LONDON, NOVEMBER 8 – On 7 November, EMERGENCY – a humanitarian non-governmental organisation that has offered free treatment to over 10 million victims of war, landmines and poverty since 1994 – presented ‘Zakhem | Wounds: When War Comes Home’, a photographic exhibition by Giulio Piscitelli commissioned to honour the charity’s 25th anniversary. The London event follows the success of the exhibition in both Milan and Venice.
In 2018, Italian photographer Giulio Piscitelli visited EMERGENCY’s Surgical Centres in Kabul and Lashkar-Gah, Afghanistan. There he met war victims who continue to face public indifference after 18 years of conflict and vowed to tell their stories: stories where violence punctures daily life without warning, stories that reveal the wounds – zakhem in Dari – left by the conflict.
Shell and shrapnel wounds take centre stage in the exhibition because ultimately, war begins with them, but deeper wounds are also revealed here, like the fear and exasperation that never leave those living in the midst of violence.
“When I went to Afghanistan to start this project, I started work as I normally do as a journalist. Part of the photos from ‘Zakhem’ are normal photojournalist photos… but when I arrived at the EMERGENCY hospital in Kabul, I looked at the patient files, which were something I hadn’t normally seen. One of the first objects I found in these files was a landmine that had scarred a boy terribly. I looked at that object and thought, ‘this has been inside that boy’s body’. I continued to take portraits of the patient,s but also of the various objects – one of the many faces of the war. I was surrounded by white, as I was in a hospital, so I thought I could create a diptych which could get people to think about these victims’ deep relationship with their surroundings.” explained Giulio Piscitelli.
Says Rossella Miccio, President of EMERGENCY: “For us, to share what we see daily in our hospitals is a way of giving back justice to the people we see in these beautiful pictures, who normally stay without a name and are seen as collateral damage. Their lives and dreams destroyed by a mad war that has destroyed the country for 41 years. Different fighting parties change, but what stays the same is that the people who pay the highest price are civilians. Afghanistan is a big part of the story of EMERGENCY. We’ve treated over 6 million people there”. (@OnuItalia)