Photography project sheds light on domestic workers' experiences

Photography project sheds light on experiences of domestic workers

  • Published on
    August 5, 2023
  • Category:
    Domestic Slavery, Forced Labor
Hero Banner

Photographer Aline Deschamps recently met and photographed women who were tricked into traveling to Beirut for skilled professions and then forced through the kafala system into exploitative domestic work. Due to this sponsorship system, the women often experienced continuous verbal and physical abuse from their employers with little to no recourse for them to escape. Her photography aim to shed light on their psychology during both the dark and light aspects of their survivor stories.

Kafala system – a tool of exploitation

The kafala system is a sponsorship system whereby an employee’s immigration status is tied to their employer, used to control migrant workers in countries such as Lebanon.

Deschamp explains:

“Basically, your life depends on one individual. Maybe you’ll have a good employer who will pay
you and won’t take away your day off, and won’t take away your passport, or maybe you’ll have
someone who does it. And agents suggest they do that. ‘She’s not behaving well? just lock her
up, take the passport’. It’s systematic.”

Because the sponsor is responsible for the worker’s visa status, salary, and working conditions, exploitation and abuse run rampant. Sponsors take away employees’ passports, confiscate their phones, and regularly subject them to abuse with little or no fear of any repercussions.

Bait and switch, then forced into slavery

Deschamp describes how after being recruited in their home country for roles like teaching or nursing, when the women arrived in Lebanon they were forced into domestic servitude. Having gone into debt to make the journey, the kafala system left them with few options for redress or escape.

“They were forced into someone’s house to wash dishes, do chores, and sleep on the balcony,
often without receiving any remuneration for months. If they demanded to be moved to another
employer or to be repatriated, they were threatened, beaten, raped.”

The kafala system and its exploitation of migrant workers are built on the same implicit justification for slavery used by Europe and the United States in their own recent history. Seeing someone as less than human allows people to justify the abuse, exploitation, and slavery of others, both then and now.

Like slavery, kafala system needs to be abolished

Deschamp says her photographs capture aspects of the person’s experience; “shock of being trafficked, their longing for home, the comfort of new friendships, the strength of fighting back and the effort of repairing relationships that were interrupted”. They also speak to the cruelty and deception inherent in the kafala system, which needs to be seen not as a legitimate migrant worker program but as an institutionalized form of modern slavery and abolished.

Take action!

Sign the open letter calling on Lebanon’s Ministry of Labour to abolish the kafala system.

Subscribe

Freedom United is interested in hearing from our community and welcomes relevant, informed comments, advice, and insights that advance the conversation around our campaigns and advocacy. We value inclusivity and respect within our community. To be approved, your comments should be civil.

stop icon A few things we do not tolerate: comments that promote discrimination, prejudice, racism, or xenophobia, as well as personal attacks or profanity. We screen submissions in order to create a space where the entire Freedom United community feels safe to express and exchange thoughtful opinions.

Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

This week

Arkansas child labor violations spike; advocates call for action

A report by the U.S. Department of Labor reveals that Arkansas consistently ranks among the highest in child labor violations compared to neighboring states. Arkansas Advocate reports that key findings from the report highlight a 266% increase in state-level violations and a staggering 600% rise in financial penalties from 2020 to 2023. The food service industry, responsible for 78% of state-level cases, remains the biggest violator. The data

| Monday November 18, 2024

Read more