Guest Post: Caroline Irby on “A Child from Everywhere” (Part 2)

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

Welcome to the Second Part of our Guest Post from photographer and journalist Caroline Irby, whose interview with PaperTigers is also featured in our current issue. If you missed Part One, then head on over there straight away to take a look at her stunning photographs of some of the children from her recent book A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing (UK), in association with Oxfam, 2010) – and without further ado, here are the rest of the photographs that Caroline has kindly shared with us, along with some of the background to each one.

Malawi: Alexander. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010). Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Alexander, 4, Malawi > Edinburgh

I’ve taken photographs for the NGO WaterAid a few times in Africa, and their head of photography in London offered to help with this project, knowing that some of their UK-based employees are from overseas. Alexander’s father, Anthony, came forward.

Mali: Oumou. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010). Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Oumou, 16, Mali > London

The Community of Malian Refugees introduced me to Oumou’s family, now living in London.

Niger - Boubacar. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010).  Copyright 2010.  Reproduction prohibited.  All Rights reserved.
Boubacar, 14, Niger > London

BBC World Service were a brilliant resource: their journalists come from all over the world and I spoke with people working on every different language desk there. A woman on the ‘French for Africa’ desk gave me Boubacar’s contact details.

Nigeria: Daniel. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010).  Copyright 2010.  Reproduction prohibited.  All Rights reserved.
Daniel, 16 months, Nigeria > London

Daniel’s father was working for a refugee organisation in Scotland, and they put me in touch with him.

Peru - Luis. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010).  Copyright 2010.  Reproduction prohibited.  All Rights reserved.
Luis, 15, Peru > Watford

I met a Cuban on the London underground; he knew no Cuban children in the UK but did have a Peruvian contact, whom I called and who invited me to a party for Peruvians near Waterloo. There were no Peruvian children at the party born in Peru, but I was given contact details there for a boy called Luis…

St Vincent and The Grenadines - Andree-Ann. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010).  Copyright 2010.  Reproduction prohibited.  All Rights reserved.
Andree-Ann, 10, St Vincent and the Grenadines > Enfield

I joined an online chatroom for people from St Vincent and the Grenadines living overseas; Andree-Ann’s much older sister responded to my message that I was looking for a young St Vincentian in London, and suggested her younger sister…

Sudan - Emmanuel. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010).  Copyright 2010.  Reproduction prohibited.  All Rights reserved.
Emmanuel, 13, Sudan > Bolton

I met Emmanuel through an organisation called Refugee Action, which provides support to refugees who have arrived in the UK direct from refugee camps, as part of the UK government’s Gateway Protection Programme.

Swaziland - Bola. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010).  Copyright 2010.  Reproduction prohibited.  All Rights reserved.
Bola, 7, Swaziland > London

Bola was the last child I interviewed for this project. After trying all the more obvious routes (the Swazi embassy, South Africans living in the UK, online chatrooms etc), I contacted an independent newspaper in Swaziland, hoping I might find a journalist there who’d studied in the UK and had connections in this country. There I found a man called Welcome, who gave me the number of a Swazi lady living in London.

USA - Fiona. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010).  Copyright 2010.  Reproduction prohibited.  All Rights reserved.
Fiona, 5, USA > Oxford

Oxford University put me in touch with Fiona’s family: her mother is a postgraduate student here.

Vietnam - Emilia. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010).  Copyright 2010.  Reproduction prohibited.  All Rights reserved.
Emilia, 7, Vietnam > Leeds

I met Emilia at her school, in a very multicultural area of Leeds.

Zambia - Fernanda. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010).  Copyright 2010.  Reproduction prohibited.  All Rights reserved.
Fernanda, 14, Zambia > Glasgow

The Scottish Refugee Council gave me Fernanda’s details; she was one of the first children I met with.

Thank you again, Caroline, and many congratulations on the arrival of your own baby son in August.

The exhibition of A Child from Everywhere has now closed in London but will be opening in Japan later this month: at Okazaki World Children’s Art Museum from 18th September to 28th November 2010, then at Arts Chiyoda, Tokyo, from 21st December 2010 – 23rd January 2011.

The immigration debate and From North to South/Del Norte al Sur

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

We are looking forward to the release of From North to South / Del Norte al Sur, by René Colate Laínez, due out in September by Children’s Book Press. René has written many children’s books about the immigrant experience, such as I am René and René Has Two Last Names, always drawing on his experience of coming to the United States, as an adolescent, from civil war–ravaged El Salvador (he arrived as an undocumented immigrant and is now a US citizen). From North to South deals with the issue of family separation, due to a parent’s precarious immigration status, from the perspective of child who, as is the case in these situations, has no say in it. With the immigration debate in the US being as heated as it is now, this is an important and very timely release.

Spanish speakers can see a video of René talking about the book here. I’ll be adding a link to our review of the book as soon as it’s live.

Guest Post: Caroline Irby on "A Child from Everywhere"

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

It is a real privilege to welcome photographer and journalist Caroline Irby to the PaperTigers Blog to share some of the photographs from her recently published book A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing (UK), in association with Oxfam, 2010), in which she has brought together children from 185 countries now living in the UK. In itself it is quite an achievement, but what makes this project so very special is how Caroline has captured the children in her beautiful photographs, and how they then speak to us in their own words.

You can read an interview with Caroline in our current issue of PaperTigers, in which she talks about the project. Here, she gives us an idea of how widely she had to throw her net to track down children from so many countries. Enjoy these stunning photographs – and we’ll be bringing you more in a second post next month.

Andorra: Chloe. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere.  Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Chloe, 6 months, Andorra > London

I called the Andorran Embassy in London and the Ambassador’s wife agreed to help… Andorra is a tiny country with few nationals living in the UK; it took a few months to find an Andorran child here.

Antigua-Barbuda: Akeilah. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010).  Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Akeilah, 8, Antigua and Barbuda > Leeds

An organisation called Education Leeds gave me the details of a few schools in multicultural areas. One of these yielded Akeilah.

Chile: Juan. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere. (Black Dog Publishing, 2010). Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Juan, 3, Chile > Orkney Isles

I wanted to reflect the extent of the diaspora of the recent wave of immigration; I’d also never been to the Orkneys and was curious to see so I contacted the Orkney Isles Education Authority and they found me Juan.

Dominica: Alissa. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010). Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Alissa, 11, Dominica > London

The Dominica Embassy in London helped me to track down Alissa.

Egypt: Nadine Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010). Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Nadine, 6, Egypt > Cardiff

University postgraduate departments are home to many foreign students; Cardiff University put me in touch with this family from Egypt.

Ethiopia: Elsabet Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010). Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Elsabet, 14, Ethiopia > London

I got talking to someone at a Christmas party about this project; her daughter was at school with Elsabet…

Fiji: Adi. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010). Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Adi, 6, Fiji > Tidworth

The British army recruits soldiers from Fiji, amongst other countries. I knew of an army barrack in Tidworth village, Hampshire, and contacted the local school, who let me interview a couple of children.

Guatemala: Aura. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010). Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Aura, 8, Guatemala > Oxford

A friend of mine living in Oxford has a daughter who goes to school with Aura…

Ivory Coast Inza. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010). Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Inza, 15, Ivory Coast > London

I noticed a sign reading, ‘Ivoirien Computing and Community Centre’ outside a portacabin on an estate near my home. The man working at reception connected me with Inza’s family.

Japan: Moeko. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010). Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Moeko, 5, Japan > Cambridge

Cambridge Racial Equality and Diversity Service introduced me to a few recently-arrived children who they give English language support to. Moeko was one of them.

Kiribati: Isabella. Photograph by Caroline Irby from A Child from Everywhere (Black Dog Publishing, 2010). Copyright 2010. Reproduction prohibited. All rights reserved.
Isabella, 5, Kiribati > London

I contacted the Pacific Islands Society and they invited me to a party for Pacific Islanders in London. I met Isabella’s family there.

As Corinne wrote a couple of weeks ago, there is an exhibition of A Child from Everywhere now on in London – or do get hold of the book for yourself: not only for the actual photographs, but also to read the insightful, thought-provoking and sometimes funny observations the children make about their new and old homes. I can’t recommend it highly enough! Thank you, Caroline.