Howick and Pakuranga
AWARD-WINNING VOICE OF THE COMMUNITY – NZCNA Thursday, May 30, 2019
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General 271 8000 ■ Classified 271 8055 ■ Delivery Enquiries 271 8000 ■ Website www.times.co.nz
Vol 48, No 21
Capturing a world in crisis
Eric Koh is on fire selling East Auckland. Eric Koh AREINZ M: 021 388 383
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Helen Manson lives in Uganda with her husband, Tim, a trauma counsellor for refugees, and their three children, Maz, 2, Hope, 5, Eva, 3.
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By THERESE HENKIN
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10 Central Terrace (behind Rice’s Mall) Ph 271 8000
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hen Helen Manson started working as a humanitarian photographer, she found herself thinking the people she photographed were somehow fundamentally different from her. The 33-year old has travelled to 35 countries to photograph postwar zones, refugee camps and areas stricken with famine and drought, capturing the faces of a world in crisis. Painfully, she says, she has come to realise how wrong she was. “I thought maybe they don’t feel things like I do... maybe they expect less, they care less, they hope for less, they want less or they need less,” she says. “I’ve seen that they are exactly like me and that what they endure living in poverty is no easier for them just because they are poor.” Manson, a former Macleans Col-
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lege student, lives in Kampala, Uganda, with her husband, a trauma counsellor for refugees, and three young children helping create campaigns for 50 NGOs and charities. Recently she was in Auckland as part of Tearfund’s Citizens of Humanity Tour to share her work with Kiwis. Manson is on the front lines, witnessing the best and the worst parts of humanity. In March she was tasked with photographing the work of Medical Teams International and Red Cross in hospitals in Tanzania. She saw children fighting for their lives, shaking as they battled malaria and pneumonia while their mothers wept at their bedside. As she was leaving the hospital one day she spotted an eight-yearold girl hooked up to an oxygen tank. She went home and prayed that these children would make it through the night.
The next day, while several of the children had improved, the eightyear-old girl had not. “All of a sudden she started making a noise that I’ll never forget. The doctor put his hand on my back and said ‘it’s time to go’,” Manson says, holding back tears. “I walked out into the sunlight and I completely lost it. Sobs came out from the deepest place they possibly could. “You should never see an eightyear-old little girl take her dying breaths from simple stuff like pneumonia and malaria.” Once she composed herself, she visited the mums in the maternity ward. “Within minutes I watched newborn twins come into the world.” Manson says wrestling with the tragedy of death and the celebration of new life within 10 minutes of each other was a significant moment for her.
“Just when this world seems ruined beyond repair, a baby is born.” Manson says there is a rocket inside of her that burns fiercely for humanitarian work. But it’s a job that takes its toll. “When I interview people, more often than not I sit there with tears rolling down my cheeks and I feel sick. I start crying because it’s the only thing I know how to do,” she says. “I encourage them for how brave they are to be sharing their story. Sometimes I say nothing because sometimes being there with them in silence is all I’ve got.” She says she then goes home to edit and write the best campaign she can to connect with people in the west and “prays like mad that people give”. Her most recent assignment saw her follow the story of three Ugandan mothers from pregnancy until their child’s first birthday. ➤ Turn to Page 5
FOR ALL THE WORKING SUPERMUMS!
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working mums, a work life balance is something only to be dreamt together somehave tips to help you on your way. Here at Wynyard Wood, we many working mums so we’ve put about, yet we are always striving to achieve. Here at Wynyard Wood, we have many working mums so we’ve put Visit our website to read more advice given by Penny Jones who is a together some tips to help you on your way.
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Here at Wynyard Wood, we have many working mums so we’ve put together some tips to help you on your way.
Visit our to read more advice given byby Penny who is a Visitwebsite our website to read more advice given PennyJones 09Jones 969 0126 who is a manager@wynyardwood.co.nz working mother, Lawyer and Partner at Wynyard Wood. Visit our website to read more advice given by Penny Jones who is a working mother, Lawyer and Partner at Wynyard Wood. www.wynyardwood.co.nz
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HIGHBROOK working mother, Lawyer and Partner at Wynyard Wood. AUCKLAND WARKWORTH
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