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Le Monde
Le Monde
4 Nov 2024


Images Le Monde.fr
WILLIAM CAMARGO

In Anaheim, California, Latinos are in search of housing and visibility

By  and
Published today at 7:00 pm (Paris)

3 min read Lire en français

With 25 million visitors expected by 2023, Anaheim is a leading tourist destination in the United States. The Disneyland theme park has a lot to do with it, and the Anaheim Convention Center does the rest. The urban landscape of this Californian city is unsurprisingly amply dominated by an ever-growing architecture aimed at hospitality. Less well known are the working-class neighborhoods, overwhelmingly Latino, which nevertheless account for more than half of the inhabitants.

Images Le Monde.fr

Photographer William Camargo was born and raised in these neighborhoods, largely made invisible, sometimes even hidden behind high brick walls. As a student, Camargo took part in protests denouncing police brutality, gang activity, the domination of the city by commercial interests and the lack of political representation of Hispanic residents in local government. This was much to the despair of his parents, who were undocumented at the time.

His photographic work "Origins and Displacements," which began during the Covid pandemic and continues to the present day, focuses on these contrasts. Part survey, part documentation of everyday life, this series draws on the city's archives and the local press to trace more or less recent history, which resonates with current reality. The photographer begins in the 1920s, when the Ku Klux Klan, then at the height of its influence and popularity, decided to make Anaheim a model "Klan town." He took a detour to 1994, when California passed a law limiting undocumented immigrants' access to state public services, including public education and health care. He also revisits the city's not-so-distant past linked to gentrification, systemic racism and police brutality.

Images Le Monde.fr

Above all, it restores visibility to his community, largely absent from the archives and still marginalized despite its growing weight in the electorate. This year, the Hispanic vote represents 15% of voters. "This county, nicknamed Nixon County and Reagan County interchangeably, has always been Republican and eventually became more Democratic with the influx of migrants and the new generation," explained Camargo.

Due to its proximity to the Mexican border, the migration issue is at the heart of local concerns. "There are many mixed families here, many of whom are undocumented," he added. "Donald Trump wants to send back undocumented migrants, the very people in Anaheim who build the luxury hotels and buildings that drive the local economy."

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