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On Father’s Day, which coincided with her father’s death anniversary, the photographer chose to spend the day at an orphanage in Dhaka rather than observing traditional rituals. There, she met five-year-old Rani, an orphan who had lost her own parents two years prior. The image captures a profound moment of connection as the young girl prays for the photographer’s late father and for the photographer herself. This portrait is award-worthy for its raw emotional honesty and the poignant, quiet dignity it grants to a child navigating loss, transforming a personal moment of grief into a universal testament of empathy.
Shahnaz Parvin is an award-winning photojournalist based in Dhaka, Bangladesh. While balancing a professional career as a system administrator, she dedicates her creative energy to documentary photography, aiming to capture the diverse culture and people of her homeland. As a highly decorated contributor to Light & Composition and the organization's Media Head for Asia, she is recognized for her evocative storytelling that spans themes of conflict, social upheaval, and the human condition.
Transparency Note: The resonance score (13.6/20) is calculated based on social engagement metrics collected before the award announcement.
We often mistake the city for a collection of structures—steel, glass, and concrete—forgetting that its true foundation is the invisible network of human care.
Read the reflection →I was folding laundry this morning when I found one of my father’s old handkerchiefs tucked into a coat pocket. I haven't worn that coat in years. Holding it, I didn't feel the sharp sting of grief I used to expect; instead, it felt like a quiet, heavy warmth.
Read the reflection →
The Architecture of Silence
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