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Simon Moricz-Sabjan

Photographer,photojournalist
     
Mud Country
Location: Budapest, Hungary
Nationality: Hungarian
Biography: Simon Móricz-Sabján was born in Kiskunhalas, Hungary in 1980. He is an award-winning photojournalist and documentary photographer living in Budapest, Hungary. Since 2016 he is the official photographer of the Hungarian daily business... MORE
Public Story
Mud Country
Copyright Simon Moricz-Sabjan 2024
Date of Work Mar 2010 - Ongoing
Updated Jan 2020
Location Hungary
Topics Abandonment, Children, Documentary, Hope, Hungary, Long-term, Photography, Photojournalism, Portraiture, Poverty, Spotlight, Water, Youth

Mud Country

”Mud Country" is a long-term photography project that aims to provide a personal perspective for the Hungarian dirt roads beside the spreading of poverty, the mass departure of people and the local everyday problems.

The number of dirt roads is amazingly high in Hungary. Many people live habitually and inevitably along dirt roads in the rural areas of Bács Kiskun, Békés and Csongrád counties. One of the main problems of many Hungarian villages is the state of their common roads, which also poses as an obstacle of their improvement. More than 70 percent of public roads of local governments in Hungary have no surface pavement. This problem is most abundant in the Southern part of the Hungarian Great Plains, where 80 percent of the public roads are unconstructed dirt roads.

The villages of Csanytelek and Tömörkény of Csongád county are representative examples of the problems „Mud Country“ must face. More than third of the population lives along dirt roads. In rainy weather the ground alongside the river becomes completely impassable. Years ago they spent 6500 Euros ont he design, permits and application required for preparing the renovation of three dirt streets in particularly bad condition. The local government did not win the grant, because they failed to provide traffic count data and accident statistics to prove the need for a pavement. It is impossible to provide high traffic data to justify the neces-sity of renovating a road that is impassable during most of the year; nor do hay carts ever collide on a street where even jeeps get stuck. Just like in other settlements similar to Csanytelek, not only is it impossible for the ambulance to reach a patient with a heart attack within 15 minutes, it is virtually beyond any chance to find a tractor that could tow the ambulance to the patient.

Depopulated farmlands, emigration and the spreading of poverty also characterize “Mud Country”. Millions living in the deepest poverty, an extremely small middle class and more and more people who cannot provide for their family despite having a job – these are the features of Hungary. One in every three Hungarians, that is 3,3 million people live in poverty. 1,2 million of them must endure extreme poverty, which is an extraordinarily high number for a country with a population of 9.9 million. Almost every second hungarian is living in cramped conditions, every fourth flat is not properly protected against rain or has mould on the walls and almost one million households do not have electricity, heating and gas.

The "Mud Country" later on has also face the problems of the mass departure of people, which seriously affects rural villages. In Hungary already the half of people between 19 and 30 would like to work abroad. A significant proportion of youth and middle aged Hungarians desire to leave the country and have already started planning their emigration. Currently, more than 600,000 Hungarians live abroad in the European Union.

This is an ongoing project.

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