Categories lebanon Photography refugees Dry desert flowers~ Post author By ~mimo~ Post date September 8, 2018 6 Comments on Dry desert flowers~ Woman at the Syrian refugee camp in beqaa valley, Lebanon How fair is it that someone’s whole life experience and story can be diminished to one word: ‘refugee’ ? ShareEmailTweetShare on TumblrWhatsAppLike Loading... Tags beqaa, camp, lebanon, people, photography, portrait, refugee, syria, syrian, valley, woman By ~mimo~ Photographer, Art searcher, Motion Designer, traveler. View Archive → ← Where is your happy place?~ → A face to remember~ Lebanon 6 replies on “Dry desert flowers~” Did you take that image where? It’s an amazing portrait, telling the story very well. Loading... Yes, I took it during a Unicef organized visit to the refugee camps in beqaa valley, Lebanon. Thank you Loading... You are amazing!! Loading... You are kind Loading... Agreed, like ‘collateral damage’ and other government or military speak, it reduces lives down to the non-human for those hard of caring. Loading... Because anything more elaborate than that is just too much to digest for a majority audience hungry of fast and simple pseudotruths? Loading... Leave a ReplyCancel reply
Yes, I took it during a Unicef organized visit to the refugee camps in beqaa valley, Lebanon. Thank you Loading...
Agreed, like ‘collateral damage’ and other government or military speak, it reduces lives down to the non-human for those hard of caring. Loading...
Because anything more elaborate than that is just too much to digest for a majority audience hungry of fast and simple pseudotruths? Loading...
6 replies on “Dry desert flowers~”
Did you take that image where? It’s an amazing portrait, telling the story very well.
Yes, I took it during a Unicef organized visit to the refugee camps in beqaa valley, Lebanon. Thank you
You are amazing!!
You are kind
Agreed, like ‘collateral damage’ and other government or military speak, it reduces lives down to the non-human for those hard of caring.
Because anything more elaborate than that is just too much to digest for a majority audience hungry of fast and simple pseudotruths?