Photographer Spotlight: Raed Bawayah [VIDEO]

By Michael KurcfeldApril 23, 2015

Photographer Spotlight: Raed Bawayah [VIDEO]
 

Unless you live in the relentlessly complicated region dominated by the state of Israel, Palestinians may seem like a faceless abstraction no matter which side of their struggle for enfranchisement you’re on. Which is what drew me to interview Raed Bawayah, a photographer who was born in Qatanna, a village between Ramallah and Jerusalem — “between the Palestinian territories and Israel.” Having lost his father when he was seven, Bawayah grew up in poverty, in a family of nine children and an illiterate mother, on the dusty fringe of the region’s populace. Surviving variously as a goat-herder, fruit-picker, street peddler, and construction worker, Bawayah became fascinated by the cameras of tourists visiting Jerusalem. On an impulse, he talked his way into a scholarship at a local photography school. He decided early on that he wanted to shoot pictures that celebrated his world and that of other marginalized peoples. His work would be grounded in his belief that, despite the grimness of his youth, “humanity is beautiful.”

Bawayah shot his first series, “Childhood Memories,” while still at school. He returned to his village and pointed his camera at everything that elicited early experience, constructing a vivid record of his life that proved precocious and inspired enough to win him attention and a permanent path of esteem. He has focused since on the sequestered lives of gypsies, patients in an asylum, Palestinian workers temping in Israel, and children in an orphanage. In each case, he spends time with his often-shunned or exploited subjects, wins their trust, and finally reveals them as “the same as you and me.”

Bawayah’s beautifully probing images balance the aestheticism of masterly compositions with the harsh realities he targets in his various series. They present his subjects not as victims or tragic figures, but as possessing dignity and deserving of compassion. In Hollywood parlance, they become “relatable,” and often for the first time to those who only “know” them by news accounts. It might be said that in its quiet way, respectful and empathetic work like Bawayah’s is more effective in inching that bloody patch of the world toward peace than any military action ever will.

Raed Bawayah’s work was on view at La Maison Européenne de la Photographie in Paris in November 2014. More about Bawayah and his work can be seen at his website: www.raedbawaya.com

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More from the Photographer Spotlight Series:


SACHA GOLDBERGER


NEIL SELKIRK


BREA SOUDERS


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SERIES PRODUCER / MICHAEL KURCFELD

LARB Contributor

Michael Kurcfeld is a journalist, originally from the print world, but since 1990 working in electronic media. Since founding Stonehenge Media, he has produced film and arts coverage for NYTimes.com, WSJ.com, Huffington Post, PBS, Bravo, Yahoo Movies, 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, and Film.com. He produces the Photographer Spotlight series for the Los Angeles Review of Books.

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