hese are not just images. They are people breathing in silence, spaces that think, and shadows searching for their light.
Every photograph is a bridge between worlds — between what is seen and what is felt. This section is a visual journal of essential encounters: with Juju, with the mines that no longer roar, with the booths that stand in for temples, with faces that ask for nothing, but say everything.
My photographs do not document. They listen. They do not judge. They embrace. They do not explain. They leave room for silence.
This is the space where reality transforms into visual poetry. Where every frame is a question, and every gaze — an answer.




The streets of Morocco are a visual and sensory experience in themselves. In the old medinas, narrow alleys wind between ochre walls, concealing traditional riads and small craft workshops. The stone pavement, polished by the footsteps of passers-by, carved wooden gates, and wrought-iron lattice windows create an authentic setting steeped in history.
👥 People are the soul of these streets. Men in djellabas converse over tea outside cafés, women in brightly coloured caftans move gracefully between market stalls, and curious children run among pigeons or play in front of mosques. Their gazes are warm, their gestures simple yet full of meaning — every interaction adds a human dimension to the backdrop of traditional architecture.
📷 Whether you capture a motorcycle threading its way through pedestrians, an elderly woman in a colourful caftan, or a merchant carefully arranging his wares, the streets of Morocco tell stories. These are places where time seems to slow down, and every detail — from a hand-painted door to a shadow falling on a wall — is worthy of contemplation.
I sought to portray Juju, a former miner from Anina, not as a "social case", but as a complex human being — with dignity, depth, and a rich inner life. My photographs do not expose him; they visually rehabilitate him — transforming him into a symbol of human resilience, introspection, and personal freedom.