On Housewives
BY Sevil Alkan
2018
I grew up a happy kid. Mom,
dad and my younger brother, we made a warm family. As is the case
with most men, there was some distance between home and my father.
Both when he was at work and at home.
The
beating heart of our home was mom. The steadfast lady of the house.
She meant everything to our home. She was home. A housewife
fortifying dad’s ‘guest’ relationship with home by her presence
and with all the endless housework she does.
There
are around 14 million housewives in Turkey. Workers who turn groups
of rooms inhabited by family members into homes. Bearing the brunt of
a job they can never leave or hand over. A
job where pay is not even suggested.
Rich
or poor, by choice or by force… Once a housewife, your labour is
null. Your time, happiness, health, your body and your future are all
dedicated to a sacred cause. You become invisible.
That
was my motive. I wanted to enter the housewives’ sphere and to tell
what I see and hear. I spent days in the homes of 14 women including
my mom. I photographed them trying to keep up with housework, raising
kids and and on their rare spare time. Because: HOUSEWIVES
MATTER!