BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND TWITTER BACKGROUNDS

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Out of what would you build your house? Plywood, plastic, or used metal?


Shantytown of Damunager, India- One of the largest shantytowns in all of Asia and it continues to grow. Shantytowns are well known for not having electricity, proper sanitation, and no communication lines for telephones.   Often such cities are a result of a developing country that has an unequal distribution of wealth leading to many people with hardly any money to live.  Sadly to say, over one-sixth of the world’s population lives in such conditions. 



In Dumunager, the shantytown located around the great city of Mumbai, officials have recognized this tragic problem and have tried to create a new program to help remove people from the Shantytown sector and also have tried to make sanitation more possible—at least publicly (Chinai).  Unfortunately, the actions of government have made the decision to start to destroy some of the shantytowns because they continue to move into the countryside of India.  As a result, many of people living in these towns have made their conditions even worse (The South Asian).

Works Cited

Chinai, Rupa. “Mumbai slum dwellers’ sewage project goes nationwide.” Bulletin of the World Health Organization. 2002.  Print. 18 Mar 2010.

Salgado, Sebastião. Photograph. Migrations: Humanity in Transition. New York: Aperture, 2000. 427. Print. 4 Mar. 2010.


Thursday, March 11, 2010

Moms and Bombs


Mozambique-A place once filled with destruction and war has left many incapacitated or killed from the mines, bombings, and slaughters.   Many of these have lost limbs, family, and their homes.  Despite all of these terrible problems, disease spread killing many parents of children and left many as orphans.  As such, many women take on the responsibility to care for those without any parents left.  And yet despite all the tragedies, some can even smile at the life they now have.  Gratitude is visible in their eyes as they continue to press on bringing hope to those who have lost everything.

Sebastiao Salgado depicts this beautifully with two magnificent African women caring for two young children and even though both have lost limbs, you feel hope and a feeling of love for them and their future.  The National Center of Biotechnology Information says that Over 90 percent of the people who lived and were interviewed had hope for the future. 


Works Cited


Salgado, Sebastião. Photograph. Migrations: Humanity in Transition. New York: Aperture, 2000. 233. Print. 4 Mar. 2010.


Thursday, March 4, 2010

The Troll who lived under the bridge



Jakarta, Indonesia- The troll who lived under the bridge was a childhood story that haunted some young children, but in Indonesia instead of trolls under the bridge, immigrants live with families that have nowhere else to turn.  During 1996, more and more immigrants were flocking to Jakarta to start a new life where a city was beginning to blossom.  Jakarta is the capitol city of Indonesia, but is a city of slums, gangs, and violence.  For many, these bridges represent a safe haven from the trolls that are lurking, not under the bridge, but above it (Jakarta Globe).



This capitol city originally was designed to hold a little over 800,000 people, but currently there are as many as 25,000,000 people and the numbers are growing.   The government has continued to struggle to provide housing for the new immigrants resulting in people living under bridges, along rivers, and on railway lines (Jakarta Globe). 

Works Cited


Salgado, Sebastião. Photograph. Migrations: Humanity in Transition. New York: Aperture, 2000. 423. Print. 4 Mar. 2010.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Devastated towns are homes for refugees and displaced people


Photograph by Sebastiao Salgado

            The Wars between the Serbs and Croats and some Muslims in the early 1900s destroyed many villages, left hundreds of thousands of internally displaced people, and even more refugees.  These pictures depict the homes where many children from the war have been left to survive.  The areas where these towns have been destroyed to the north of Yugoslavia (at that time), had to suffer very severe winters and refugees would survive by putting plastic sheeting on blown out windows and holes to keep warm.  The city was heavily mine and incidentally many refugees lost limbs and worse due to the tripping of these mines (Salgado).
 
            This map to the side helps us picture the mass amounts of refugees that left Yugoslavia in the early 90’s and many of these refugees are slowly making their way back to their country. However, even more than those who left Yugoslavia were internally displaced and most of over 2 million to this day have yet to see their homes (Wikipedia).  





Works


Salgado, Sebastião. Photograph. Migrations: Humanity in Transition. New York: Aperture, 2000. 119. Print. 25 Feb 2010.

Salgado, Sebastião. Migrations: Humanity in Transition. New York: Aperture, 2000. Print.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Left to Tell


   

This book encompasses every feeling from depression, anger, and fear to hope, love, and forgiveness to bring to light the tragedies of the Rwandan Genocide.  Immaculee Illibagiza tells her inspiring story with beautiful words that bring the story to life for all who read it.  It brought emotions and understanding for those who have suffered similar stories.  The book helps one to understand that God does love all His children and it really discusses the idea of the famous line of the Lord’s prayer, “forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass against us” (Luke 11:2-4).  

  I cried multiple times throughout this book as the devastation spread across Rwanda.  The pain described by the author left a impression on my mind for good the need to help situations such as these to never occur.  I never thought about genocides before I read this book. I never thought that something so destructive could occur a mere 20 years ago.  I came to personally love the author and her stories and her family as she suffered.  

  I would encourage all to read this book because almost everyone I have talked to has little knowledge of what occurred during the years of this book.  It enlightened me and helped me want to help others know about it as well.  It’s an easy read but needs the maturity required to understand the mass murder of a race in ways you would never hope would happen.   

Thursday, February 18, 2010

African Holocausts

Photograph by Sebastiao Salgado

I have grown up in the United States all my life and it seems that we live in a bubble.  It feels that sometimes our lives have so many problems that we feel are huge in comparison to everyone else.  At least I felt that way for a while.  Complications, trials, tragedy befall upon everyone. No one can escape it.  However, the atrocities during the Holocaust resonate in everyone's mind in America.  Little or no attention has been given to the multiple holocausts in Africa have been given the attention they deserve.  

In this photograph, a family is finally going home after yet another holocaust had occurred in Mozambique. Over a third of the population had fled due to multiple attacks inside their country (focus on refugees).  It amazes me that people on this continent keep surviving and pressing on.  I have grown to love these people. I had the opportunity to have a man from Ghana live in my house for a few months and those months made me feel grateful and humble for the life I have.  Mozambique finally attained peace in 1995. Over 1 million Mozambicans died during the time of trial.   

Works Cited



Salgado, Sebastiao. Photograph. Migrations: Humanity in Transition. Aperture. New York, 2000. 239. Print.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Water

Haven’t you ever wondered what it would be like if every time you felt like you were thirsty had to go find somewhere miles away from your home to drink water that is not clean and probably contaminated with all sorts of diseases, bodily fluids, etc.?  For these people who live in a shantytown in Bombay it is an everyday activity. This picture shows how close clean drinking water is but how poor the people are who can’t afford to have the running water.

                                     photograph by Sebastiao Salgado 

In India many places have running water.  This is an overstatement because the running water usually lasts only about an hour.  After that for the rest of the day, no one gets water.  Anyone who wants water has to wake up the moment the water is turned on and the water is used up within the hour leaving everything that had not been taken care of, for the next day (BBC News).

WORKS CITED


Salgado, Sebastiao. Photograph. Migrations: Humanity in Transition. Aperture. New York, 2000. 399. Print.