CPOY

CPOY 71 Documentary Gold: How is Life?

Death follows life. Always. A fact that unites all and everyone of us. As a young person I expect too die when I'm old, maybe when I'm sick, but definitely not now. So much still lies ahead of me. For the ones who are left behind, suicide always raises the question of life. Why did someone chose death over life? The suicide rate In Lithuania is nearly three times as high as the average rate in the European Union. It is even among the highest in the world. Looking at the bigger picture, suicides occur more frequently in bigger cities. Whereas in rural areas, less people lose hope in life since social ties are still stronger. In Lithuania, on the contrary, more people commit suicide on the countryside. Especially men between 40 and 50 years of age are at a high risk to commit suicide. Alcoholism, unemployment, no perspective – and many other cases with reasons that are hard to find and even a harder to understand. The reasons for each suicide are different. They are not an expression of personal freedom, but often affected by hopelessness and diseases. Outer, social and environmental factors also play a big role among them. Since World War II and starting with the Soviet occupation the suicide rate for men, at times, grew from ten suicides per 100.000 inhabitants to 90 annually. Experts speak about a collective trauma and loss of identity – influenced among others by the forced collectivization of the farms in rural areas through the Soviets. But the reasons for each suicide are always more complex and personal and can not mainly be related to the countries trauma. My story “How is Life?” is not just about photography. It is about the people and there stories. I want to use my capabilities as a story teller to give a voice to those affected by the high suicide rate in Lithuania. I worked together with the protagonists and asked them to write down their personal story. These statements (Visible in the captions of the photos) are an essential part of this project.

Caption
Slide 12 of 12
February 27, 2016
The audience during a concert of the lithuanian rockstar Andrius Mamontovas at Litexpo. Mamontovas tries to raise awareness for social problems. Andrius wrote: "In 1992-1994 I worked for a radio program called Voices of the Night at M-1 radio. As the program’s host, I used to work there several times a week. The idea was simple – people would call my work phone and I would just put them live. They could say whatever they wanted.Once a young guy called me and said that after talking to me live he was going to kill himself. The only thing I knew was that one must speak to a suicidal person as long as possible. This way the person may pass that critical limit when he is ready to harm himself. I talked to him more than an hour. After that he suddenly hung up. I didn’t know how it all ended, but while talking to him live, I asked various things just to extend this conversation as long as possible.A few weeks later he called me and thanked me for our conversation. He said it had helped him. It was exactly that case when I clearly understood how powerful a simple conversation can be. Recently I got a message from him: “Do you remember how we talked on the phone 20 years ago? Well, I’m still alive.”"
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