Entry Title: " (SINGLE) WOMEN"
Name:
Antonio Faccilongo
, Italy
Category: Professional, Political


Entry Description: My work tells the story of 7000 Palestinian prisoners through the eyes of their mothers, wives and daughters – awaiting their return from the Israeli prisons – and through the eyes of former prisoners returning to freedom.
All of these women must struggle to support their families both economically and emotionally, often finding themselves with many children to raise.
Due to the strict red tape of the Israeli prison service, they must face endless and humiliating routes to visit their sons, daughters and husbands in the local prisons.
From here the heading of my photo session “(SINGLE) WOMEN” : to give an account through my photos of how the lives of these women are suspended and they are lying in wait of their men’s return. And this will never happen until they remain single women.
The report takes place in the prisoner’s homes : in the bedrooms where they would rest, in the living rooms where they would receive guests for tea or coffee, in the kitchens where their women would cook their meals.
And these women are the picture of their life outside the prisons and the only emotional tie between them and the life they have left behind.
These women burden themselves heavily as only their presence of mind and actions can keep their family together and hold the hope of a new family gathering.
Despite still being in love with their men and still giving proof of it, this wholehearted attachment to their men is also these women’s chance to join the Palestinian resistance.

About the Artist:

Antonio Faccilongo was born in Rome in 1979, after he graduated in communication science, he explored his passion for photography at “Istituto superiore di fotografia” and "Officine fotografiche" in Rome. Then followed a course of journalism and then obtained his MA in photojournalism under the direction of Rolando Fava, a former director and photographer for the Ansa Agency. Since 2007 he began to work in photojournalism and has chosen to work in the area of reports of international interest. He has mostly focused his work in Middle east and South-East Asia, covering cultural, social and political aspects.