In 2006 Jonathan Torgovnik, an Israeli-born photographer, travelled to Rwanda with a reporter to investigate how HIV had been used as a weapon of war during the 1994 genocide. This atrocity left more than 800,000 people dead, but one interviewee revealed another aspect of its aftermath: “This woman,” Mr Torgovnik explains, “described how her family were killed and how she was raped and how she’d contracted HIV as a result. And she mentioned, in passing, that she had become pregnant through these rapes and had a boy.” Mr Torgovnik says the interview kept coming back to him in the following weeks, so he “decided to go to Rwanda and start a personal project to investigate this issue.” He spent the next three years interviewing women who’d had a child after being raped by militiamen. He photographed them with their children, many of whom don’t know the truth about their parentage. In 2009 he published a book about his project called "Intended Consequences", and in July his exhibition of the same name won the Discovery prize at one of Europe’s largest photography festivals—Les Rencontres d’Arles in France—where it is on show until September 23rd. “These women are ostracised,” Mr Torgovnik says. “They are rejected by their communities because of the stigma associated with rape, associated with HIV, associated with having a child of the enemy, so to speak.” But despite their trauma, and despite talking to a man and an outsider, Mr Torgovnik found the women he interviewed surprisingly candid. “I think they’d kept it in for so many years that when someone was finally there to collect their testimonies, they actually pleaded with me to tell their stories because they cannot tell them themselves.” Their trauma was not only harrowing to hear about, but hard to photograph. “How do you document trauma in pictures?” Mr Torgovnik asks. “These experiences happened many years ago.” His solution was to photograph his subjects immediately after he had interviewed them, when their emotion was still at the surface. Photographing on film rather than digitally helped too. “I had to change the roll of film every 12 pictures, and as I was changing the film I could see they were more relaxed. It took two or three rolls of film before they were relaxed with each other and relaxed with me.” For the first time Mr Torgovnik’s work has taken him beyond photojournalism. In 2008, he started a charity called Foundation Rwanda, which now supports 860 families. “I’m still very much involved in the country and with this specific population of survivors of the genocide.” Isabelle with her son, Jean-Paul (pictured above) "A group of militias attacked our home and killed my three brothers. Then they took me to a place where they raped me, one after the other. I can’t tell you how many there were; I can’t describe the experience. What I know is that later I realised that I was pregnant. I’d never had sex before; that was the first time. After giving birth, I thought of killing the baby because I was bitter, but eventually I decided not to kill him. I feel trauma every time I look at this boy because I don’t know who his father is. I am physically handicapped because of the beatings that I endured and I can’t carry anything. I can’t work. All I can do is sit down. It was not until now that I can say it is good that I didn’t kill that boy because he fetches water for me. Now I have accepted that he is my son, and I will do whatever I can in my position as a mother to raise him. But I fail in my duty as a mother because of poverty. Sometimes he doesn’t have enough to eat. I am not interested in a family. I am not interested in love. I don’t see any future for me. Sometimes I look at my situation and compare myself with people who have their families around them, and I regret that I didn’t die in the genocide." |
Olivia with her son, Marco "About ten thousand people had fled to the church compound. After a week, militias started attacking us. It was a terrible experience. They entered with machetes, with axes, with grenades and guns. They started cutting into the crowd. It was all noise, crying, and the killing did not stop. On the third day, they did not kill, but spent the entire day just raping women from different corners of the church. I am a victim of that day; they raped me with all of my children watching. I can only remember the first five men. After that I started losing my understanding. Even after I was unconscious, they kept raping me. I had a premonition that I might survive if I picked one child and ran away. I looked at all three of my children, and they all looked so nice to me that I couldn’t pick one. But I also knew that I couldn’t run with all three. Eventually, my heart told me to pick the first born, so I ran toward the church door with him. Many other people were running too, and I fell. I put my body over my son’s to protect him. The militias started cutting the people on top into pieces, and blood was falling on us. When they came to my layer, the militiamen said, “I think this one is already dead.” I pretended to be so. I learned later that my other two children were killed after I left them behind in the church." “Intended Consequences” is at Les Rencontres d’Arles in France until September 23rd |
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