CHOKORA

The singing tin

It’s pronounced “Cho ko rah” and in Swahili means trash
This is the name given to the Nairobi street kids.
Kids who live in the trash, or to better say: survive

From the immense Dandora dumpsite to Dagoretti slum and Amref HQ, we’ll tell their stories and a tin one.
It’s a story of re-birth, childhood that can be finally lived, hope.
It’s the story of a piece of garbage which becomes music, play, new life.
I went to Nairobi – Kenya and thanks to AMREF HEALTH AFRICA social workers I documented the story of the children living in dumpsites and their re-birth thanks to recycling materials found in the garbage to make musical instruments.
I followed step by step all the rescue process: I went to Dandora dumpsite and other ones, I contributed at the rescue process with the social workers, I followed the kids inside AMREF centers where they begin to go to school, health and practical assistance, I’ve been brought to a family visit and assisted on classes where the kids are taught how to recycle the garbage (the same garbage they used to sell to buy glue drug) for making instruments and how to play them. It’s a story on how art can save lives and bringing back childhood to the forgiven ones

The project was conceived and realized with the journalist and writer Mario De Santis, who curated the texts.

Passion not only dispels fears but also, above all, ensures that willpower leads to creativity. When I see the eyes of these damned souls, already in hell without ever passing through the purgatory of life, in her photos taken in Dandora, they restore in me the awareness I had lost: the ability to look at true photography, the kind that tells a story, the kind that leaves a pit in your stomach and makes you want to shed a tear for what I thought was lost, but that still exists: Valentina Tamborra, Photographer.

Francesco Cito