14 Children And Their Bedrooms From Across The World. This Truly Opened My Eyes, I’m Stunned.

Millions of children around the world are living very different childhoods. Some experience abject poverty, lacking basic food and sanitation, while others are more fortunate by being born in a country where those things are usually taken for granted.

When photographer James Mollison was asked to come up with an idea for engaging with children’s rights, he found himself thinking of his bedroom: how significant it was during his childhood, and how it reflected what he had and who he was.

And with that, he made it his mission to create Where Children Sleep – a collection of stories about children from around the world, told through portraits and pictures of their bedrooms.

Bilal, 6, Wadi Abu Hindi, The West Bank

Bilal, 6, Wadi Abu Hindi, The West Bank

Indira, 7, Kathmandu, Nepal

Indira, 7, Kathmandu, Nepal

Ahkohxet, 8, Amazonia, Brazil

Ahkohxet, 8, Amazonia, Brazil

Dong, 9, Yunnan, China

Dong, 9, Yunnan, China

Anonymous, 9, Ivory Coast

Anonymous, 9, Ivory Coast

Alex, 9, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Alex, 9, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Bikram, 9, Melamchi, Nepal

Bikram, 9, Melamchi, Nepal

Tzvika, 9, Beitar Illit, The West Bank

Tzvika, 9, Beitar Illit, The West Bank

Douha, 10, Hebron, The West Bank

Douha, 10, Hebron, The West Bank

Joey, 11, Kentucky, USA

Joey, 11, Kentucky, USA

Lamine, 12, Bounkiling village, Senegal

Lamine, 12, Bounkiling village, Senegal

Rhiannon, 14, Darvel, Scotland

Rhiannon, 14, Darvel, Scotland

Risa, 15, Kyoto, Japan

Risa, 15, Kyoto, Japan

Netu, 11, Kathmandu, Nepal

Netu, 11, Kathmandu, Nepal

Inside the book, each pair of photographs is accompanied by an extended caption that tells the story of each child.

“It occurred to me that a way to address some of the complex situations and social issues affecting children would be to look at the bedrooms of children in all kinds of different circumstances”, James Mollison says on his website.

“From the start, I didn’t want it just to be about ‘needy children’ in the developing world, but rather something more inclusive, about children from all types of situations.”

We think he did an incredible job of doing just that. If the phrase ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’ was ever true, then the pictures above say more than anyone ever can.

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