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Your Story is Beautiful "Your story is beautiful." That came to me recently as another way to say what my photography is all about. With all the posturing in this world, it's hard not to get sucked into sloganeering. But it's reassuring to know that it's still possible to authentically describe my passion and style--that I can actually believe myself when I say it. The story...it's why I like taking pictures of people and for people. I hope that ethos comes through in everything image and blog post I share.
Eden and Scott's Romantic Castle Wedding Eden and Scott celebrated their marriage at a beautiful castle-like home overlooking Lake Pend Oreille in northern Idaho. Eden was dressed in a gorgeous wedding dress she designed for herself, with a hooded white cape and tiara. Scott was sharply dressed in a Hugo Boss suit, with a royal purple riding overcoat.
Spinning Merrily // Weddings The day before this wedding, I suddenly got a mental image of a bride and her flower girl spinning joyfully in front of a white-pillared church with their bouquets in front and the sun streaming through their hair and dresses. God blessed us with perfect circumstances at the perfect time, and I love the result!
Where Hip-Hop Came From // Ghana There is something unmistakably and undeniably familiar about this drumming and dancing. I ask myself, How is it that people so far separated in space and time from the modern world could lay down a beat so obviously inspired by the hip-hop music that dominates my own homeland? And it's then that I realize I've crossed this ocean and gone WAY back in time and somehow landed at the source of the music. Now this is really cool.
The India You Don't Really Hear About While Hinduism dominates our perceptions of India, there is an amazing number of Muslims there as well, especially in the northern part of the country, which includes the capital, Delhi. That's where this man was photographed, outside of India's largest mosque, the Jama Masjid. Islam began its spread in India in the 12th century, many hundreds of years after Christianity's first appearance in southern India.
Faces of Hope 1 // Ghana This woman lives in a camp with about 45 other alleged witches, scratching out an existence on the edge of a village and the very margins of human society. So why is she smiling? The short answer: hope.
Faces of Hope 1 // Ghana
Faces of Hope 1 // Ghana

About this image: created 7/5/2009 with a Canon EOS-1D Mark II—1/250sec. @ f/4.0, ISO 200, focal length 200mm

This woman lives in a camp with about 45 other alleged witches, scratching out an existence on the edge of a village and the very margins of human society.

So why is she smiling?

The short answer: hope.

Earlier I wrote about issue of witchcraft in northern Ghana (and other countries in West Africa). I mentioned meeting this woman and others in her situation, as well as the concerned and compassionate Ghanaians who are reaching out in love to these outcast women. For generations women like this one have had no hope other than the limited prospect of being declared no longer a witch--but even then they are not allowed to return to their homes and families. All women continue to be subject to suspicion of witchcraft, and so the cycle of fear and oppression continues.

Accused witch with family member.

Women bear the brunt of this abusive practice, but they are not the only ones dehumanized by it. For every woman who is sent away to eke out a living as a non-person in miserable conditions, there is someone who brought the initial accusation that got her expelled. That person is a slave to his or her own fear and ambitions. There is a family, most of whom did not want their mother, their sister, sent away, but who felt powerless to resist tradition and the word of the elders. There is a generation growing up in silent witness to this tragedy, yet most likely doomed to perpetuate it. Everybody is trapped.

But it doesn't have to be that way, and people are working to change this part of the West African cultural landscape. A friend of mine, native to Ghana and himself a victim of this practice on account of his mother's exile, is spearheading a movement to bring holistic change to not only victimized women but their communities and the whole region. By rallying village leaders, political officials, law enforcement, educators, and the alleged witches and their families, he hopes to not only slow the deadly cycle but eradicate it completely. The solution will be positive, life-giving, relationship-restoring, and uniquely suited to local culture. The result will be as beautiful as this woman's bright eyes and warm smile.

The woman in this photo now knows that people care and they are working for her. That's why she can smile again.


Robert Huggins
Written on Friday, 20 November 2009 00:00 by Robert Huggins

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I am your photographer, Robert Huggins. My photography work over the years has carried me around the globe as a photojournalist, portrait and wedding photographer. My passion now is to create images your family will treasure and your organization will rely upon for years to come.
Leading Spokane, Washington Photographers listed in Decidio.com