Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

By Mark McConville

 

THE ISOLATION and loneliness of villages with a population of 10 people or less has been captured in a series of striking photographs.

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

Incredible images show the few remaining people, most of them elderly, as they go about their simple lives without modern technology such as televisions and mobile phones.

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

Other black and white pictures show people posing for the camera or gazing longingly outside, perhaps waiting for their relatives to return.

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

These people still living in the villages of the Portuguese region, Tras os Montes, were captured on camera by Portuguese photographer Ricardo Ramos.

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

He joined a young team from the Proximity to the Isolated Elderly project. The goal is to ward off loneliness and help improve the quality of the elderlyā€™s life.

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

ā€œThe people Iā€™ve met have fantastic stories that I could listen to for hours,ā€ said Ramos.

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

ā€œThe natural light in these houses is very good. Usually they are old houses, with small windows and a fireplace.

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

ā€œPeople like my photos, but they are also sad by the reality. In the 70s and 80s, these villages had between 100-200 people and today only five or 10 people remain.ā€

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

ā€œThis region and the personality of the people is very moving. They have little, but they always have something to give you. There is simply no wickedness in their hearts.ā€

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

There have been cases of only 1 person living in a whole village. As the young population left a long time ago in search of a ā€˜better lifeā€™, the small villages are mainly lived in by the elderly.

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

Many of the villages are untouched by technology; television and cell phones are a rarity. People mainly survive from agricultural production and sheep farming. During winter, these elderly people spend days or even weeks without leaving the house because of the cold.

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

The photographs are in black and white, which Ramos hopes forces the viewer to wrap himself in the mystery and immerse himself in the scene.

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

Ramos simply walked into peopleā€™s homes and chatted with them, before asking if he could take their picture.

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com

 

Ramos believes that loneliness among the elderly is a problem and that it can kill them faster. The current desertification of Tras-os-Montes also doesnā€™t help the situation, as almost all schools are now closed and the villages have been turned into ghost towns ā€“ except for the elderly.

Ricardo Ramos / Universal Features / mediadrumimages.com