And Our Life Goes on

  • Dates
    2012 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Topics Daily Life, Contemporary Issues, Documentary

On Dec. 2016, there were 2,814,631 registered Syrian refugees in Turkey, according to UNHCR. This displacement crisis generates dramatic levels of suffering, and shattering the lives of many Syrians. I witnessed their struggle to rebuild shattered dreams, despite years of violence and trauma.

While I started to document their life in Turkey in 2013, I witnessed their struggle to rebuild shattered dreams, despite years of violence and multiples trauma.

Everything has to be redone, the landmarks are not the same, neither the daily life. And they must face a fundamental question: how to survive? They have to find a job, a house. Sometimes the whole family has to do it, children included. Many of them works twelves hours in a day, six days in a week for very low wages. The school? They will think about it later. First: survive.

In Turkish border cities with Syria, it is not too disorienting. Same religion, same climate, same lifestyle. But family, community and inter-community links are severed. Syrian young generation has been drastically affected by the conflict with limited access to quality education, protection and limited opportunities to contribute to their communities resulting in growing hopelessness. In Syria, they were going to school, they were brilliant students, they started their carreer. In Turkey, they are dishwasher, sweeper, unemployed.

In cities overwhelmed by the influx of refugees, Turks welcome the Syrians with suspicion, sometimes violence. They have difficulty to tolerate this sudden cheap labors. One turkish worker in Mersin told me: "This country started to arise. Then the refugees arrived. It would be better without them. I am a Muslim, they are my religion’s brothers, but we can no longer pay for them.” Two communities side by side, quite ignorant of each other. In fact, Turks seem to be caught in a tension between the Muslim solidarity and racism. But they also know that Syrians are boosting the local economies and few countries would have done what the Turks did. Europe, for example, has closed its doors.

This issue is so complex in Turkey that it borders on Schizophrenia.

Often viewed suspiciously, Syrian refugees instinctively recreated a community in every large city where they found refuge. There are now large Syrian neighborhoods in cities like Gaziantep, Mersin or Izmir. And their daily life, a new one, began again. Punctuated by moments of joy, doubts, fear, hope.

What about their future? Will it be in Turkey, Syria, or elsewhere? They are losing hope that a political solution will soon be found to end the bloodshed in their homeland. Youth, who have been settled in Turkey for years, does no longer intend to leave Turkey: there is nothing left in Syria. And even if families need more help to send their children to school, to prevent child labor, early marriages, lost generations and women’s empowerment, they are building slowly a new home, a new life, without daily bombing.

Another life begins, a new one. Life always takes over: "And our life goes on".

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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A Syrian family has just crossed the border that separates Syria from Turkey. One truck takes them to a refugee camp. Suruc -Turkey, september 2014.

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Sherko , a Syrian refugee , 27, waits for a hotel room on the bus that will take him and his friends to a boat to Italy. Mersin - Turkey, January 2015.

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Twin sisters Sied and Sidra 12 stands and poses in their home. Their father Mahmud 39 and his family fled from Syria 3 years ago. He has 4 children. He works in a car repair center in Gaziantep. TURKEY May 2016

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Syrian children work intensely in a textile workshop, 6 days in a week, 12 hours a day. They earns 70 euros monthly and all are very exhausted. Recently, the brands H&M and Next admitted having used unknowingly Syrian children in their Turkish factories. Children work with dangerous machines without protection and end up in hospital with crushed limbs. The girls are not spared by these labors force. Mersin, TURKEY May 2016

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Since hours, Kurdish Syrians waits In a car near the border of Syrian to check their families remained in Kobani . Suruç, Turkey, september 2014.

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Ahmed 22 (right) and his son Yasir poses in Basmane district in Izmir. They fled from Aleppo 1 month ago. Ahmed sells birds with a cage to earn his life. Basmane is one of the biggest neighborhood in Izmir where mostly Syrian refugees lives. Approximately 300 thousand Syrian refugees lives in Izmir TURKEY October 2016

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Lilan 7 sleeps on the couch. They fled from Aleppo four years ago and live in Izmir. Basmane is one of the biggest neighborhood in Izmir where mostly Syrian refugees lives. Approximately 300 thousand Syrian refugees lives in Izmir TURKEY October 2016

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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A syrian refugee smokes sisha under the umbrella in a restaurant which is the place mostly for Syrians. Mersin is one of the biggest Syrian populated city in Turkey. Mersin TURKEY May 2016

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Mohamed (11) lives in Kilis and works in a bakery with his twin brother, 14 hours a day for 30 euros per month. Mohamed tries to get well after he has been injured during his work in the bakery. He fled from Idlib (Syria) 2 years ago. He has a lot of pressure from his family (8 members). With his twin brother, they are the only two to work and earn money to support all the family. His father disappeared few weeks ago. Kilis, Turkey March 2016

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Syrian family poses in their home in Inonu district. They fled from Mumbac, Syria two years ago. Mother Heyfe, Father, Hasan and children left to right Kewser, Firdevs, Alican 4, Rezel, Heyfe 12. Gaziantep TURKEY May 2016

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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A view in one of the rental for Syrians in Mersin. Its three room-house and more than 20 Syrians living in this home for 100 euros monthly payment. Mersin is one of the biggest Syrian populated city in Turkey. They mostly lives in Soli district. Mersin TURKEY May 2016

© Emin özmen - Syrian refugees use internet room in Harran refugee camp near Syrian border in Sanliurfa Turkey, August 2013
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Syrian refugees use internet room in Harran refugee camp near Syrian border in Sanliurfa Turkey, August 2013

© Emin özmen - Young Syrian refugees being check up by voluntary ophthalmologist in Basmane district in Izmir TURKEY October 2016
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Young Syrian refugees being check up by voluntary ophthalmologist in Basmane district in Izmir TURKEY October 2016

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Syrian refugees, including children, pray in a textile workshop during the lunch time. They work 6 days in a week. Mersin, TURKEY May 2016

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Syrian refugees having Turkish and Arabic lessons from voluntary Syrian teachers in un-official school/house in Gaziantep Turkey, November, 2016.

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Mahmud, 8 poses with his rooster in a garage where he works full time. He works in this garage 60 hours in a week, 6/7 days. He fled from Aleppo-Syria two years ago and live in Gaziantep. The owner of this garage (center) is Turkish, he has 7 Syrian employees, including 3 children. Gaziantep, Turkey November, 2016.

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Syrian refugee from Aleppo, drinks coffee on the street in Basmane district in Izmır. Basmane is one of the biggest neighborhood in Izmir where mostly Syrian refugees lives. Approximately 300 thousand Syrian refugees lives in Izmir TURKEY October 2016

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Mahmud 39 carries his 3 months old baby in his hands. He fled from Syria 3 years ago with his family. He has 4 children. He works in a car repair center in Gaziantep. TURKEY May 2016

© Emin özmen - A woman stands on a carpet in her roof where mostly Syrian refugees lives in Gaziantep Turkey, November, 2016.
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A woman stands on a carpet in her roof where mostly Syrian refugees lives in Gaziantep Turkey, November, 2016.

© Emin özmen - Image from the And Our Life Goes on  photography project
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Syrian teenagers plays on the beach near Soli district. Syrians and Turks lives separately in Mersin which is one of the biggest Syrian populated city in Turkey. Mersin TURKEY May 2016