Heda
2024
The starting point of Heda was born somewhere between the thousands of text messages which I exchanged over the years with one of my closest friends, a Chechen anthropology graduate living in Moscow. The original idea – back in 2019 – was to combine our research into
a documentary about the oppression faced by women in the restrictive culture of post-war Chechnya. This plan was quickly hindered first by the pandemic, and later the Russian invasion of Ukraine. It became impossible for us to meet in person: I couldn’t enter Russia, and she couldn’t leave.
Amidst these challenges, a new concept emerged – a narrative which would incorporate both a broader picture of the cultural identity of Chechen women and our personal connection as friends. In 2023, I started travelling around Europe photographing young Chechen women who share the same name as my friend – Heda. I set out to create a story which is concerned with the contemporary issues of migration as much as the individual character of its heroines. The main subject of the project is the in-between state which daughters of refugees find themselves in: estranged from the conservative culture of their origin due to misogyny, while simultaneously not fully accepted in their new homes due to xenophobia.
This project tells the stories of five Hedas – the four I met in person, and the one still 1400 kilometers away. Together, they create a multifaceted tale of migration, war, trauma, belonging and community.