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The Invisibles – Story of a Beggar Family

06 September 2018, 4:45 pm–5:30 pm

The Invisibles

Heidi Piiroinen and Kimmo Oksanen (Helsingin Sanomat)

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Cost

£0.00

Organiser

Claudia Roland – SSEES
020 7679 8754

Location

431
SSEES
16 Taviton Street
London
WC1H 0BW

Who are they? Where did they come from? What are they doing here? In 2007, unfamiliar people sat down on the streets in Helsinki and some other Finnish cities. People like these had not been seen in the Nordic periphery before. The newcomes were greeted with bewilderment, pity, questions – and what often comes out of facing the unknown – fear and hatred.

For ten years, photographer Heidi Piiroinen and journalist, author Kimmo Oksanen have been following the life of Romanian Mihaela Stoica and her family and siblings in Finland, Romania, Greece, Estonia and France.

Stoica came to Helsinki as a street beggar in 2007 from the village of Cetatea de Baltă, Romania. On her 17th birthday, in February 2008, she gave birth to her first child in Helsinki. Now she is a mother of three living in Helsinki. Mihaela herself has not been to any schools and cannot read or write. Her firstborn now goes to school in Finland. Is there hope for a better future for him?

Through the personal story of Mihaela, the project deals with larger societal issues, Romania, Europe and the reception of Romanian beggars in Finland. With photographs and texts, Oksanen and Piiroinen dig into the reasons for street begging, the living conditions of families in Transylvania, and the phenomenon of Romanian people leaving their homes and becoming street beggars in Western Europe.

WSOY published a book “Ohikuljetut – erään kerjäläisperheen tarina” (480 pages with 133 photos) in February 2018 and the project was also exhibited in the Finnish Museum of Photography 7.2.–20.5.2018:

https://valokuvataiteenmuseo.fi/en/exhibitions/invisibles-story-beggar-f...

Organised by SSEES, UCL Department of Hebrew and Jewish Studies and the Centre of Nordic Studies, University of Helsinki, and sponsored by the Finnish Institute in London. Followed by a wine reception in the Masaryk Senior Common Room, 4th floor, SSEES.