“Privilege, if you’re very strict, is an immoral and unjust thing to have, but if you’ve got it you didn’t choose to get it and you might as well use it. You’re privileged … but you know you’re under an obligation to repay what’s been put into you.”
– Walker Evans
Ongoing projects include photography workshops with the homeless in Los Angeles, kids living in urban poverty in East Africa, and the documentation of Intangible Cultural Heritage visual and performance artists in rural China.
Contact One of Us Project
Origin story…
The One of Us name represents work done on behalf of or in collaboration with members of so-called “marginalized” communities. The photography and writing started with eight years in East and Central Africa documenting the lives of street children, the urban poor, refugees, rural villagers and others. Blumenkrantz ran the information department for InterAid International for four years, and later freelanced for Kenyan media, taught workshops for various groups in East Africa and the Horn, and eventually supervised the information department at the Undugu Society of Kenya.
“David played an active role in bringing hope and rejuvenating the societies’ resilience through his photos and articles that always sought to bring out the best side of the situation, desperate as it was. This was the case regarding his work with Undugu Society of Kenya, the pioneering human rights organization focused on street children and the urban poor. It is through David’s strong images of the situation in the Kenyan streets that Undugu was able to get then-Mayor of Nairobi Magic Mwangi to initiate the ‘Nairobi Cares for Its Children’ project, a ground-breaking advocacy and response intervention that brought to the fore the situation of the street families
and provided relief, rescue, education and the reintegration of
thousands of street children.”
* John Muiruri, Executive Director, Action for Children in Conflict