Jamaica is a homophobic society. We grow up to dislike homosexuals. We grow up to hate homosexuality.
says Daggering, a LGBTQ youth living in Jamaica sewers.
These self-described ‘Gully Queens’ live in the city drains. But we know what they call their so called homes are not any place to be called as a home.
Dagerring further says,
“Right now, we all want to leave the gully because you don’t know what might happen, who will jump down. The gully is cold, mosquitoes bite you. So, in the gully, it’s like hell down there.”
A London based documentary photographer and journalist Christo Geoghegan undertook this project to capture the lifestyle of these “Gully Queens”.
Geoghegan said,
“I wanted to be able to use the photographs and accompanying documentary film as a way for them to display their sexuality and personality the way they wanted to and not the way that society had told them that they should.”
According to a recent interview with Feature Shoot, Jamaican police evicted the Gully Queens. Christo hopes to follow up their story and revisit Jamaica.
Christo Geoghegan wants the society to admire these individuals for their strength, beauty and style and not feels sorry about such subjects.
“The photos aim to be a celebration of their spirit amidst the adversity they face each and every day and not purely ‘misery porn’ that only focuses on their hardships, because there is so much more to them than just that.”