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ALBERTO CEOLONI PHOTOGRAPHER

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  • IMG_0011 RUSSIA. Western Siberia. Novosibirsk. 2015. Children at the gym of the Franciscan Catholic Scool. It opened its doors in 1994. It is one of 24 private schools in the city and one of two Catholic Schools in the Russian Federation. Fra Guido Trezzani, the pastor of Immaculate Conception Parish, began the school in response to the expressed wishes of parents anxious to provide for their children a quality education inspired by Christianity and the Franciscan vision of life. In addition to the required core curriculum, the school offers complementary elective courses in art, languages, music and culture. There is also a program of computer learning in the school. At the heart of the School is education for human, moral and Christian values. Education in Russian culture is highly valued.
    CEOLONI_RUSSIA_2015_IMG_0011.jpg
  • IMG_0003 RUSSIA. Western Siberia. Slavjanka. 2015. A boy at the Caritas Child Center “Hope”. Children and teens tend to attend several courses such as Russian language, behavior, ethic, cooking and theatre. Slavjanka is a small village about 160 km south of Omsk, in the county of Novowarschavka, near to the border with Kazakhstan. Half of the adults have no jobs and have low paying casual jobs. The alcohol consumption grows with the lack of any prospects. Almost every family is touched with alcoholism. The adults and children feel completely out of place and have difficulties integrating. Caritas assists children and teenagers whose families have been hit especially hard by poverty and lack of prospects. Some children need psicological support to deal with family problems such as poverty, domestic violence and alcohol.
    CEOLONI_RUSSIA_2015_IMG_0003.jpg
  • Teens taking part Abracadabra party that took place in June 2015 for families and their children at the Caritas center. The life of many children consists of extreme poverty, unemployment, alcohol and drug addiction, neglect and violence due to excessive challenges of young parents and lack of financial support.
    CEOLONI_RUSSIA_2015_IMG_0061.jpg
  • A teenage girl, 13 years-old, showing a medal won at a swimming race. She lives with her parents, three brothers and a sister in a house for rent. The family moved from Kazakistan, her father works as driver and her mother is housewife. Caritas supports families in their effort to create a healthly environment for the development of children. The intention is to break the vicious cycle of helplessness and to keep families together.
    CEOLONI_RUSSIA_2015_IMG_0042.jpg
  • IMG_0009 RUSSIA. Western Siberia. Novosibirsk. 2015. Orphans in their room at St. Nicholaus Orphanage runs by “St. Elisabeth from Hungary” nuns. 20 children and adolescents (aged 3-18) live at the orphanage. Children and adolescents tend to attend the public school. This years, it should be forced to shut down according to Putin policy towards orphanages.The Russian families will have to look after orphans.
    CEOLONI_RUSSIA_2015_IMG_0009.jpg
  • IMG_0001 RUSSIA. Western Siberia. Slavjanka. 2015. Adolescents standing in front of the Caritas Child Center “Hope”. Children and teens tend to attend several courses such as Russian language, behavior, ethic, cooking and theatre.<br />
Slavjanka is a small village about 160 km south of Omsk, in the county of Novowarschavka, near to the border with Kazakhstan. Half of adults have no jobs and have low paying casual jobs. The alcohol consumption grows with the lack of any prospects. Almost every family is touched with alcoholism. The adults and children feel completely out of place and have difficulties integrating. Some children need psychological support to deal with family problems such as poverty, domestic violence and alcohol.
    CEOLONI_RUSSIA_2015_IMG_0001.jpg
  • A boy in his flat. His mother has lost her husband in Chechen war. His sister went to town to look for some job a year and a half ago. He has two nieces. They live together in run-down flat without heating and water supply. In the winter they can not use the stove because it is forbidden to use it in a multi-storey-building. The village Slavjanka is 160 km south of Omsk in the county of Novowarschavka, close to the border with Kazakhstan. Half of the adults have no jobs and have low paying casual jobs. The alcohol consumption grows with the lack of any prospects. Almost every family is touched with alcoholism. Heating systems and running water have not been working for years because most of the families cannot afford the associated costs. There are a lot of cheap, empty, run down apartments. For a couple of years now families with debts are being relocated from Omsk into these apartments. The adults and children feel completely out of place and have difficulties integrating. Some children need psicological support to deal with family problems such as poverty, domestic violence and alcohol.
    CEOLONI_RUSSIA_2015_IMG_0033.jpg
  • IMG_0007 RUSSIA. Western Siberia. Novosibirsk. 2015. Orphan at St. Nicholaus Orphanage runs by “St. Elisabeth from Hungary” nuns. 20 children and adolescents (aged 3-18) stay at the orphanage. Children and adolescents tend to attend the public school. This years it should be forced to shut down according to Putin policy towards orphanages.The Russian families will have to look after orphans.
    CEOLONI_RUSSIA_2015_IMG_0007.jpg
  • IMG_0005 RUSSIA. Western Siberia. Novosibirsk. 2015. Orphan at St Nicholaus Orphanage runs by “St. Elisabeth from Hungary” nuns. 20 children and adolescents (aged 3-18) stay at the orphanage. Children and adolescents tend to attend the public school. This years it should be forced to shut down according to Putin policy towards orphanages.The Russian families will have to look after orphans.
    CEOLONI_RUSSIA_2015_IMG_0005.jpg
  • IMG_009 GEORGIA. Tbilisi. 2009.  Avlabari’s metro station. As a result of the war with Russia in the August 2008, 35.000 ossetian refugees fled in the North Ossetia and 167.000 Georgians were forced to leave their houses ( 25.000 refugees from South Ossetia and 6.000 from the Kodori Gorge, in the Upper Abkhazia).<br />
Georgian refugees moved in 448 IDP shelters across their country. The majority of them, 296, are in Tbilisi.<br />
Public schools, kindergartens, research institutions, higher education institutions and student dormitories are typical of the buildings pressed into service to help them. <br />
Initially, 202 of Tbilisi’s public schools sheltered IDPs. These were later transferred to other buildings, including kindergartens, freeing up 164 schools. A further 24 establishments have been partly vacated. It has not been possible to vacate every school; to date; sixteen of them are still used as emergency accommodation.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2009_IMG_009.jpg
  • IMG_006 GEORGIA. Tbilisi. 2009. A young refugee playing in a collective center's courtyard. The perspective for the youngest are better than the rest of population, young people are very skilled, many of them go to school or attend the university. Unfortunately during the last war with Russia, many scholastic buildings have been destroyed, burnt and ransacked, the scholastic facilities and the surrounding grounds were mined and there are still cluster unexploded bombs, shed on the ground. Many students and their teachers are refugees themselves and they will not be able to attend regularly the lessons, this could jeopardize the regularity of the school year.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2009_IMG_006.jpg
  • IMG 019 GEORGIA. Tbilisi. 2009. A teacher in a corridor of a school that hosts several class from kindergarten to High School, students coming from Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The perspective for the youngest are better than the rest of population, young people are very skilled, many of them go to school or attend the university but they can not to find a job, the lack of better perspectives for their future has left them bewildered and discouraged. The Russian invasion will also have series consequences on the Georgian educational system, in fact a lot of schools have been set on fire, ransacked or damaged, the buildings are not sure because mined and there are still cluster unexploded bombs in the same areas. Because of the war a lot of schools host Georgian refugees.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2009_IMG_020.jpg