During a day trip through the mountains of Gredos we stopped at Valverde de la Vera. Many years ago, I tried myself as a photographer taking pictures all over the iberic peninsula, but I never was satisfied with any photo of this ancient and sinister act of penitence taking place every year in the early morning of good friday: men dressing up as "empalaos" and walking the streets of the town at night... The men who are becoming “empalaos” normaly made a promise to the Christ of Vera Cruz, a venerated image in a small chapel outside the village. This tradition comes from an older substrate of celtic initiation rites, so the actual cientific consense; in our days, overlayered by the Christian tradition, the "empalao" will pray the Via Crucis on the streets of Valverde de la Vera, an enchanting medieval town on the southern slopes of the Sierra de Gredos in Extremadura. The dressing up of an “empalao” is a difficult and solemn procedure and has to be done with special care. Normally the closer family members are with the empalao during the moments before going out on his way through the cold morning air of Valverde. The first piece an "empalao" has to put on is a white pettycoat. The body and both arms are surrounded with heavy cords and a big, heavy wood mast is put in horizontal position, to form a cross with the man's body. The sinister outfit is completed with a thorn crown, clanking chains and two crossed swords at the back. The whole event is surrounded by mistery and anonymity. Nobody knows the names of the empalaos except their families and their closest friends and those who help them to get dressed. Silence reigns in the streets and everywhere while they are walking on their particular Via Crucis…