In the midst of the Arab Spring and the consequent few wins and many losses that seen the biggest countries of the Arab world from Syria to Egypt to Libya to Yemen succumb into conflict and dictatorship, the Bahrain Spring went almost unnoticed covered up by the regional events and the burying of any genuine desire for more democratic rule under the political tensions of the Sunni regimes of Saudi Arabia and Bahrain and the Shiite one of Iran.
Some speculated that the uprising in Bahrain is only sectarian and, hence, not a genuine gesture to democracy and progress. This was especially the case when sides like Hezbollah in Lebanon, a viciously sectarian militant party, spoke out in support of the uprising in Bahrain while it was fighting to suppress the uprising in Syria.
While the gestures and actions of regional powers will never speak on behalf of the people in the street, those people's actions would. In Bahrain, where a Sunni minority governs a Shiite majority, many stood peacefully and protested against a rising brutal oppression. Ahmed was one of them and he paid for his stance with his life.
This story is does not claim to cover the politics of the country or the region and will give only glimpses of the situation. It is not a history nor is it an analysis. It is merely the story of one young man who took it on himself to cover the images of a popular movement he believed in and received a bullet that killed him in exchange.
Now that the uprising in Bahrain has been crushed and the country pretends to be back to normal, the stories of its people are as important to know as ever if we are to have a day where standing in the street with a camera is a right that cannot be oppressed by the police and their guns.