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New Book Available for Preorder

"Lens on Life: Documenting Your World Through Photography" is now available for preorder on Amazon. Starts shipping July 15 in the US, Canada, and United Kingdom.

Exibit for National Center for Civil and Human Rights

Stephanie exhibits her documentary photography at the invitation-only Ground-Breaking Ceremony and Celebration for the National Center for Civil and Human Rights at the Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta, GA on June 27.

Speaking at BlogHer '12 Annual Conference

Stephanie joins Elan Morgan and Stacy Jill Calvert at the iPhoneography Session at the annual BlogHer conference in New York City on Aug 3.

Feature on FoxNews.com

Stephanie shares thoughts on iPhoneography and visual journaling.

Feature in March/April Digital Photo Magazine

Read "Master the Moment" and use your mobile camera to experiment and explore personal documentary by Stephanie in the March/April issue of Digital Photo Magazine.

Speaker News from Macworld | iWorld 2012

Stephanie joined Rick Smolan, Harold Davis, and Paul Pierson on the "TIPS FROM THE PRO’s: Taking Digital Photography to New Heights," TechTalk on Jan 27 at the annual Macworld conference in San Francisco. Read the press at Geek Sugar.

Feature in Photographers i Magazine for iPad

Experience this interactive magazine and "Uncover Your Visual Voice with the Art of iPhoneography" feature story by Stephanie C. Roberts in the pilot Nov/Dec issue.

Feature on LIFE

See The Art of iPhoneography is featured on LIFE.com.

Photo Essay on Forbes

See "It Takes a Tweet to Raise a School" photo essay by Stephanie on Forbes.com.

Features on Shutter Sisters

Stephanie is a partner and regular contributor to Shutter Sisters.

Lens on Life

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iPhoneography Journal

"One Life in Motion" is Stephanie's iPhoneography journal. This experimental space is updated daily with new images shot & processed on her iPhone.

« As She Waits | Main | To Her Left »
Friday
Apr162010

Let's Bring These Girls Home

“You’re writing your story everyday,” she told me. “You just need to decide what happens next.” It was precisely what I needed to hear at that moment from my friend and Picture Hope partner, Jen Lemen. It reminded me that the act of living one’s life on purpose is nothing like reading and everything like writing. And the work of writing a story most often begins as a whisper or a quiet feeling of knowing from within. It may not make sense, but you just have to learn to let it guide you.

So when Jen called to tell me that she and our Rwandan-native friend Odette had decided it was time for her to leave home and join Odette’s daughters, Grace (age 15) and Lilian (age 12), and their guardian, (Odette’s brother Innocent) in their temporary housing situation in Uganda on a moment’s notice, I knew there was no need for my predictable dose of questions and analysis. “How long will you be gone?” I asked tentatively, knowing we had more than two handfulls of planning to prepare for our next Picture Hope commitment in Nepal.

“I don’t know… but I’m not coming back without them.”

So she went.

She went because Odette has been apart from her daughters for four long years, not by her plan or choice. She went because the girls need their mother. She went because Odette needs her girls.

After several years of hopeful wait littered with road blocks and wrong turns… and the most recent several weeks of unraveling red tape, triggering slow into action, plotting what-if scenarios, traveling dusty roads and crossing sketchy borders, texting on battery fumes, rubbing coins for food, and painting hopeful stories in the dim of a future that is to come for Odette’s young daughters… Jen will very soon guide Grace and Lilian into their mother’s arms here in the United States.

And this story, a story of Turikumwe (meaning “We are together.”), is one that must be written. I’m honored to be a witness and to document and share this experience for you as it unfolds, with Odette as my guide. I will join her on Monday to help prepare for their arrival.

But we can’t do it without you. Please chip in to help us decide what happens next.

Cross-posted on Shutter Sisters.

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