Friday 24 July 2015

Homeless in Manchester...Part One.

My assignment for today got cancelled, leaving me 100 miles from home in the rain with no purpose. So I had a walk around Manchester city centre, where according to a report in the Manchester Evening News issued by the goverment there are 150 people sleeping rough in the city. But unofficial numbers put this figure at nearly 2,000.  Campaigners say benefit sanctions and evictions have led to a rise in rough sleepers across the region.

Here are some of them...

Rough sleepers, Piccadily Gardens.
The two rough sleepers above had only been on this wall in Piccadily Gardens for about 15 minutes, I had been seen them arrive as I watched the TV crew following this Police officer arrive in the Gardens, he promptly moved them on. 


Sean.
This is Sean. I saw him on Market Street. He lost his wife twenty years ago. They had a child together but she ended up staying with family as Sean fell apart, devastated by grief. With no support network Sean developed a drug problem trying to escape from the torment in his mind, he didn't recieve any medical help for his psychological problems, slipping through the net.  He has been on the streets since last christmas when he was affected by changes to the benefit system which caused him to fall behind with bills and ended up with him being evicted.
"You can't beg!" He told me. "If they catch you begging they will move you on. So I write peoms and people buy them off me." During the fifteen minutes I was with him he sold two poems.

"Do not beg. Donation for a poem. A little something for all your help. I am homeless. Thank you Manchester."














John and his dog Rooney.

This is John and his dog Rooney. They have been homelesss for 15 months. John became homeless after his wife and child died. He suffers from Epilepsy. "I totally lost it when they died. They offered me a hostel but said I couldn't bring Rooney. They said I should put him in a shelter if I couldn't find anyone to look after him. I couldn't do that he is the only family I have got left! He knows if I am going to have an Epileptic fit. In the past when I was going to have one that day he would lay with his head on my lap and not move at all, like he could tell. It's happened a couple of times. They said if I wouldn't leave the dog and go in the hostel then they wouldn't be able to help me, so here I am." 

Monday 20 July 2015

A postcard from Anastasia Taylor-Lind in Ukraine.

   Originally, Anastasia Taylor-Lind travelled to the Ukraine in 2014 as part of an ongoing project called "Negative Zero", documenting the effects of population decline in Europe. Her arrival in the Ukraine coincided with the "Euromaidan Revolution" which started in February of that year and resulted in the ousting of the then President of Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovych. Anastasia started to cover the revolution, producing a series of portraits which became the widely acclaimed book "Maidan: Portraits from the Black Square" published by GOST. 

Anastasia has now relocated to the Ukraine and is working on a new project about the war there. As part of this she recently posted on her social media accounts that she would be sending postcards as part of the project, inviting her followers to sign up to recieve one. So far she has already sent out hundreds of them around the world. One of them came to me as I had signed up to be a part of this.  

This is the postcard I recieved from Anastasia Taylor-Lind.

This is the message she wrote on the back.

This is the Imageblend I created after grabbing a shot of a gorgeous sunset in Leominster last night.

This was Anastasia's response to my Instagram post.


 As she said, unexpected and poignant. For me it's kind of poignant that the amount of people who have lost their lives in the conflict equate to the amount of people who have visited my blog from the Ukraine in the past few years. That would be 20% of my audience...gone!

I will be posting more about this in the next couple of months here on my blog.  

Sunday 19 July 2015

Upton Upon Severn Blues Festival 2015.

This weekend thousands of people flocked to the sleepy riverside town of Upton Upon Severn in Worcestershire for this years Upton Blues festival, which attracts acts from around the world.
If you are the ladies who asked me to take their picture on Saturday night at the Riverside stage drop me an email for a copy of the picture ;) . 






















Saturday 11 July 2015

Manchester #MarchForTheHomeless with Merseyside Love Activists.

SOME IMAGES HAVE BEEN MANIPULATED TO PROTECT IDENTITIES

Today in Manchester a small group of between 20-30 protestors marched through Manchester city centre, the protest consisted of members of the Merseyside Love Activists and Homeless Rights Of Justice group who are currently in occupancy of St Anne's Sq at the camp there. They were marching to raise awareness of the homelessness situation within the city and how the homeless community is being further impacted by the recent Budget announcement this week.

The demonstration set off from Piccadilly Gardens where there is a kitchen set up to specifically feed the homeless in Manchester.





After passing through Chinatown the march came to McDonalds, where upon they burst inside with their banners.






 The Police were called by staff and escorted the protestors off the premises.






After marching back to Piccadily the march tried to gain access to Halifax bank, some of the protestors made it in but security locked the doors trapping some of the protestors inside.









Eventually the Police gained control of the situation and the protestors were let out and the march continued down towards the Arndale Center.


This time the Police were infront of the march and were able to prevent the protestors from gaining entry along with bank security.


Then the march came upon this scene of a homeless man passed out by a bench with a member of the public sat on her phone totally ignoring him as did the other hundreds of shoppers who were going past at the time. If you have never been to Manchester it is quite common to see a person asleep on the floor. This is part of the issue that the protestors were demonstrating about, the fact that there seems to be no concern in the wider community for people who have ended up in this position.


The demonstrators tried to rouse him, but he was un-responsive only opening his eyes for a brief second and then flaking out again. One of the protestors got on the phone to call paramedics to the scene whilst others put the man in the recovery position.


After about 15 minutes the Police arrived on the scene and took over from the protestors some of whom made their way back to Piccadily Gardens, while others stayed around to see what was going to happen to the man.