Photographer Jacob Sammut’s lens turns to the daily trials experienced by street children in Cambodia in his first exhibition, currently showing in Valletta.

The following words, penned by Herman Grech, introduce us to the book Pnomh Penh: The Struggling Smiles, which reproduces photographer Jacob Sammut’s collection, currently being showcased at the eponymous exhibition that is running in Valletta.

The exhibition focuses on the photographer’s experiences in the Cambodian capital, where he captured the lives of the future of Phnom Penh: the children that if given a chance can make a change, and the people who are working hard to make that chance a reality.

“The five-year-old boy smiled broadly, exposing several missing teeth, as I aimed my smartphone in his direction to take a photo. Sitting on the ground playing with hundreds of discarded seashells at a slum in Phnom Penh, the boy offered me a piece of his clearly-undercooked chicken leg, unfazed by the two mice crawling into the reeking garbage beside his feet. 

‘Come, let me show you my house,’ says the boy’s neighbour Chen Srey, a pretty 17-year-old girl who dreams of becoming a doctor. Her ‘house’ is a rickety wooden structure perched on stilts above a stream of sewage. The sewage or ‘black water’ as it is called by the locals is washed down from the city to the lower areas where the slums of Phnom Penh are situated. In heavy rain the levels of this river of filth rises, flooding the already raised floors of these stilt huts.

Welcome to the daily lives of thousands of street children in the Cambodian capital, a city still reeling from the devastation wrought by the brutal Pol Pot and the legacy of the Khmer Rouge. Steering an orgy of violence between 1975 and 1979, Pol Pot decimated almost two million people in a purge of the educated, the commoners and anyone who stood in his warped sights. Today, almost 40 years later, the scars continue to fester.  Abuse and extreme poverty are the rule of the day. Yet, the smiles planted on the faces of the homeless and orphaned children in Phnom Penh defy this daily hardship.”

Pnomh Penh: The Struggling Smiles runs until April 17 at the Malta Postal Museum & Arts Hub in Valletta.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.