Malika was a Moroccan oven j 22 who died in 2004 on a beach in Motril.
She arrived by boat with thirty other people, but it reached the coast and body.
In the exhibition The Dream of Malika, framed within the programming of the Sea Music and located in the CIM, Bernard Clement is to name the thousands of drowned trying to reach Spain by boat.
The sample consists of over a hundred pictures, a book and a documentary that tells the story of dozens of immigrants and Malika's own.
Malika's dream makes sense through i imaging technique of peers and photograph of the beach where they died and fragments of his body and inert.
Its author, Clement Bernard, explained that in 2004 when the events occurred, he was in Tarifa and wanted to portray any subject related to immigrants. Outside the convention, I wanted to escape the constant arrival of immigrants to the beaches, he said.
It was then learned that a boat had arrived with 30 people on a beach in Motril, Granada, and a young Moroccan who had died.
The causes were not determined, but nobody seemed to care, notes Bernard.
à ‰ left the starting point of their work.
When the body arrived Kashba Malika Tadla, the mother of the young caede pain on the floor.
The girl is then buried in the ground, under stones, in a humble cemetery.
The exhibition will be open in the CIM until July 31, 10 to 13 hours and 19-21 hours.
Source: Ayuntamiento de Cartagena