I have been invited to work in Ethiopia with a non-profit organization from Australia called Barefoot Initiative. Tickets are booked for December and I am looking forward to the trip! Barefoot initiative is a Non Government Organisation (NGO) that is a group of three young Australians who have been working in the Afar region (hottest inhabited region on Earth) of Ethiopia since 2004. We will stay in a remote community, living in a mud hut for a month, with no electricity or phone reception. This means I will be out of contact with no access to a computer or telephone from December 18th to January 18th. For more info on the project, check out their website: www.barefootinitiative.org
Humanitarian
Recommendation from Oxfam America on LinkedIn
Today I received a recommendation on LinkedIn from Oxfam America for the work I did in Guatemala. Here is what they had to say:
I recently worked with Anna for six days in Guatemala to document some of our work in the area near Chimaltenango and in the western highlands (San Marcos area). Anna was really easy to work with, she took a creative approach to documenting some challenging stories and her final results are simply excellent.
Oxfam America, June 10, 2011.
If you would like to see this recommendation, and others, please feel free to view my LinkedIn profile
Orphanage in West Bengal: India 2009
I've just returned from a month in India, where I spent several weeks in an orphanage in West Bengal. I arrived into Calcutta (Kolkata) where I spent my first week, becoming adjusted to the distinctive sounds, smells and chaos of the city. The constant beeping of car horns, day and night, amongst the thick traffic of taxis, tuk-tuks and rickshaws kept me awake the first night, but became a reassuring contestant for the rest of the week. Staying on the edge of the slums, in a room shared with 7 others, I would exit the gates to be confronted by streets bustling with beggars, children and adults, living amongst the trash in the gutters and on the footpaths, clinging to my clothing as I passed, yelling, crying and asking for help. Images and faces from this first week will stay with me for life. Beyond this, the colors, smells and spices of the open markets were vibrant and wonderful. The city is overflowing with personality and life, and I hope to return for a longer stay in the future. Once I met with the small group of Kiwis I had arranged to stay with in a local orphanage, we got on a train and travelled several hours south, to a tiny railway town, in the middle of no-where. The orphanage was a large building in contrast to the local huts and basic living. There was limited electricity from a generator that worked for a few hours a day, and our water supply from a well. Life was basic. The children were beautiful. Some of the stories of their past lives were sad beyond belief, girls who had been bought out of prostitution before their 10th birthday, children who has been discarded, forgotten and abandoned. Getting to know the children was pure joy. The experiences that I had could fill a book with words, so I will try and keep this relatively short.
On my return to Australia, I discovered that a corroded pin in my camera had corroded all of my memory cards and corrupted them. The cards have been sent away for recovery, and in the meantime, I will share a few of the images that I managed to salvage.
© Anna Fawcus 2009 Village children pumping water, West Bengal, India
© Anna Fawcus 2009 Children in outdoor wash area at the MMH Orphanage (also used for washing clothes and dishes) © Anna Fawcus 2009 Children doing their morning chores at the MMH Orphanage, collecting wood © Anna Fawcus 2009 One of the children, Nandeeni, at the MMH Orphanage, working in the garden © Anna Fawcus 2009 Children in outdoor wash area at the MMH Orphanage washing their breakfast plates © Anna Fawcus 2009 Tears through the dust © Anna Fawcus 2009 Gypsy child, living in community by railway at Chandrakona Road, West Bengal, India © Anna Fawcus 2009 Young girl from MMH Orphanage collecting water