Memory of a March — 

“Memory of a March” documents protest not as a set of sharp images, but as it is actually lived—moving, uncertain, emotional. Faces blur into anonymity, not to erase people, but to reveal the collective force they form together. The softness protects identities while capturing the energy and tension of the crowd in motion. Instead of freezing a single moment, the images echo how protest feels inside the body: shifting, imperfect, half-seen, but fully experienced. These photographs show protest not as evidence, but as memory—fleeting, atmospheric, and deeply human.

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