Syrian Abdulazez Dukhan wrote a letter to Donald Trump asking him to try to grasp the suffering of Syrian refugees.
The 18-year-old was forced to flee from his war-stricken home earlier in 2016.
"We started the revolution holding roses and hoping for support from the international community," he wrote in the letter.
"Years passed; the roses turned into guns but the hope for support continues. Still, neither roses nor hope helped."
Dukhan taught himself photography during his escape, which was peppered with refugee camps.
He met families, made friends and started a photography project in April 2016 titled Through Refugee Eyes to present the reality of being forced to live somewhere other than your home.
"The hardest thing about living in a refugee camp is the isolation. People build walls around us and countries build walls around those walls."
He then went on to talk about borders and walls, something that Trump repeatedly called for during his presidential campaign.
"Dear future president, borders kill dreams. I've seen dreams die before their body - it leaves that person with no soul. For those of us who still have faith, please don't build walls in front of us."
Through his lens, Dukhan is bringing the Syrian crisis to light in hopes that it will change things. He tells the stories behind those featured in his photographs.
"Dear future president, we hope that someone can hear our words. We hope that you do."
"I used to have house but I lost it. I used to have home but I left it. Take care dear, take care and be thankful for what you have. Be thankful you can go whenever you want and wherever you want.
Support refugees and try to feel the difficulty which we are facing."
"Here we spent 2016. Between the camps through many tents.We are still in our way looking for the light."
"Opened my eyes to see myself moving between the camps, yes because my family fled from the war before I was born. When I came into this world, it called me a refugee. That's my name today, refugee."
"Today I am in a camp and you're in your house. Today I sleep in a tent and you're sleeping in your bed. Today my passport can't do anything for me but you can do everything with yours. Today I have no home to go back to it and you have your country.
All of that today, but do you know anything about tomorrow ? Maybe the war will be in your country and you'll be like me today. Support us today to find people to support you tomorrow."
"You may like this photograph, but have you ever asked yourself if you are able to live there for 10 months? Here is the place refugees have been living in for 300 days!"