The Kids of Calais: Portraits of Europe's forgotten children
- Text by Michael Segalov
- Photography by James Rippingale
According to aid organisation Help Refugees, the ‘Jungle’ camp in Calais is currently home to 157 unaccompanied minors – some of them as young as ten.
These children are alone and vulnerable, having left their homes on the other side of the world. Trying to navigate a new culture and country is hard enough for fully grown adults – different languages, different people, a society that all too often won’t open you with open arms.
Now imagine doing this alone as an infant – it doesn’t bear thinking about. Except we must, because it’s happening.
After the French authorities ordered the demolition of the camp’s southern zone in March this year, thousands of refugees found themselves once again displaced, surrounded by violence and aggression. Ramshackle homes were grounded, but so too was the camp’s family area and women and children’s centre, all of which have now been relocated shoulder-to-shoulder inside the northern camp.
As well as the camp’s unaccompanied minors, the fate of the Jungle’s 228 remaining children remains as uncertain as ever. Despite their vulnerability and age, many are accompanied by a parent or guardian so fail to meet the government’s criteria for aid, assistance or safe passage.
“These kids have only ever known war”, says Alison Moriarty, a volunteer at The Jungle’s Women and Children’s Centre. This had once been a makeshift drop-in facility distributing food and clothing, but since that was demolished they now operate from a double-decker bus.
“They’ve seen their schools blown up. They’ve seen their houses blown up. They’ve been smuggled half way across the world. And now, they’re here”, Alison continues. “Here they run around all night, every night, they have [no one] to make them put on socks, change their underwear or the basic things we take for granted.”
“We’re terrified. These kids are really, really suffering.”
Photo-journalist James Rippingale visited the camps over a period of weeks in Calais, getting to know the children who live there.
I’ve worked between Calais and England for around 18 months, usually staying on site with volunteer friends. Though I only stayed for a week this time, it helped me strengthen my relationship with my subjects who I’d known from previous trips”, James says.
“These children are the faces of the crisis, the most vulnerable and the most let down. They are the eyes which European governments should be looking into when they decide to build wire fences instead of implementing constructive policies and carrying out their ‘humanitarian interventions’ with tear gas and batons.”
“These are just small children, trapped in an alternate and ever-crumbling reality a few miles from the British coastline, desiring nothing more than the magic of an ordinary afternoon.”
Names have been changed at the request of the Calais Jungle’s Women and Children’s Centre.
You can follow James on Twitter.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Latest on Huck
The party starters fighting to revive Stonehenge’s Solstice Free Festival
Free the Stones! delves into the vibrant community that reignites Stonehenge’s Solstice Free Festival, a celebration suppressed for nearly four decades.
Written by: Laura Witucka
Hypnotic Scenes of 90s London Nightlife
Legendary photographer Eddie Otchere looks back at this epic chapter of the capital’s story in new photobook ‘Metalheadz, Blue Note London 1994–1996’
Written by: Miss Rosen
The White Pube: “Artists are skint, knackered and sharing the same 20 quid”
We caught up with the two art rebels to chat about their journey, playing the game that they hate, and why anarchism might be the solution to all of art’s (and the wider world’s) problems.
Written by: Isaac Muk
The Chinese youth movement ditching big cities for the coast
In ’Fissure of a Sweetdream’ photographer Jialin Yan documents the growing number of Chinese young people turning their backs on careerist grind in favour of a slower pace of life on Hainan Island.
Written by: Isaac Muk
The LGBT Travellers fundraising for survival
This Christmas, Traveller Pride are raising money to continue supporting LGBT Travellers (used inclusively) across the country through the festive season and on into next year, here’s how you can support them.
Written by: Percy Henderson
The fight to save Bristol’s radical heart
As the city’s Turbo Island comes under threat activists and community members are rallying round to try and stop the tide of gentrification.
Written by: Ruby Conway