blogs: Water Stories

Defining drought: A duty to see

At the opening reception last week for Water Stories at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, we talked about iconic images that define and punctuate eras. Matthew Brady’s plates of the Civil War that captured the still, anonymity of death. Eddie Adams and Nick Ut’s black and white photographs from Vietnam that etched war’s horrors on our collective mind’s eye. And the first self portrait of Earth taken from the Moon. Moments that engage, involve, inform, defy, horrify, inspire.

While Atlanta suffers severe drought and the Great Lakes levels are dropping, I’m reminded of the iconic imagery produced during the Great Depression. Few are as engrossing as Dorothea Lange’s image of a migrant mother and her family. When I hear scholars speak of water refugees, I think of Florence Owens Thompson and her hardships (see below). And I think of the faces captured by today’s photojournalists, chroniclers of our time such as Brent Stirton. One of these faces of the modern water crisis is Francisca Rosas Valencia, whose tears belie the deep sorrow for her family as they leave their drought-stricken farmland near Tehuacan, Mexico.

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Photograph by Brent Stirton/Getty Images for Circle of Blue
TEHUACAN, MEXICO — Francisca Rosas Valencia dabs away tears while praying for her son, Florentine, who left this drought-stricken valley to work in Los Angeles. (Read her story from Circle of Blue’s coverage in Tehuacan: Divining Destiny).

In this era of digital media, there are bound to be many iconic images from the front lines of the water crisis. Will it be the stranded polar bear looking at us with longing eyes? Or perhaps the hands of a Bangladeshi farmer, crippled by arsenic poisoning? Or the precipitous drop in a river’s flow to its delta? Or the overwhelming beauty of rainfall in the desert? These images will call to us with a duty to see. To see that so many of the world’s struggles are about water.

Migrant Mother

The photograph that has become known as “Migrant Mother” is one of a series of photographs that Dorothea Lange made of Florence Owens Thompson and her children in February or March of 1936 in Nipomo, California. Lange was concluding a month’s trip photographing migratory farm labor around the state for what was then the Resettlement Administration. In 1960, Lange gave this account of the experience:

I saw and approached the hungry and desperate mother, as if drawn by a magnet. I do not remember how I explained my presence or my camera to her, but I do remember she asked me no questions. I made five exposures, working closer and closer from the same direction. I did not ask her name or her history. She told me her age, that she was thirty-two. She said that they had been living on frozen vegetables from the surrounding fields, and birds that the children killed. She had just sold the tires from her car to buy food. There she sat in that lean- to tent with her children huddled around her, and seemed to know that my pictures might help her, and so she helped me. There was a sort of equality about it. (From: Popular Photography, Feb. 1960)

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Filed under: drought, agriculture, Mexico, poverty, climate change, Atlanta, refugee — J. Carl Ganter @ 9:31 am October 19, 2007

Epicenter: Hotel Condesa D.F.

MEXICO CITY - After 12 hours of back-to-back interviews with Mexico City press, Circle of Blue team members made a mad dash back to their rooms to change clothes, grab laptops and head down to the Hotel Condesa Cinema to present a special preview of Tehuacán: Divining Destiny. Just four weeks earlier, a Circle of Blue field crew landed in Mexico for ten days of reporting for the pilot production. In the dim lights of the underground club, seven plasma screens glowed with Brent Stirton’s photographs from the front lines of the world water crisis. Staff welcomed over 150 of Mexico City’s best-known artists, entertainers, creative professionals, editors and philanthropists, as well as international water experts and scholars who were in town for the World Water Forum. I started the the presentation at 10:30 p.m., following an opening address by Dr. Scott Whiteford and the 13-minute documentary from the Tehuacán assignment. We’re enthused and tired.

Filed under: communications, celebrity, Mexico — J. Carl Ganter @ 11:38 pm March 20, 2006

Ball Foundation joins Circle of Blue

MEXICO CITY - It’s going to be a great day here in Mexico City. As we meet with reporters and prepare for our guests to arrive, I just learned that the Edmund F. and Virginia B. Ball Foundation has joined Circle of Blue as a funder. The foundation board shares our vision for a better world through communications, the arts and education. It’s a thrill to have them by our side.

Filed under: news, Mexico — J. Carl Ganter @ 9:41 am

Wilson Center Water Stories

WASHINGTON - While we’re preparing for our return to Mexico City to showcase “Tehuacán: Divining Destiny,” the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Environmental Change and Security Program has published our working group’s papers online. (Mine is called “Navigating the Mainstream: Making Water Issues Matter.”) Included are the multimedia reports Soren Nielsen and I produced in Iztapalapa and other regions of Mexico (with editing help from Aaron Jaffe). These are mere examples of the the people, the children, the faces behind the global freshwater crisis.

Filed under: news, health, Mexico, poverty — J. Carl Ganter @ 1:33 pm March 10, 2006

Tehuacán: every drop is sacred

I’m just back from Tehuacán, Mexico where an entire region’s survival hangs by each liter of water. Beneath the dust plumes that cloud the sky north of town, families shepherd every drop to sustain themselves and their meager crops. The situation for subsistence farmers can be dire — many only grow enough to feed their families for six months of the year. Other times, they must buy their food, and often their drinking water as well. Water means much more than statistics of declining aquifers or the rediscovery of ancient solutions. It’s an axis issue that defines families, sustains or takes away loved ones, lifts or presses down upon poverty. Our team of Brent Stirton, Joseph Contreras, Dr. Scott Whiteford and Brian Robertshaw reported some exceptional stories. Our production team, 12-people strong, will prepare the piece in time to show March 20 in Mexico City.

Filed under: drought, agriculture, Mexico, journalism — J. Carl Ganter @ 10:50 am February 24, 2006

At breakneck speed

It’s all systems go for our Circle of Blue pilot in Mexico. We’re all up to the a challenge — create exceptional, fresh, relevant reportage from the frontlines of the global freshwater crisis in time to present in Mexico City on March 20.

Filed under: Mexico, journalism — J. Carl Ganter @ 10:57 am February 1, 2006

Two tales of a city: water poor, heart rich

MEXICO CITY - It’s Valentine’s Day here and I’m traveling with our intern Soren Nielsen to learn, first-hand, about the freshwater crisis facing Mexico and Mexico City. We’re staying with several families in the Iztapalapa municipality where, it seems, every inch is occupied by tarpaper shanties or ramshackle buildings. The universalities and metaphors abound - the poignant ironies that children here, even those without safe water, are making Valentines in school. Watch for our report on the Wilson Center site soon.

Filed under: Mexico, poverty — J. Carl Ganter @ 1:45 pm February 14, 2005