‘Baobab’ ? A photographic project by Federica Valabrega @federicavalabrega About the project - ‘The Baobab Experience was an entirely volunteer-based camp hosting sometimes up to 400 migrants in an abandoned parking lot behind the Tiburtina Station in the Italian capital. I spent from March to June 2018 inside the camp, gathering images and testimonies of the people living in those tents, their “temporary homes,” because I felt a sense of responsibility towards documenting these stories as a Roman whose past life was spent few kilometers around that same area. The Baobab Experience was born out of a necessity that his founder Andrea Acosta had seen back in 2015 when he first started it back in Via Cupa of providing “in transit” migrants a place to stay when the rest of the center of assistances were full or the time limit of permanency of migrants in those was expired. The Baobab camps filled the gap between having the migrants on the streets or gathered in an organized parking lot where they could benefit from two warm meals a day, a few Italian and English classes, and some legal advice to proceed with their asylum demands. After many threats of closing it, the Italian police dismantled the Baobab last November basing it on the premises that the camp was build on public soil illegally. Most of these migrants who were living in the camp, are now living on the streets around Rome, under bridges and on side walks, still jobless, paperless and now even in less of an organized manner as the camp was providing.’ #FedericaValabrega Discover more today on vogue.it ?

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‘Baobab’ ? A photographic project by Federica Valabrega @federicavalabrega
About the project - ‘The Baobab Experience was an entirely volunteer-based camp hosting sometimes up to 400 migrants in an abandoned parking lot behind the Tiburtina Station in the Italian capital. I spent from March to June 2018 inside the camp, gathering images and testimonies of the people living in those tents, their “temporary homes,” because I felt a sense of responsibility towards documenting these stories as a Roman whose past life was spent few kilometers around that same area. The Baobab Experience was born out of a necessity that his founder Andrea Acosta had seen back in 2015 when he first started it back in Via Cupa of providing “in transit” migrants a place to stay when the rest of the center of assistances were full or the time limit of permanency of migrants in those was expired. The Baobab camps filled the gap between having the migrants on the streets or gathered in an organized parking lot where they could benefit from two warm meals a day, a few Italian and English classes, and some legal advice to proceed with their asylum demands. After many threats of closing it, the Italian police dismantled the Baobab last November basing it on the premises that the camp was build on public soil illegally. Most of these migrants who were living in the camp, are now living on the streets around Rome, under bridges and on side walks, still jobless, paperless and now even in less of an organized manner as the camp was providing.’ #FedericaValabrega
Discover more today on vogue.it ?


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