Getting from Kampala, Uganda to Nimule, Sudan is not as easy as the folks at the atlas publishing company make you think...
Friday, June 20, 2008
Monday, June 16, 2008

'All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing'
I keep thinking about this quote. I know the problems in Africa are vast and complicated, but I can't shake the notion that we, who are more fortunate, must do something. No matter what our belief, no matter how desperate the situation may seem, we simply cannot turn our back on these beautiful people. They still have hope after everything they have endured, still have faith that the Americans are coming to help them. If they can still believe in us, shouldn't we believe in them?
Aids or Starvation

I had to get special permission from the military to visit Geli, a village that had been attacked four months earlier by the LRA. The government lent me a Police Chief and a Military Intelligence Officer for the day as added protection. Half of the village was wiped out by the attacks, entire families buried together in small unmarked graves next to their burned down huts. The LRA took all of their livestock and destroyed the fields leaving the survivors with nothing to sustain them. When I arrived, there were only a few people around sitting under a tree trying to escape the scorching Sudan heat next to a makeshift chalkboard outlining ways to prevent HIV/Aids. Gabriel, the Police officer, served as translator and said the villagers were so happy to see me because I was American and that meant I would send help. They had been surviving on boiled leaves for months, and some of the villagers had walked several hours to the nearest town to see if they could trade some leaves for maize or soap. After a lengthy tour detailing the attacks I thanked them for their time. The tribal elders came out and gave a speech of gratitude for my visit and offered blessings from God. Later I was able to send a 50 kilo bag of maize and a case of soap. I wish I could have sent more.

Friday, June 13, 2008
Nihal

One little boy, Nihal, sits on my porch for hours waiting for me to come out. He never says a word, just sits and waits. When I come out he smiles a shy toothless smile and quietly approaches me slipping his hand into mine. We walk all over the compound never saying a word, just walking and holding hands. One day, after standing in my doorway for a long time, he suddenly got the courage to step inside in pursuit of a pink feather. After that he just sat at the foot of my bed playing with his feather and an empty water bottle.
Photography lesson
Today was a wonderful day! As I was walking the grounds of the orphanage taking photos, I noticed some older boys watching with immense curiosity. Their eyes lit up when I handed them some disposable cameras. The photography lesson that followed was one of the most beautiful times I have ever experienced. Nine boys, ages 14-17, all victims of the war, some of them ex-soldiers in the LRA. Yet I felt nothing but love, acceptance and gratitude from these boys. They really touched my heart at that moment as I became the student. I've come to document the tragedies that these children, these victims of war, have endured, yet I am in awe and inspired by the courage and the immense love they have. Throughout the lesson I show them samples on my digital display. Lessons in composition, light, and subject take place with the nine of them huddled around me, watching closely and politely asking questions. I love the way all of our heads smash together as we analyze what we see on the viewfinder. Like one big group hug after another. Soon I send them out on assignment but I give the oldest one, Opio Joseph, my 30D. I ask him to try and get something different. I found out later that he had a goat slaughtered so he could document it for me. I wasn't quite sure how to react to such a violent act of kindness! Later, when I leave, he writes me a letter referring to me as his mother.
AK47 and a restless mind

6:30 am and the roosters have been carrying on for hours already. I'm sitting outside as the sun rises revealing the lush green landscape and deep red earth. A choir of hundreds of different species chirping and squealing fill the air with a sweet early morning chatter. A slight breeze and an occasional baritone dog bark complement the harmony in this African landscape. I'm sleepy but restless in my mind. A wise old chinese doctor in Thailand once told me that the only thing wrong with me is I'm always thinking thinking thinking...
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