Refugees' Lives Refracted Through Arts Project Lens
Photography, writing help youths from strife-torn nations deal with trauma,
change.
By Tony Perry Times Staff Writer
January 12
2003
SAN DIEGO -- A program at two local schools is encouraging young
refugees from strife-torn nations to use photography, oral narrative and
journal-keeping to ease the transition to their new lives in the United
States.
Students from Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia, Colombia and elsewhere
are part of an effort at Crawford High in San Diego and Cajon Valley Middle
School in El Cajon sponsored by the AjA Project, an international group that
also runs youth programs in Colombia and refugee camps in Thailand.
"We
want them to tell their own stories through pictures and words," said Shinpei
Takeda, president and co-founder of the AjA Project.
Armed with
inexpensive "point and shoot" cameras, the students are told to portray their
everyday lives and reflect on their homelands and hopes for the
future.
"I can still smell the dust of the people. I remember people
asking each other, 'Who got killed today?' I can still hear young girls crying,
'Help us,' " wrote Ahmed Diriye, 17, who emigrated from Ethiopia.
A
common theme in the students' work is the mix of excitement and homesickness
that confronts many immigrants.
"It was very exciting to watch TV for the
first time in America," wrote Yonis Ismail Omar, 15, from Somalia. "At first all
I thought about was back home, and TV would help me to forget."
After a
semester's toil, students unveiled their work -- pictures, essays, and taped
commentary -- as part of a youth conference last week at the University of San
Diego's Joan Kroc Institute for Peace & Justice. (The work can also be seen
on the group's Web site: www.ajaproject.org).
At a panel discussion
titled, "Youth Making Sense of Lives Touched by Fear and Terror," the students
shared their perceptions of the U.S. and their homelands with students from San
Diego and Tijuana.
"I don't like American politics, because they always
think they're right and never see another way to see a problem," said Andres
Pavgo, 16, from Colombia. Nassra Abdi, 16, said Americans were more accepting
than Europeans she met after her family fled Somalia: "In America, you don't see
a lot of judgment. They just want to know about" me.
And in what proved
an eye opener to the native-born students at the conference, Abdi and other
students talked of hunger and fear as common experiences in their
homelands.
"I would love to go back, if my country had as much food as
here," Abdi said.
Said Milano Fatho, 13, from Iraq: "I would love to go
back to my country if I had money and food and I could be safe
there."
Offered in partnership with the International Rescue Committee,
the AjA Project (the initials stand for Spanish words that can be translated as
"serving self-sufficiency") is underwritten by several groups, including Sempra
Energy, corporate parent of San Diego Gas & Electric.
"By validating
their feelings, they can be a real protagonist, not just someone who's been
victimized," said project official and documentary photographer Alex Fattal. "I
definitely think there's a therapeutic value."