Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - The disabled tramp under the global lens, everything real depends on fate.

The disabled tramp under the global lens, everything real depends on fate.

Nisa Maier, an Austrian female photographer, and her mother love to travel, and she will share her travel photography records on her blog. She started an independent website () with the original intention of "because a single traveler can't live to see everything" (because every traveler can't see everything). She introduced a country through photos. Sometimes it is not necessarily the high-end atmosphere of PS that is a blockbuster, but what we see in reality may be more appropriate.

Nisha Maier met many people who couldn't take care of themselves because of their disabilities during her trip. Not everyone's life is sunny. Fate can turn people's lives upside down at any time. Although in some countries, accidents can be dealt with immediately. In other countries, it is purely luck to decide whether a person is alive or dead or permanently disabled. In the end, everything depends on fate.

In our fast-developing modern world, even small accidents can make people's lives miserable, such as losing their mobile phones, missing flights or having a broken car. But what if something bad really happened? No, urban residents in modern countries have social institutions, insurance and savings to protect themselves, and they will always get some help.

Nisha Maier recorded the daily life of many disabled people living in third world countries with a lens. She said: "Please remember that the third world countries are the backbone of this world. It is the labor force of millions of people in these so-called third world countries that supports our superior life. They are doing jobs that we dare not do, usually in dangerous conditions that endanger health and welfare. They are great, but they are suffering from a bad situation that cannot match them. "

Nisa Maier expressed the hope that this set of photos will attract more people and more social organizations to pay attention to the disabled.

All the pictures in this article are from Maier and Maier photography, and the copyright belongs to the photographer.