Seen and Heard: Voices from Ghanas Orphanages

Published: Dec. 10, 2014, 3:30 a.m.

b'In the past few decades, orphans in Africa have become defined by snapshots: snapshots of jutting ribs, ragged clothes, hopeless eyes. Those images have become the face of international charity work and have helped drive the idea that we should send resources to help. But there are things that can\\u2019t be captured in snapshots. In this story, Christine Chen travels to the West African country of Ghana, to talk with the people directly involved with orphan care there\\u2014the social workers, orphanage directors, families, and kids. There, she encounters narratives that put an unexpected twist on our understanding of orphanages\\u2014and push us to reconsider our assumptions about the children living inside them.\\n\\nThis project was supported by a Braden Grant from Stanford Storytelling Project. For more information about the Braden Grant for the Study of Oral Narrative, go here: http://web.stanford.edu/group/storytelling/cgi-bin/joomla/index.php/grants.html\\n\\nProducer: Christine Chen\\nFeaturing: Samuel Anaglate, Helena Obeng-Asamoah, Akosua Marfo, Emmanuel, Richmond, Hannah\\nSpecial thanks to: Christy Hartman\\nSounds: \\nMusic: A Smile for Timbuctu, Chris Zabriskie, Lee Rosevere\\nImage courtesy of Brandee Cooklin'