Posts Tagged ‘media’
Habitat for Humanity : Senegal
A small window into the experience of students from the Benjamin Franklin International School in Barcelona who spent a week near Dakar, Senegal in Mbaye Fall, working in collaboration with Habitat for Humanity.
Eye Witness
By Lisa Akhmetova
“Africa? You’re going to get malaria. And AIDS.”
“You’re going to Senegal? ”
“Didn’t some Catalans working with a NGO get kidnapped near Senegal?”
Fueled by common misconceptions we’d heard from friends and family, we set off to Dakar, Senegal.
Contrary to common belief, Senegal has one of the most stable governments in all of Africa and we were treated with great interest and respect by all of the people we met there. Apart from a few typical cases of traveler’s stomach, none of us became sick during our stay. We, and all of the people who heard about our trip, seemed to have worried enough about all the harm that might come to us in Senegal. What we had not anticipated, however, was just how much our perspective would shift during the trip, not only of Africa, but of ourselves and the world we live in.
What did we do, exactly? We (fourteen students, a photographer, a filmmaker and two teachers) worked with Habitat for Humanity, a non-profit global organization that builds houses for families in need. We also joined with five students from the International School of Dakar and some of their staff, who helped us build houses in the area of Keur Mbaye Fall. We helped build six houses, collectively (with three or four people per house).
We shoveled; we mixed cement; we built and plastered walls. Though our arms and backs ached because of it, we had very little time to notice. The people from the community of Keur Mbaye Fall seemed to find us even more interesting than we found them, if that is even possible. Many of the children had never seen white people before. They would surround you, touch you, take hold of your hand. We would play with them at the end of every workday. The next day, we’d find that people we’d never seen before knew our names.
Apart from the houses, we also visited (and donated money to) two schools and one hospital. There was a minimum of fifty children per classroom in the elementary school, and all of the students were sharing desks. The middle school had no running water. As for the hospital we visited, their medicine supply fit into one cupboard – most of us have more in our own homes.
Its maternity centre was comprised of three rooms, which often got overcrowded, so women would have to give birth on the floor. It was difficult to see the scarcity – scarcity we’d only heard of – with our own eyes, but we left with different eyes because of it. It seemed there was a shortage of something everywhere we went.
Despite this, the people in the schools and the hospital weren’t any less friendly – which provided all of us, who have so much, with an important lesson. In fact, the people of Keur Mbaye Fall welcomed us with open arms in a way that people in the western world never would.
We had come to Senegal to help – but in the end, Senegal helped us. We came to Dakar with a mixture of excitement and apprehension, not knowing which we felt more. We left with new appreciation for what we have, and also new appreciation for what we can give, for this journey was far more gratifying than anything we could have bought for ourselves. Few trips could have taught us that much about a country and its people, and have us come away with such a different view of the world.
Worf and the Evil Inventor
Here’s what happens when you show silent films that are nearly 100 years old to some 7-year-olds: they roll on the floor laughing. Chaplin and Keaton. All you need.
Once they catch their breath, give them some toys to use as characters in their own stories with little or no input from outsiders ie “grown-ups”.
The goal was to let them work out their own creative differences, while only gently assisting them with making their own silent movies that made sense to them. Perhaps, to them alone.
Then, we made simple storyboards, title pages and backdrops for their first silent movies.
Each production team of 3 or so rehearsed at least once in front of the camera before we called out “Camera Rolling…” and “ACTION!”
The results are fascinating in each their own way, perhaps even more so as collections, though some do stand on their own quite well [click the image above to watch]
Stop-Motion: Holiday Greetings
The agency I created this for sent it out as a holiday greeting to their entire client roster, including Anheuser-Busch, Cargill and Revlon, among others.
demo reel
thinfilms works in as many contexts as possible using motion pictures and sound,
including a diverse mix of commercial, independent and academic productions. With the exception of the last example, which was edited using historical footage, this reel demonstrates this diversity while presenting a showcase of cinematography, directing and editing capabilities.
powderhorn empty bowls
made for a great cause – please visit Powderhorn Empty Bowls
Conrad Praetzel and Clothesline Revival made that music

















