About
I am a photographer and writer with a degree in Foreign Languages and Literature, majoring in Postcolonial Studies.
I have dedicated much of my work to Latin America.
I have worked in photojournalism in Chile and Argentina, in the former detention centers of Pinochet and Videla military dictatorships.
In Argentina I worked on the cause of family members of the desaparecidos.
In Mexico, I worked at the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) headquarters in Oventic and in pre-Hispanic Tzoztil communities.
But it was Bolivia that brought me to the International Human Rights Award of Latin America with traveling exhibition of the related report in all states from Mexico to Argentina.
In Europe, I have been dedicated for years to a personal photographic project on nomadic communities in France and Spain and the tracing of their somatic features.
Following the so-called Arab Springs, I focused my work on the Balkan route and the refugee camps between Greece and Turkey, doing image and text reportage and later delving into the civil war in Syria.
It was during those years that I started working closely with people of Islamic ideology and those were the worst years of my life.
After some trauma resulting from the context, I accidentally bought the Koran in a bookstore and on page one I realized that the horror of those years all stemmed from that book.
I then began to study Islam through texts, podcasts and channels mainly in English until one day I decided to talk about it in first person with online publications.
For personal reasons I am familiar with the communist ideology and have always been able to read between the lines of the so-called Palestinian cause, to which I was dedicating a lot of content even before the terrible October 7.
But after October 7, I immediately went to Israel where I was able to carry out a report at the Kfar Aza kibbutz, three kilometers from the Gaza Strip, interview the Zaka spokesman and collect the testimonies of some survivors.
Today my criticism of Islam is mainly on YouTube but I dream of the day when I will have time to stop and write books.
I like irony, loneliness and rock.
