Skip to main content
  • English
  • Deutsch
  • عربي

Qantara.de - Dialog mit der islamischen Welt

  • Home
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Culture
  • Essays
  • Photo Essays
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Culture
  • Topics
  • Essays
  • Photo Essays

smartphone menu rubriken

  • Home
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Culture
  • Topics
  • Dialogues
  • Essays
  • Photo Essays
  • Letters to the Editors
Back to start
More Photo Essays

Photographer Yusuke Suzuki: Discovering the meaning of war

Japanese photographer Yusuke Suzuki has just received the Award for Young Emerging Talents at the Berlin Photo Biennial. To understand what war means, he travelled to Syria, Afghanistan and the Greek island of Lesbos. By Nadine Wojcik

Total destruction: photographer Yusuke Suzuki travelled over the Turkish border into Aleppo, in Syria. This picture in his series "City of Chaos" shows a once-lively shopping street. "When I arrived in Aleppo, I realised that there wasn't any water, gas, electricity, nor medicine, schools, jobs or baby milk here, he said

Bitterly cold: "as blankets were handed out, people were screaming to get one. No one had enough gas to heat and the winter was super cold," recalls Yusuke Suzuki, who took this picture in Aleppo in January

Friends: the Japanese photographer travelled to Syria with the help of a contact in the Free Syrian Army. They immediately became friends; thanks to him, Suzuki was warmly received among Syrian families. The photographer lived with the people in modest houses that were often already overcrowded with members of the extended family who had lost their own homes

Up on the front: the photographer accompanied the fighters of the Free Syrian Army to the front. "We often drank tea and they were joking around. Sometimes they'd even keep telling jokes when the first shots were fired at the front," Suzuki recalls. However, the mood would quickly change as shelling intensified. The photographer could feel he wasn't the only one to fear for his life

Desperate arrival: on the island of Lesbos, the Japanese photographer documented the refugee crisis. "Some 20 to 25 fully packed boats arrived every day," recalls Suzuki

What next? Yusuke Suzuki says he experienced "heartbreaking moments" on Lesbos. He didn't find it easy to shoot photos of the people's pain and despair. "But someone has to tell these stories," believes the photographer

First professional project in Afghanistan: in 2006, at the age of 21, Yusuke Suzuki travelled to Afghanistan for the first time and took his first professional photos there. The trip changed him: until then, Suzuki had planned on becoming a guitarist but decided to focus on photography instead

First professional project in Afghanistan: in 2006, at the age of 21, Yusuke Suzuki travelled to Afghanistan for the first time and took his first professional photos there. The trip changed him: until then, Suzuki had planned on becoming a guitarist but decided to focus on photography instead

Award-winning photography: "I wanted to understand the meaning of war. I wanted to see, hear and feel how people manage to live with war," says Suzuki about his Afghanistan series. For his authentic reporting, Yusuke Suzuki has won the Berlin Photo Biennial Award for Young Emerging Talents

PausePlay
PrevNext
  • Newest
  • Most Read
  • Most Comments
  1. Unrest in Iraq

    Sadr City – a hotbed of resistance

  2. Book review: Sherko Fatah's "Schwarzer September"

    Dirty war

  3. Unpopular presidential elections

    Algeria stands at a historic crossroads

  4. Interview with Lebanese activist Nizar Hassan

    Beirut's ruling elite may be down, but they are not yet out

  5. Migration museum in Cologne

    Recognising Germany's immigration society

  6. Interview with the artist Parastou Forouhar

    Iranian society in shock

  1. Interview with a mixed-faith couple

    Experiences in a Christian-Muslim marriage

  2. Sex tourism in Egypt

    A bride for the summer

  3. Spotlight on Sahih al-Bukhari

    Rocking the foundations of Islam

  4. Women′s rights in Islam

    Can feminism be Islamic?

  5. Child trafficking in Iran

    The agony of the destitute

  6. Unrest in Iraq

    Sadr City – a hotbed of resistance

  1. The German Islam Scholar Lamya Kaddor

    Why I as a Muslim Woman Don't Wear a Headscarf

  2. Jordan and the influx of refugees

    The true Samaritans

  3. Muslims in Liberal Democracies

    Why the West Fears Islam

  4. The decline of Islamic scientific thought

    Don't blame it on al-Ghazali

  5. The Media and ''The Innocence of Muslims''

    Against the Islamisation of Muslims

  6. Turning away from Shia in Iran

    ''A Tsunami of Atheism''

Social media
and networks
Subscribe to our
newsletter

In brief

  • Algeria awaits outcome of election marred by unrest

  • Iraqi families fear worst after protesters abducted

  • Iraq protesters form 'mini-state' in Baghdad's Tahrir Square

  • India protest hotspot offline as two shot dead

More

Most Recent Photo Essay

Protests bring Beirut’s abandoned Egg back to life

In the heart of Beirut's manicured downtown, something is stirring in a bullet-pocked concrete shell of a building known as "the Egg": the visually unappealing Egg has advanced to become the meeting place for Lebanese democracy activists. Impressions by Lisa Barrington

  • Home
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Culture
  • Topics
  • Dialogues
  • Essays
  • Photo Essays
  • Letters to the Editors
  • About us
  • Masthead
  • Privacy Policy