'My City Through My Eyes' is part of Habitat Photosphere, the year-long photography festival initiated by India Habitat Centre (IHC) in collaboration with Save the Children and is being displayed at the Mandi House Metro Station till September 30.
Launched along with Save the Children's new global campaign 'Every Last Child', the exhibition captures the city as seen by children from the slums of Jahangirpuri, Sriniwaspuri and Madanpur Khadar (North and South East Delhi).
It showcases some of the critical urban challenges, such as lack of clean drinking water, risks emerging from industrial waste for resettlement colonies, status of education and health and lack of safe playspaces for children.
"This exhibition highlights that the environmental hazard affect everyone, however the most vulnerable are those children and families who are living on the streets and unauthorised slums," she says.
"Forums such as this exhibition highlight the creative ability of portraying reality as seen from the eyes of the children," says Avinash Kr Singh, Senior Manager, Delhi State Programmes, Save the Children.
'Long and Lonely Walk' is a photograph taken by children from Madanpur Khadar JJ colony and portrays a child walking on a pipe, leading to a pushta, an embankment of industrial waste from a thermal plant in South-East Delhi.
According to WHO, Delhi is the most polluted city in the world, reeling under severe particulate pollution and air toxins. The growing air pollution adds to the maternal and child health challenges for the most vulnerable.
'Delhi The City of Dreams' portrays a boy standing in front of a moving train, representing the fact that the city continues to attract migration.
This often acts as a barrier for continuous education for many children from migrant families.
equipped with a garbage collection system that can ensure, waste is collected and dumped away from residential areas.
'Girl with a Lamb' has been clicked by children in a slum cluster in South Delhi showing a stark contrast of the girl's reality and what exists beyond her. It is estimated that 24 per cent girls drop out of school from the marginalised groups every year for reasons related to the lack of basic sanitation.
'Badli Neher' is about the river stream which is a common recreational spot for the children living in the nearby slums of Jahangirpuri and Badli in North Delhi.
According to the census 2011, there are 55.5 million marginal workers in India. Most of them work in unsafe and hazardous conditions.
