Photos Expose the Practice of Underage Marriage in Georgia

Kakheti region. A bride waits out her house for the groom to arrive.

Kakheti Region. Bride showing off her wedding dress to her classmates.

When photojournalist Daro Sulakauri was a girl coming of age in Georgia, one of her peers was married off at the age of thirteen. After becoming a bride, she stopped attending school, and though the 12-year-old Sulakauri could not fully grasp what being married at such a young age entailed, she was upset by it, and the memory stayed with her long after she reached adulthood.

It was with this childhood acquaintance in mind that the photographer embarked on Deprived of Adolescence, an ongoing body of work evidencing the phenomenon of underage marriage in Georgia. The country, explains Sulakauri, has a 17% rate of early marriage, one of the highest in Europe, and yet the facts remain shrouded in silence and secrecy.

In Georgia, sexual education is not offered to young girls, and the topic is confusing for those who undergo arranged marriages. Unequipped with the age and experience to understand what’s happening, these school-aged girls often meet their grooms just briefly before the wedding. The notion of consent, and the wishes of the brides-to-be, carry little weight.

Although the World Health Organization has put pressure on the government to acknowledge and fix the problem as it would any other human rights violation, the public of Georgia, suggests Sulakauri, is in deep denial about the phenomenon, which mostly takes place in rural villages.

The topic of underage marriage is always an emotional and contentious one, and when the photographer first began posting her images on social media platforms, she received a significant backlash and requests that the photographs be deleted.

Because of the controversy surrounding the subject, in addition to the obstacles that come with gaining access to such intimate, private moments, Deprived of Adolescence continues in many ways to be an uphill battle. Still, Sulakauri and the girls who have trusted her with their likenesses, press on, in hopes that someday things will change.

Zemo Adjara. Village Ghorjomi. Tamro, dresses for her sister’s engagement party.

Tamro, 14, dancing at her sister’s engagement party. Although it is very common for girls to get married at a young age in Adjara region, Tamro says she is not ready to marry and plans to finish school.

Kakheti region. Boys chasing the newlyweds with cars.

Zemo Adjara. Zortikheli Village. Engagement Party.

Kakheti Region. Bride, 17, leaving her house for her wedding ceremony. She met her future husband on the day of her engagement.

Zemo Adjara. Village Zortikyeli. Mari, 15.

Zemo Adjara. Sali, 13, daydreaming.

Zemo Adjara. Landscape.

All images © Daro Sulakauri

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