In Losing Childhood, the Dhaka-based photographer K.M. Asad tells the story of the city’s overpopulation through the eyes of its children, whose playgrounds, gardens, and open lawns have been all but been snuffed out by the astronomical influx of people into the capital.
Dhaka, reports the photographer, holds nearly 15 million people within its 1,528 square kilometer area. In the wake of environmental devastations—including global warming and the erosion of rivers—villagers have flocked into the city for work, and many of them end up struggling to survive.
Garment workers in particular, says Asad, are forced to make homes for themselves in densely-populated settlements that surround the factories, while the few wealthy elite loom above the city in residential and office towers. As more and more people enter the city, citizens face the threat of daily life without electricity, gas, or running water.
Asad notices these children out and about in daily life, but where he remembers frolicking with the neighborhood kids in his own youth, these days he finds youngsters playing only within the confines of their homes. Children, he has discovered, will invent and imagine games to play indoors, but their play is tinged with a degree of melancholy. For the most part, says Asad, they play alone. In many cases, they lack the physical space to cultivate friendships.
Since he lives nearby and had been familiar with the neighboring families for some time, each boy and girl warmly welcomed him into their homes. His job, he suggests, was simply to wait, to listen, and to photograph their solitary games.
All images © K.M. Asad