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Stefanie Moshammer: It was taken in a favela called Santo Amaro, in Rio de Janeiro. The police pacified this favela in 2012 as part of the fight against the criminal organization Comando Vermelho (CV), and they now occupy it, but the CV still exists—there's just a different dynamic. The police and the gangs, I think, have some kind of arrangement. I took most of the photos in this series here.How did you get access?
To take photos in the favela, or even be allowed entry, you need to be there with somebody who's a native, and this person needs to introduce you to somebody from the gangs. A friend of mine introduced me to the members of the Comando Vermelho, and they agreed that I could take photos there because they knew and respected that friend.
"Black milk" derives mainly from a historical story. During the slave era, "black milk" was the name given to milk stolen from slave mothers to feed white infants. To understand Rio, you need to understand the history of Brazil. Four million slaves were shipped to Brazil from Africa, far more than were transported to the United States. Today, most of their descendants live in the suburbs or favelas, and they still work for the wealthy in Rio's South Zone. Even though my work is far from having any sort of photojournalistic or critical approach, I like to give some indication to the relevant topics in the places I photograph.