Photography

jimmy-with-cameraHaiti Street Children’s Photography Workshops: How they started…

The people, culture, poverty, and violence of Haiti are all attractive to photographers. Countless international photojournalists go to Haiti, mostly during times of political upheaval, and through them the media show the world a limited view of Haiti. Most of the images we see from Haiti are violent, but there is also happiness, beauty and especially pride. I wanted to create an outlet for young Haitians to develop skills to document their country’s continuing history and its daily life from their own perspectives. During my first trip to Haiti in January 1997, while documenting a home for street youth, I began the Photography Workshops. My love of photography was what I had to give the children. Hundreds of them were living at Lafanmi Selavi, a home created in 1986 by Jean-Bertrand Aristide when he was still a parish priest. Some children had never had their picture taken before, most had never seen a photo of themselves, and none of them had every used a camera. An opportunity was created for kids with no resources to do something completely new, nurturing hidden talents, adding skills, and offering them a way to tell their own stories and express themselves. At the Workshops, we teach the importance, history, and uses of photography, technical information, instruction in the operation of a 35mm camera, and encourage visits from professional photographers. The fun has included an amazing pinhole camera workshop put together by visiting San Francisco photographer Matthew Millman, outdoor slideshows, a permanent exhibit in Port-au-Prince, and students receive income from sales of their prints and postcards. Just to hold a camera is an exciting experience. The kids have worked individually and in groups using photography to interact with their community from a different perspective. In 2004 and 2005, our Photography Workshops thrived at Caritas St. Antoine, a small home for street children in Port-au-Prince. Twenty students went on field trips, photograms were created in a makeshift darkroom, Haitian photojournalist Evens Sanon presented his story of becoming a professional, and two U.S. photojournalists visited the class with their digital cameras. In 2007, 2008, and 2009 we went south to Jacmel working with Art Creation Foundation for Children (ACFFC), a nonprofit that cares for 50 impoverished children daily providing art classes, meals, and financial support for school in a newly rented safe and secure house with enough room for a gallery. ACFFC also integrates the local artisans into their program as teachers and mentors, and the children have begun showing and selling their artwork.

More to come

The Haiti Street Children’s Photography Workshop Gallery

Fostering children’s photographic talents not only boosts self-esteem and teaches practical technical skills for the future, it also inspires change. Given a chance, empowering children enables them to improve their quality of life.

The Lafanmi Selavi Photography Workshop


This gallery includes work from six Workshops (2-4 weeks long) and many tutoring sessions during a three-year period. There were 17 boys and girls, and many took multiple classes. The primary focus was black and white film photography, and the treat was a special pinhole camera workshop.

Individual Mentoring


After Lafanmi Selavi closed, there was no place to conduct the Photo Workshops so we worked with boys living on the streets. The one that took the most initiative was Jimmy (street name). Jimmy lived at Lafanmi Selavi when he was a boy, and lived out on the streets after it closed. Although he was never in a formal Photo Workshop, he received one on one lessons and shot a lot of black and white film. He loved making pictures and had a natural eye with a strong will to learn. I worked with Jimmy for two years, and then in 2003 the Haitian National Police took him away and he was never seen again. He was 19 years old.

The Caritas St. Antoine Photography Workshops



In 2004 and 2005, Photography Workshops were held in three-week sessions. All 20 residents were students and each shot multiple rolls of color film. On a field trip to the country, their quest was the perfect postcard shot. Students made personal photograms in our temporary darkroom, questioned a Haitian photojournalist, and checked out digital cameras for the first time

The ACFFC Photography Workshops


During Kanaval seasons in 2007 and 2008, 24 students from ACFFC’s program in Jacmel shot a total of 33 rolls of color film with disposable cameras. The children integrated some of the seasonal celebration into their photographs, as well as shooting rarely seen family and home life.

The Legacy of Lafanmi Selavi

The Documentary Project

Daily life of street children living at the group home and out on the streets
Photographs by Jennifer Cheek Pantaléon 1997-2008

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