The photo story you are reading is part of the Chai Khana archive. From 2015 to 2025, Chai Khana covered the South Caucasus, sharing stories from Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan.
Public displays of affection are a no-go in Azerbaijan. In this largely Muslim yet secular country, tradition dictates social norms and young couples are frowned upon if spotted cuddling and kissing. Neighbors, relatives, acquaintances, schoolmates or co-workers feel entitled to judge. The unwritten law on public displays of affection means that there is a time and space where a young couple can engage with each other. That time is after marriage, that space is in private.
Photographer Ehtiram Jabi aimed to capture how love -- or its absence -- nonetheless shapes perceptions of public spaces in Baku, the Azerbaijani capital.
Jabi, a native of Baku, turned his ironic eye toward those spaces where couples seek privacy for their love affairs. Boys and girls, young men and women move cautiously in these locations; places where they can escape judgment and the public eye as they explore the physicality of love.