Goodbye My Chechnya - ABC News
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Transcript of Goodbye My Chechnya - ABC News
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Goodbye My Chechnya - ABC News
Sep 10, 2012 3:46pm
Photojournalist Diana Markosian spent the last year and half covering Russia's volatile NorthCaucasus region. In 2011, she moved to Chechnya where she started a personal project entitled"Goodbye My Chechnya," which documents the lives of young Muslim girls who witnessed thehorrors of two wars and are now coming of age in a republic that is rapidly redefining itself as aMuslim state. The project will be exhibited at the Half King in New York City from Sept 11- Oct 30.
Seda Makhagieva, 15, wraps a pastel-colored head covering before leaving her home. Makhagievasays it's her duty as a Muslim to wear a hijab. Islam is quickly becoming the cornerstone of identityfor youth in modern-day Chechnya.
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Students at the Chechen State University sit in an auditorium before a performance. All femalesstudents must follow a strict Islamic dress code. Females have reported being harassed, somephysically harmed for not wearing a head covering and long skirt.
A woman on a date with her boyfriend in the village of Serzhen-Yurt. Couples on dates must meet inpublic and sit a distance from one another. All physical contact is forbidden before marriage.
A Chechen teen, who considers herself a type of punk rock fan called "Emo," puts on pink lip glossin her room. Chechen youth who have been influenced by the Western Emo subculture have becometargets of violence.
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Seda Malakhadzheva, 15, sits beside her friends as they adjust her hijab. She started wearing thehead-covering a year ago.
Chechen dancers backstage at a concert hall in Grozny. A suicide bomber in 2009 detonatedexplosives near the concert hall. The explosion killed five people and left several others injured.
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Gym class at School No 1 in the Chechen village of Serzhen-Yurt. The girls, all dressed in skirts withtheir heads wrapped in headscarves, say gym clothes violate Muslim dress code.
A teenage boy checks out a group of girls from his black tinted window in the town of Urus-Martan. Young women are often kidnapped off the street and married to men they have never met. Bridekidnapping continues to be an endemic problem.
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Jamila Idalova, 16, on her wedding day. The teen bride was kidnapped by her boyfriend. Idalova'sfamily eventually approved the marriage. Bridal kidnappings are outlawed under strongman RamzanKadyrov.
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Chechen girls after school in front of the Heart of Chechnya mosque, the largest in Europe. AllChechen girls, despite religion, must wear a head covering in public schools and governmentbuildings.
Half of the girls in the ninth grade at School No 1 in the Chechen village of Serzhen-Yurt wear thehijab. The head and neck covering is a sharp break from Chechen tradition.
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Layusa Ibragimova, 15, has her hair and nails done before her wedding. Her marriage to 19-year-oldIbragim Isaev was finalized by her father just weeks before.
A group of Chechen men at a party, standing at the opposite end of the women. In Chechnya, understrongman Ramzan Kadyrov, gender segregation is being enforced.
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Elina Aleroyeva, 25, along with her child at their home in Grozny. Aleroyeva says her husband waskidnapped by federal security forces on May 9, 2011, accused of being a militant. Disappearancesused to be a signature abuse in both Chechen wars and continue to take place.
At sunset in the outskirts of Grozny, Kazbek Mutsaev, 29, fireshttp://www.fastfoodnation-lefilm.com/uncategorized/increase-your-online-presence-with-these-blogging-tips/ celebratory gun shots as part of an age-old wedding tradition in Chechnya.
Photo Essay by Diana Markosian
http://www.fastfoodnation-lefilm.com/uncategorized/increase-your-online-presence-with-these-blogging-tips/http://www.fastfoodnation-lefilm.com/uncategorized/increase-your-online-presence-with-these-blogging-tips/