Currently in Tanzania – upcoming travel to Rwanda, Ethiopia, & Uganda.

Only in Tesoland

Posted on 16 Feb, 2012 in Blog Posts, Personal WorkLeave A Comment

The Teso tribe of East Africa numbers about 3.5 million people, most of whom live in NE Uganda. After Kampala, Tesoland was the first place I visited in the country. Nearly three years later I still hold it in my heart as one of the most special places in the world. Centuries old traditions remain firmly engrained in the culture here.  While that’s not unique among tribes in Africa, rarely are they so welcoming to outsiders as the Teso.  Take, for instance, their nearby cousins, Kenya’s Turkana.  During colonial times even Great Britain dared not enter their tribal lands.  The colonial power shut off the Turkana Region and required a special pass of any outsider wishing to visit.

Above, villagers enjoy beer and peanuts at the local bar. The local brew, shared from a communal clay pot, is concocted from millet and sucked through long straws made from reeds.  In the past twenty years, the Teso have endured much hardship: two armed rebellions (including Joseph Kony and the LRA’s infamous 2003 incursion), floods, drought, the HIV/AIDS epidemic, and cattle raids from the neighboring Karamojong tribe. However, you wouldn’t know it if you were to travel here. The Teso remain resolute and joyful.  It’s all water under the bridge.

Watch the above video about a private primary and vocational school in Amuria, in the heart of Tesoland. Living Hope Education Center currently educates over 300 pupils, many from extremely disadvantaged backgrounds. When I’m not out shooting, I sit on Living Hope’s advisory board. We’re currently getting ready to begin a volunteer-teacher program at the school. For those willing to make the step out here, shoot me an email. The musical performance for this piece was captured at the Teso Traditional Music Competition in Amuria.

Growing Together:
ChildFund’s Work in Sri Lanka

Posted on 01 Feb, 2012 in Assignment, Blog Posts, Video1 Comment

I’ve just completed nine days in Sri Lanka with ChildFund documenting recovery efforts in rural areas. Schools and community centers were severely damaged during the civil war. ChildFund is building newer, better centers with the help of the local community on the ground. Throughout this, the organization’s educational, nutritional, and growth-monitoring programs continue. They are ever so important here among a population that has been devastated by upheaval. Despite this, Sri Lanka was perhaps the warmest and friendliest place I’ve been in some time, to which these photos will attest. The majority of meals I ate were in homes rather than at my hotel.

I shot two videos spots during the week, the first of which is about Dilshan, whose family struggled to keep him in school until ChildFund’s agricultural programs stepped in. The spot will air on cable television in the US, and I have to keep it hidden until after it does. Below Dilshan harvests brinjals, one of Sri Lanka’s many exotic vegetables. It’s like a tart eggplant, but with a firmer texture. I’m certainly going to miss the great variety of food here.

Below is the second video I shot, and have just put the finishing touches on. It focuses on ChildFund’s reconstruction of Early Childhood Care and Development centers, or ECCDs, which are a launching point of ChildFund’s programs in the community.

Below, ECCD coordinator Chamila Krishanti talks to parents at a home-based ECCD, wherein adults learn about activities to stimulate their young children’s minds at home, and about proper nutrition and diet for their families.

If you count the video below, I shot three in total. Officially, Sri Lanka drives on the left-hand side of the road, though this is more of a guideline than a rule. Several times I thought I could be filming the last moments of my life. Without a freeway system, Sri Lanka’s roads cut through populated areas and make for a few close calls.

Magic in the Numbers

Posted on 05 Jan, 2012 in Assignment, Blog PostsLeave A Comment

Not many of us can claim to have saved 100,000 lives. I recently spent a week in Rwanda photographing jointly for the Gates Foundation and the Global Fund, two of the greatest change-makers in global health today. The Gates Foundation is a major contributor to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis. Together they save an estimated 100,000 lives each month. Above, a child receives a polio vaccine in a public health center in Kabuga, Rwanda.

While health care is a controversial issue across the world, especially in US politics, we in the West might view it differently if were we dealing with the same epidemics people face in places like Sub-Saharan Africa. Here, UN, PEPFAR or Global Fund-supported public health centers are the primary means for accessing care for diseases such as tuberculosis and HIV. Treatment for such diseases would be far out of reach for most individuals were it not for donor agencies.

Above, community health care worker Angelique Uzamukunda (r) measures the diameter of four year old Elie’s arm with the help of his mother in order to monitor his nutrition levels. Angelique, also shown below walking along a roadside in the town of Rumyongza, monitors members of her community for signs of HIV, TB, malnutrition, and malaria, and makes referrals to local health centers when needed.

Prevention programs are also part of the Global Fund‘s strategy. Research shows a 60% decline in transmission of HIV from female to male after circumcision. The procedure is now in high demand since the Rwandan Ministry of Health has been offering it for free every Saturday. Below, Dr. Semana Cyrille talks with young men as they queue for circumcision operations at Kibagabaga Hospital in Kigali.

I’ve been in Africa long enough to remember a time when anti-retroviral therapy (ARV) was not available. As a volunteer at an orphanage in 2002, I recall one three-year old child dying on the first week of my arrival there. I’m hopeful that these days are in the past.

Above, Nutritionist Claudette Kayitesi counsels François Iyamuremye as he receives his monthly anti-retroviral medication at a clinic in Rwanda’s capital, Kigali. Nearly 100,000 people (seems to be a magic number) are supported with essential ARV medication by the Global Fund in Rwanda alone. Proper adherence to treatment and diet are an essential part of the ARV regimen. The medication is never unaccompanied by counseling.

Our team documented François and his family’s life for two days while in Rwanda. Both he and his wife are HIV positive. François also leads a class of HIV victims where he discusses adherence to the medication and ways patients can deal with stigma surrounding the virus in their communities.

3.3 million people are currently receiving ARV treatment through the Global Fund. Following the global financial crises, contributions to the fund from donor governments have been down. Isolationist rhetoric coming from some US presidential candidates is also troubling. Perhaps we should keep in mind that not all interference in the affairs of other nations need be for strategic political gain.

François’ wife Jacqueline, shown above, together with her husband, was diagnosed with HIV before the birth of their last child, Thierry. Shown below on right, with his sister Lyzette, Thierry’s status is negative thanks to Global Fund-supported Rwandan government programs. Jacqueline is determined for her children to remain HIV negative throughout their lifetimes and has begun to educate them about the disease even at their early age.

Work in Action

Posted on 16 Dec, 2011 in Assignment, Blog Posts2 Comments

It’s getting on toward the end of 2011, so I’ll take the time to display some work used by clients this year. These selected works document everything from PSI‘s Peer Educators who make the rounds at bars counseling sex workers and their clients in Hanoi, to ChildFund‘s annual reports and holiday gift catalog covers. I probably shouldn’t mention these two in the same sentence. Other works seen here are for UNICEF, the ICC‘s Women’s Initiative for Gender Justice, the Gates Foundation and the Uganda Women’s Health Initiative. For a closer look, click on any of these articles or covers.

At a loss for what to give for Christmas gifts this year? Why not a goat, pig or clean water in honor of a friend or loved one? Go to ChildFund’s online gift catalog to begin your shopping spree. Much of the photography, including the cover shot, is by yours truly.

Follow this link to navigate through a unique interactive about the Gates Foundation‘s initiative to reduce poverty by empowering small farmers in the developing world.

Rubbing Elbows with the Royals

Posted on 08 Dec, 2011 in Assignment, Blog Posts1 Comment

His Royal Highness, Prince Charles, recently stopped by WaterAid projects in Dar es Salaam as part of his state visit to mark Tanzania’s 50 years of independence from Great Britain. His Royal Highness didn’t seem bothered by Dar’s extreme heat and kept tradition by wearing his trademark double-breasted suit.

No one knows the identity of the man immediately to the left of the Prince in the above photograph. I took great pains to try to find out for captioning purposes. In spite of the tight security, the unidentified man managed to inch his way up to His Royal Side during the tour, making him the ultimate party crasher. It was clear he enjoyed being photographed, however, as in most of my photos he preferred to glare at the lens rather than schmooze with the Prince, as shown below. He disappeared right after His Royal Highness made his exit.

Our uninvited guest ought to take some fashion tips from the Prince. What’s with that short-sleeved suit? This was the first time I’ve seen such an outrage openly flaunted.

I stayed on to photograph other water and sanitation projects in the area, including the use of foot-activated DIY hand-washing stations seen below.

Spicing Things Up

Posted on 14 Nov, 2011 in Assignment, Blog PostsLeave A Comment

It’s good to be back at work in Uganda again. Of the all African countries I frequent, it seems to be the place where I spend most of my personal time, but where I actually work the least. For this assignment I traveled with Tracey Spicer, an Australian journalist and news anchor who was reporting on the work of ActionAid for the Daily Telegraph and other editorial and broadcast outlets.

Spicer highlighted ActionAid‘s work on women’s rights and domestic violence in Eastern Uganda. She knows first-hand what it’s like to experience gender discrimination. Her firing in 2006 from Network Ten (via email) after returning from maternity leave garnered much attention in the media and started a nation-wide debate about gender discrimination in the workplace. Since then she has been bringing to light the stories of voiceless women who have faced hardship or abuse.

Click on the article above to read the story from the Daily Telegraph of Jennifer Alupot, one of the women we encountered on our assignment. It’s shocking to read that 68% of women have reported being abused by their husbands in this country. How many more instances go unreported? The above story, and the nation-wide outrage it engendered when first reported, led to the adoption in 2009 of the first law against domestic violence in Uganda.

ActionAid not only works with victims of domestic violence, but also politicians and community leaders in order to advocate on a broader basis and effect change on a larger level. Below is Mr. Claudius Kikonkolo, one of the elders of Kole village in Uganda’s Pallisa District. Following ActionAid’s intervention, the elders of this village allowed women more rights in their society, including the right to own land.

We also spent some time covering the aftermath of hailstorms in the East. A series of football, yes football, sized hailstorms in this region of the country flattened the houses and ruined the harvests of many small farmers this year. Because of the loss of harvest many went hungry, and incidents of malnutrition increased dramatically. Below, The Kaula family sits together amidst the rubble that was their house in Nsinze Village, Namutumba District.

Traveling on Uganda’s roads during the rainy season can be fun. We managed to become stuck a couple of times in muddy potholes, though not as badly as this lorry did. It was forced to unload its cargo before inching its way through the muck. Below, a motorcycle bears a coffin across the Nile River in Jinja.

Africa’s True Survivors

Posted on 24 Oct, 2011 in Assignment, Blog PostsLeave A Comment

I endured photographing in Dar es Salaam’s grueling heat yesterday morning, but it’s nothing compared to what some of these women have gone though. Yes, women get breast cancer in Africa, too. But here the dynamic is different. With limited health care facilities and awareness, most women who have breast cancer are unaware of it and end up succumbing to the disease.

Susan G. Komen for the Cure is working to change that. Known for their Walk for the Cure as well as other advocacy and research programs, their scope has gone global in recent years and is now reaching women in Sub-Saharan Africa. Women diagnosed with breast cancer in Tanzania and other African countries have to deal with severe stigma and the temptation to consult traditional healers, as their family or peers may advise. It’s a miracle that about one hundred survivors came out yesterday, donning the pink shirt and ululating loudly in order to draw recognition to their cause.

Susan G. Komen for the Cure partners with the Tanzania Breast Cancer Foundation to provide breast cancer awareness and medical treatment for women across Tanzania.

In Gertrude’s STEPS – Catholic Relief Services work with OVCs in Zambia

Posted on 12 Oct, 2011 in Blog Posts, Photo Essay2 Comments

It can be said that young people have suffered the most from the effects of HIV in Africa. The disease took a devastating toll on the population of Zambia, wiping out nearly a generation of the most economically active and productive members of society, those 20 to 40 years old. But it is the young who are left behind, often to fend for themselves and cope with a disease that is to be their only inheritance. With an HIV prevalence rate of 20%, Mongu District in western Zambia is one of the areas hardest hit by HIV in the country. Below, Nurse Idah Jangazya collects blood samples during a monthly HIV screening clinic at Mindolo Clinic in Kitwe, Zambia.

Gertrude Nyambe is a 41 year-old mother of five living in Mongu. At the age of 35 she and her husband were diagnosed with HIV. He succumbed to the disease soon after. After enrolling in an anti-retroviral (ARV) therapy program, Gertrude decided she would work to fight the spread of the disease in her community and support those who had fallen victim to it.

Today Gertrude is a caregiver with Catholic Relief Services‘ STEPS OVC program (Sustainability Through Economic Strengthening, Prevention and Support for Orphans and Vulnerable Children). She spends at least two days of every week making rounds to community members affected by the disease, paying special attention to younger individuals. On her home visits she ensures HIV positive patients are adhering to their anti-retroviral therapy, eating balanced diets, and being connected to government health and welfare services. She strikes up conversations about HIV with young people on the street, sharing prevention tips. Below, Mukelabai Silimina (82, left) had twelve children, seven of whom have passed away due to AIDS-related illness. She now cares for six of her grandchildren, including Mwiya (16, left).

Gertrude also monitors the well-being of OVCs in the community, making sure they are performing well in school and not falling prey to abuse. Those that are older and not continuing on in higher education are often connected with a vocational training program. Though she is a volunteer, Gertrude treats her work as though it were a career. “This is my own way of fighting the disease,” she says. “I go out there and provide help to those that need it. Once I was in great pain, but through the help of others I was able to recover. Now I myself want to help those who are ill or in need of help like I was.”

Unlike years past, Gertrude’s work today has a dual focus: monitoring patients’ ARV adherence, and educating people about HIV prevention. “I encourage the OVCs in the community to postpone sexual activity, that they should abstain from sexual activity and concentrate on school… Our hope lies with the children.” Although she has been volunteering as a caregiver for a number of years, thanks to the availability of ARV medication, Gertrude’s workload is somewhat lighter than in the past. Although there are exceptions, most clients who had been bed-ridden and for whom she had cooked in the past are now out working and living normal lives.

Of the 22 homes that Gertrude visits each month, she spends most of her time with Muna Nyambe (no relation), dropping by four times a week. “Muna has improved since the time I met him and he was first enrolled in the program,” she tells me before we knock on the door and walk into the grass thatch house where he stays. Inside she finds 14-year old Muna, a boy who looks to be age 8 or 9, lying in a small bed that takes up most of the room.

At fourteen Muna is gentle and upbeat, yet weak and frail, so much so that he is unable to attend school. His father having passed away, Muna lives with his mother who is also HIV positive and must leave for work for ten hours each day. It was Gertrude that first identified Muna as an OVC in 2005, brought him in to be tested for HIV, and connected him with government services to receive subsequent ARV care. Muna’s mother was unaware such services existed. Linking Muna to government programs was critical, but Gertrude’s role hasn’t ended there. Today, she continues to be part of his life by bathing him and cooking for him when needed. She makes sure his appointments at the clinic are kept, often taking him there herself. She prays with Muna and his mother and has become an invaluable support to the family: “She encourages Muna to have hope that he can still live a normal life. She even encourages him to go outside and play a bit if he’s feeling well,” says Mufaweli Nyambe, Muna’s mother.

With over 2,100 caregiver volunteers like Gertrude working in the same capacity across Zambia, CRS‘ STEPS OVC is playing a crucial role in identifying, supporting, and empowering young and vulnerable people affected by HIV. At the same time the program is helping to reduce the spread of the disease by educating the community. “My own life has been able to bring positive change in other’s lives, especially those living with HIV,” Gertrude says. “I give them my life as an example. I give hope. I’m still able to do all the things that I was able to do before… I’m strong so they can also be strong and have hope for the future.”

Faces of Drought

Posted on 14 Sep, 2011 in Assignment, Blog Posts, Photo Essay1 Comment

A more somber side of Kenya’s drought in the Turkana Region compared to my last entry… and a bit of the relief effort by ChildFund.


Some more of my video work on the crisis:

Hope Amid the Crisis – Turkana, Kenya

Posted on 02 Sep, 2011 in Blog Posts1 Comment

Many have heard about the horrific drought that is gripping the Horn of Africa right now. I’ve been spending a lot of time in Kenya’s Turkana Region documenting the situation and the relief efforts there. In Turkana the UN has declared a food Crisis: one step below a Famine but one above an Emergency. While I have plenty of images that depict the crisis, today we’ll focus on the positive – the long-term food security projects of ChildFund and the World Food Programme in Turkana, known as Food for Assets. Click play above for a full explanation.

The Food For Assets program works to coerce those Turkana living in irrigable areas to learn sustainable farming practices by making the food aid they receive contingent upon their enrollment in the program. It is the hope of implementing partners that after one year of learning, people who have received the training will no longer be in need of food aid. So far the program has proved a success and is helping more than 3,000 households throughout the region. Plans are now in the works to expand it further. Of course, not everyone in Turkana lives in an irrigable area, and much of the region is still in need of emergency food aid during the current drought crisis.

There are many similarities between this program and the one I documented with Plant With Purpose in my previous blog entry. Large and small, NGOs and foundations are realizing that small farmers are the key to food security in Africa.

Regular readers may be wondering if I’ve completely abandoned the still photograph for the motion picture. Not so. Perhaps I’m just enthralled with love of the new medium. I’ve thrown in a few shots taken on a stroll after a long day of work in Lodwar, Kenya.

Greener Pastures

Posted on 10 Aug, 2011 in Assignment, Blog Posts, Video3 Comments

My most recent video assignment is truly a story of success. The Kimaro family has graduated from poverty thanks to the programs of the environmental NGO Plant With Purpose.

Several years ago Jacob & Joyce Kimaro were small farmers living in poverty and trying to make ends meet on the foothills of Tanzania’s Mount Kilimanjaro. Things became even more difficult when Mr. Kimaro’s brother and sister-in-law passed away, and they had to take in seven extra children.

It was then that the Kimaros joined VICOBA, the Village Community Bank organized by Plant With Purpose. There the family received training in sustainable agriculture practices, organic farming, and earning income while preserving the environment. VICOBA members are also able to save money jointly and access credit each week. Today the Kimaros not only have their bills paid on time, but are eating healthy and balanced diets while preserving their natural surroundings.

All for the Kids – recent videos from East Africa

Posted on 17 Jul, 2011 in Assignment, Blog Posts, Video2 Comments

Featured here are two recent videos of mine from locations across East Africa. The first is a ChildFund PSA that aired on television in the US and was filmed in Kenya’s remote Maasai land. Though ChildFund has other outlets for the footage, on this particular spot my four days of footage were cut down to meager 62 seconds. Post-production for this piece was done by the Causeway Agency.

Though certainly not as polished, I did my own editing on the spot below for Light in Africa. The video is aimed at recruiting volunteers to come out to Tanzania and aid in the work. I myself am a volunteer alumnus of the organization that years ago helped inspire me to take root in East Africa.

My Liberia assignment that was scheduled for this week has been postponed. I’ve instead been rerouted to Kenya to cover the catastrophic drought gripping the North and East of the country. More on that in the coming weeks…

From the Rooftop of Africa

Posted on 03 Jul, 2011 in Assignment, Blog Posts2 Comments

In the past few months I’ve been working in Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania. In this video update I discuss and review my most recent work with ChildFund, Right Choices, Computers 4 Africa, the Times London, and Light in Africa from my base in Kilimanjaro Region, near Africa’s highest peak.

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