Guest Feature - Dimitris Rapakousis

Acharnon street is situated in the historic center of Athens. Unsurprisingly, it has been labeled a ‘ghetto’, a place without an entry or exit to be found on the fringes of a metropolis. Houses and apartments around Saint Panteleimon, the central church of the neighbourhood, are occupied by immigrants who have come here with the dream of a better life, bringing their families along when they can. These people form a new class of citizens, facing fierce prejudice not only from the authorities but also from a part of society. In fact, this is the area where the first pogroms were organized by the right-wing extremist groups of the country, including Chrysi Avgi.

01.jpg
02.jpg
03.jpg
05.jpg
06.jpg
07.jpg

The degradation of Acharnon Street began after the Olympic games of 2004, while today the limits of what is legal and what is not are not easily discerned. Acharnon Street has become a melting pot for brothels, institutes for drug rehabilitation, gambling houses, as well as people of all religions, ages and professions-Orthodox, Muslims, Hindus, money-lenders, old and young-try to openly co-exist. Acharnon Street narrates their stories, constantly raising an important and timely question that the Greek society needs to answer: is it ready to accept and integrate differences?

08.jpg
09.jpg
10.jpg
11.jpg
12.JPG
13.jpg

Dimitris Rapakousis was born in 1981 and lives in Athens. He graduated from the ‘Focus’ School of Art Photography, Video & New Technologies in 2010. He has been working as a freelance documentary photographer over the past 10 years, collaborating with international agencies like Associated Press (AP) or Agence France-Presse (AFP) and the Greek magazines Epsilon, Unfollow, Vice and Kathimerini (K-magazine). He is a contributing member of the Depression Era collective project, which was founded in 2011 and pictures post-crisis Greece.

rapakousisphotographer.com