Voice of Memory

“These images do not seek beauty, but truth.
They are fragments of suffering and resistance, reminders against forgetting.” 

“I have been a witness, and these pictures are my testimony.
The events I have recorded should not be forgotten and must not be repeated.”

James Nachtwey

This section is not about beauty, but about truth.

From Auschwitz to the Riga Ghetto, from Schindler’s Factory in Krakow to the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin, memory reminds us of when Jews were victims of unimaginable horror.
From Ukraine under bombs from the repression of Russia’s opponents to the cries of Gaza — history shows us that oppression wears many faces.
And in Gaza, Israel — once a victim — has become an aggressor, turning civilians into prey of war.

These photographs show places of the Memory and Demonstrators who raise their voices against violence, injustice, and silence.
They also bear witness to the Israeli hostages abducted by Hamas on October 7, 2023 — and to the families who demand their return.

They are fragments of resistance, courage, and despair.
Photography cannot heal wounds, but it can refuse indifference.
It can expose contradictions, injustices, and crimes committed in the name of power.
Each picture is a testimony against forgetting, against silence, against the comfort of looking away.

To see is to remember.
To remember is to resist.

Auschwitz – Memory and Shadows

Here, silence is heavier than words.
The barracks, the faces, the walls — they still breathe the suffering of millions.
Every corridor is a wound, every portrait a life stolen.
The gas chambers and crematoria stand as unerasable evidence of human cruelty.
To walk through Auschwitz is not to visit history, but to confront humanity’s darkest abyss.
These images are not only remembrance — they are a call never to forget, never to repeat.

Places of Memory

From the Riga Ghetto to the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin to Schindler’s Factory in Krakow, these places carry the weight of history.
They are silent witnesses to lives erased, yet still present in stone, iron, and silence.
The names inscribed on walls, the endless lists of the murdered, remind us that memory must not fade.
In Budapest’s Great Synagogue, in Prague’s Pinkas Synagogue, echoes of lost voices continue to resonate.

Each site is not only remembrance of the past, but also a warning for the future.

Across Europe, voices rise against Russia’s war in Ukraine and against repression in Moscow.
Here, the streets are free to speak — but in Russia, dissent means prison, exile, or death.
These demonstrations carry both solidarity and defiance.
They remind us that truth survives only when spoken aloud.
And that silence, in the face of tyranny, is never neutral.

On October 7, 2023, Hamas brutally attacked Israel, killing civilians and taking hostages.
Those hostages remain trapped — victims of ruthless power games, their lives hanging in uncertainty.
In Gaza, Israel has become the executioner, turning neighborhoods into mass graves.
Children and innocent people pay the highest price for the hatred of a few.
Every life lost, Israeli or Palestinian, is a wound to humanity.
Justice means freeing the hostages, ending the massacre, and breaking the cycle of vengeance.

“My photographs are fragments of memory and witnesses of the present. They speak of oppression, silence, and dignity - reminding us that history repeats itself when we choose indifference.”

To remember is to resist; to stay silent is to be complicit.