HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesShe’s out to save India's missing girls using art and a digital game

She’s out to save India's missing girls using art and a digital game

Creative and fine-art photographer Leena Kejriwal has helped raise awareness about sex trafficking through her unique art and technology project Save Missing Girls.

March 21, 2020 / 08:09 IST
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Neha Kirpal

Leena Kejriwal found herself confronting a unique problem when NGOs working in the field of prostitution and human trafficking reached out to her as a fine-art photographer. They were up against a frustrating fact: prostitution is demand driven. “As long as the common man on the street continues to come and buy sex, it’s difficult to keep the girls out,” explains Leena, who decided to bring another language to the fight against sex trafficking.

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And so the Kolkata-based artist launched Save Missing Girls, a project that aims to raise awareness about sex trafficking through art installations, photography and technology. Coming from a traditional Marwari family, she had grown up in a patriarchal structure, which she thinks strengthened her understanding of the role society can play in a girl’s life. Further, being an artist, she believes in the power of the graphic language to connect with the public. “So, when I set out to create a public artwork, I wanted it to be so graphic, minimal and easy to grasp that it should have the ability to cross all vernacular boundaries to engage the masses on the issue of sex trafficking,” she says.

Missing Girls street art.