Oriane Zerah

photographer
  • Afghanistan
    • Afghanistan : Roses under the thorns
    • Coal, the black gold
    • Under the taliban
    • Work with NGOs
  • Pakistan
    • Along the Indus river
    • A taste of Pakistan
    • Edhi’s World
  • Where our horizons melt away…
  • Prints to sell
  • My Books
  • Exhibitions
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • Contact

RETURN IN AFGHANISTAN

8N6A3518
8N6A3473
Mechanic sitting on a chair in a car mechanical workshop in Jalalabad
Man selling melons and water melons on a market in Kabul during the night
Daily life on a fruit market in Herat
An employee polishes lapis lazuli in a workshop in Kabul
8N6A3952_copy
Women in Herat
Men making bread in the back side of a bakery in Jalalabad
Afghan children who work as  garbage collectors look for recyclable material in Kabul. Children who work have very rarely access to education
A craftsman builds a tandoori oven from raw clay at a workshop in Kabul
Mari Asifi, the camerawoman films footage for  the morning show Bamshad at Zan TV. The tv channel employs more than 50 women to create its daily program, a mix of news, politics and lifestyle shows
8N6A4235
Iron monger making tools in Jalalabad
Man plucking vegetables in Jalalabad
Man selling bread in Herat
View of Kabul from the heights of the city
8N6A3243
Ironmonger making metalic tools at the ironmonger market in Kabul
Woman sorting pistachios at the dry fruit market in Kabul
The four Zazai sisters left Kashmir in Pakistan where they were born, and where they grew up 6 months ago. They never saw Afghanistan before they had to leave Pakistan. Originaly from Paktia province they live in an Informal Settlement in Jalalabad. Most inhabitants of Informal Settlements are internally-displaced people (IDPs) fleeing conflict, and insecurity in their provinces of origin, or returnees from Pakistan. Informal Settlement suffer from insufficient hygiene and sanitation, lack of clean water, and the constant threat of eviction.
Boy driving his bicycle in Jalalabad
Boy selling plastic pot in the streets of Jalalabad. Children who work have very rarely access to education
Women in Herat

8N6A3518
8N6A3473
Mechanic sitting on a chair in a car mechanical workshop in Jalalabad
Man selling melons and water melons on a market in Kabul during the night
Daily life on a fruit market in Herat
An employee polishes lapis lazuli in a workshop in Kabul
8N6A3952_copy
Women in Herat
Men making bread in the back side of a bakery in Jalalabad
Afghan children who work as  garbage collectors look for recyclable material in Kabul. Children who work have very rarely access to education
A craftsman builds a tandoori oven from raw clay at a workshop in Kabul
Mari Asifi, the camerawoman films footage for  the morning show Bamshad at Zan TV. The tv channel employs more than 50 women to create its daily program, a mix of news, politics and lifestyle shows
8N6A4235
Iron monger making tools in Jalalabad
Man plucking vegetables in Jalalabad
Man selling bread in Herat
View of Kabul from the heights of the city
8N6A3243
Ironmonger making metalic tools at the ironmonger market in Kabul
Woman sorting pistachios at the dry fruit market in Kabul
The four Zazai sisters left Kashmir in Pakistan where they were born, and where they grew up 6 months ago. They never saw Afghanistan before they had to leave Pakistan. Originaly from Paktia province they live in an Informal Settlement in Jalalabad. Most inhabitants of Informal Settlements are internally-displaced people (IDPs) fleeing conflict, and insecurity in their provinces of origin, or returnees from Pakistan. Informal Settlement suffer from insufficient hygiene and sanitation, lack of clean water, and the constant threat of eviction.
Boy driving his bicycle in Jalalabad
Boy selling plastic pot in the streets of Jalalabad. Children who work have very rarely access to education
Women in Herat

Powered by Photocrati