Festival
Urban Quilombo
Sebastian Liste

Boy drug dealer selling inside the chocolate factory. The levels of drug use and related violence are increasing among youths in the community. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images

Noemi (38), drugs addicts and mentally handicapped. She works as cook and prostitue to survive after her husband and brother died in a car accident one year ago. She lives inside the abandonated chocolate factory since 2003. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images

Ronaldo (35) celebrating Christmas i his shack. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images

Two girls fighting because they have discovered that they have a common boyfriend. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images

Leila's aunt has been visiting her at the factory. She is the only family she has. By day Leila (13) is a normal girl, but at night she prostitute herself to survive. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images

Couple making sex. The prostitution levels at the factory are very high. The pricipal cause is to get money to survive or to take drugs. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images

Ana celebraBng her sith anniversary. She was born and has grown up inside the factory. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images

Two young girls looking out of a wall destroyed during the last rainy season. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images

General vision of the abandoned chocolate factory occupied for dozens of families since 2003. In spite of the extreme conditions in which they live, this factory in ruins has become a home for these families. They have managed to build their dignity and their routine adapting and normalizing their lives among chaos. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images

Young men with fighting dogs at the abandonated chocolate factory. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images

Melanie (22) is actually living with her two sons in a small shack in a old chocolate factory in Salvador de Bahia. In spite of the extreme conditions in wich they live, this factory in ruins has become a home for the family. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images

Childrens playing in a old chocolate factory occupied since 2003 for dozens of families. These families were looking for a decent place to live and a more prosperous future for their children, away from the dangerous streets of Salvador de Bahia in Brazil. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images
Boy drug dealer selling inside the chocolate factory. The levels of drug use and related violence are increasing among youths in the community. © Sebastian Liste / Getty Images
Eight years ago sixty families occupied the "Galpao da Araujo Barreto”, an abandoned chocolate factory in Salvador de Bahia, Brazil. Prior to establishing in this place, these families lived throughout the dangerous streets of the city. In 2003, these families came together to seize this deserted factory, which lay in ruins, and they transformed it into a home.
Since 2009, I have been documenting Barreto. From my studies in sociology, I understood that this was a unique community. This vast sub culture within the greater city became one extended family. They created a microcosm in which the problems of drugs, prostitution and violence tackled with the support of the community.
Today, life in a community is a form of revolution. Barreto was a place where the exchange of ideas, goods and services created a bond of identity that allowed the survival of its members in a society that marginalizes them. Thus, community life is a form of struggle and resistance. Resistance to a society that considered they as a dysfunctional organ.
Two years ago I came to Barreto to explore how communities formed within fragmented societies as a mechanism of survival. During the years, I have witnessed almost everything that one can live: love, despair, betrayal, lust, passion, unity, friendships, empathy, internal and external conflicts, forgiveness and a sense of family.
Since my first visit in 2009, I continued to return several times by myself until March, 2011, when the government evicted these families from the factory, as one of the many attempts to clean up the visible poverty of the center of Brazilian cities. This is mainly due to the upcoming international events to be held in Brazil in the next years, like the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympic Games. Brazil has begun to teeter on the brink of human rights violation as it continues with the displacement of favelas in a reckless manner.
By the time, these families relocated, there were around 130 families living in Barreto, an area approximately the size of a football field. Although Barreto, the physical place, no longer exists, the community remains. The families that once lived in Barreto now live together in the “Jardim das Margaridas”, a marginalized neighborhood on the outskirts of the city.
My main objective is to document the emotional and physical ties between the different families, how the community is managing their relationships and meanwhile, how they continue to build their dignity. This community is a metaphor for a place where the tragic decomposition of human life combines perfectly with the magic realism of Latin America.
Urban Quilombo - Sebastian Liste
Visa pour l’image – Perpignan
Evening shows - Campo Santo
Links
http://www.sebastianliste.com/
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