H.O.P.E RECONNECT
A Nation Helps Find 350 Faces.
Do You Recognize These Children? π°π
In 2007, I spent days crossing Cambodia with a camera and a tuk-tuk. No schedule. No fixers. Just the road.
I photographed 350+ children β in orphanages, street schools, floating villages, hospitals, rice paddies, dusty roads. Children running barefoot through schoolyards with a freedom that luxury resorts will never manufacture. A boy gripping a microphone like he was about to change the world. Girls waving through fences with smiles that needed no translation.
Those children are now adults. Mid-twenties to early thirties. Some have university degrees. Some have their own families. Some have left Cambodia entirely.
I want to find them.
THE ORIGIN
How This Started
2007. I was a photographer based in Bangkok. I had just completed a major project for Philippe Starck's resort in Phuket when Mitch Webber, Director of Ogilvy Action Bangkok, proposed something entirely different: "Come to Cambodia. There are children you need to meet."
The entry point: Sunrise Cambodia β an organization founded by Geraldine Cox in 1993, caring for over a thousand vulnerable children. But the photographs extend far beyond Sunrise's walls. I documented children everywhere β in the streets, in classrooms, in markets, on roads no tourist has ever seen.
The series received an Honorable Mention at the International Photography Awards 2007. Then the photographs went dormant. For nineteen years.
THE SEARCH
This Is Where You Come In.
I'm publishing hundreds of photographs from 2007 β week by week β across dedicated galleries on this page.
Look carefully. You might recognize a face. A place. A smile.
If you recognize anyone β if you ARE one of these children β if you are a parent, a relative, a neighbour, a teacher β if you grew up in Siem Reap, Phnom Penh, or Sihanoukville between 2005 and 2010 β if you know someone who did:
Fill out the form below. It takes two minutes.
Every identification brings us closer.
Every share multiplies our chances.
THE PROJECT
H.O.P.E β THE Return
H.O.P.E stands for Happiness, Obstinacy, Purpose, Education.
In 2027, twenty years later, I return to Cambodia. Not to repeat what I did. To find the people I photographed and complete the story.
H.O.P.E β Happiness Β· Obstinacy Β· Purpose Β· Education
Browse the galleries and Photographs below
Every face matters. Every identification brings us closer.
H.O.P.E RECONNECT - Phnom Penh & Around
Phnom Penh and the roads around it β markets, street schools, the communities on the edge of the capital. The last days of the journey, and some of its most direct faces: children, and the adults beside them. They are grown now. Do you recognise anyone? Every face matters. Every detail matters.
H.O.P.E RECONNECT β Wat Damnak & Caring for Cambodia
Two schools. One morning. Ten minutes apart by tuk-tuk. At Wat Damnak, young women learning to sew at the Life & Hope Association. Down the road, children in white CFC shirts running barefoot on red earth. And in between, all the faces met along the way β on village paths, in markets, at corners of streets. The adults around the children may help us find them. Every face matters. Every detail matters.
H.O.P.E RECONNECT β TonlΓ© Sap & Roads Around
Day 5. On TonlΓ© Sap lake and the roads around it. Children selling drinks from their boats. Fishermen pulling nets. A floating market. Then the road again β villages, fields, faces along the way. The children may have grown beyond recognition. The adults around them β fishermen, mothers, market vendors, grandparents β may help us find them. Every face matters. Every detail matters.
H.O.P.E RECONNECT - On The Road Β· Vol. II Β· Siem Reap
Same tuk-tuk. Same camera. Same bag of keychains. Different faces, different corners. This second volume continues the journey through Siem Reap province β more villages, more market stalls, more children running out of houses, more adults pausing to let me into their day. If you remember a French man handing you a keychain in 2007 β or if you recognise a face, a village, a market β this might be you. Every face matters.
H.O.P.E RECONNECT - On The Road Β· Vol. I Β· Siem Reap
A French photographer. A tuk-tuk. A bag of keychains. Every photograph thanked with a small object handed over β not money, a keychain. Streets of Siem Reap, food markets, water near TonlΓ© Sap, and a stop at the local hospital. If you remember a French man with a camera handing you a keychain at a market, on a road, in a hospital β this might be you. Every face matters.
H.O.P.E Reconnect Β· Sunrise Cambodia Β· Vol. II Β· 2007
The in-between moments at Sunrise Cambodia. Classrooms, courtyards, meal times, quiet corners. The everyday life of children growing up inside Geraldine Cox's program β between the activities, when no one was performing for the camera. They were between four and fourteen years old then. Today they are young adults aged twenty-three to thirty-three. The search continues here. Every face matters. Every detail matters.
H.O.P.E RECONNECT β Sunrise Cambodia Β· Vol. I
Children at Sunrise Cambodia's centres in Siem Reap and Kandal Province in 2007. Classrooms, school activities, outings to parks and cultural sites. Eighty-plus photographs from one full day with the Sunrise children. They were between three and fifteen years old then. Today they are young adults aged twenty-three to thirty-five. The search begins here. Every face matters. Every detail matters.