ARTICLES
Q TALKS
DISCOVER Q
EVENTS
Q Washington, DC 2012
Past Events
RESOURCES
Books
Studies
Bible
Church Leaders
Speaking
PARTICIPATE
Collaborate Online
Praxis Accelerator
Host Conversations
Church
Business
Education
Social Sector
Arts + Entertainment
Science + Tech
Government
Media
Cities
Gospel
Restorers
Tweet
Social Sector
Entrepreneurship in Action
by
Jason Byassee
100cameras
Website
100cameras is the creation of four young 20-something women who share a love for photography and for learning to appreciate another’s point of view.
The nonprofit won $25,000 and a year of mentorship in Redeemer’s 2010 business plan competition for nonprofit ventures. The annual business plan competition seeks to identify promising entrepreneurs with “bold plans for gospel-advancing ventures” and awards $5,000 to $25,000 to the winning plan in each of three categories: for-profit, nonprofit and arts.
100cameras gives cameras to children in underserved areas, then sells the photographs the children take as a way to raise money for and awareness of their communities.
It’s not an entirely new idea. Any number of secular outfits have pursued photography and film endeavors shot by poor kids. What is new is the cumulative effect 100cameras plans to have.
“Imagine walking into a room and seeing the cumulative effect of 100 different perspectives,” co-founder Susanna Kohly said.
100cameras has so far launched two of its planned 100 endeavors: one is in a village in rural Southern Sudan and another is on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in a Puerto Rican neighborhood.
In Sudan, the kids had never seen a camera before. In New York, the kids are inundated with technology. The American kids weren’t impressed with the idea of taking pictures, until they share with them the photos from Sudan, Kohly said. “Then something clicks.”
One can see why, looking at those photos on their website. One young Sudanese photographer named Jackson has a backbone left in a “V” shape by polio. He “walks” on all fours and takes pictures from that angle looking up. The images from Sudan are arresting, then, not just because of the natural and human beauty in a place ravaged by decades of civil war, but because we’re seeing from a perspective similar enough to ours to be familiar, yet different enough to be interesting.
The photographers in New York learned from their instructors to pay particular attention to angles. One can see how their photos play with the many angles in a great architectural city.
The idea is that a web viewer might be taken enough with the children’s angles -- with Jackson’s angle -- to purchase a photo. Those proceeds go back to the orphanage in Sudan or to New Life of New York City, a local community center on the Lower East Side. 100cameras also works with corporate sponsors: Samsung helped with an exhibit in the Time Warner Center in New York, and Whole Foods, which has a presence in the Puerto Rican neighborhood, sponsored their project. The founders’ hope is that businesses can be brought along and add to their effort to help the children in Sudan and New York.
“We see photography as a vehicle to help restore self-image,” Kohly said.
100cameras is not an explicitly faith-based organization, yet each of its founders and their vision is faith-inspired.
“Jesus challenged his disciples to have faith like a child,” co-founder Angela Bullock wrote in an e-mail. Seeing from the perspective of “the seemingly least of these will greatly bring glory to God.”
Blessed Nest
Website
The story of Heather Anderson’s business is a story of friendship.
When a dear friend of Anderson’s had her first child via Caesarean section, the postoperative discomfort frustrated her efforts to breastfeed.
The standard nursing pillows didn’t help. “’Can you design me something?’” she asked Anderson said.
She certainly could. Anderson, a designer, researched the project and came up with a triangle-shaped pillow, rather than a wrap-around horseshoe. She filled it with beanbag buckwheat hulls, rather than a less malleable cushion, so it could be pushed into whatever shape the new mother needed.
It worked so well that she founded her business, Blessed Nest, and began selling her pillows. The benefit? A mom who could nurse like she’d hoped. And more.
“One quadriplegic dad could actually use this to hold his child,” Anderson said, choking up.
So how is this a specifically Christian act of entrepreneurship?
Anderson reflected on the woman who taught her to sew: her great-grandmother.
“She used to say, ‘Every stitch a loving thought.’ I’ve prayed as I’ve made these pillows. I think people could tell if I tried to outsource the production to China,” she said. The products are also eco-friendly.
Pressed further, she expressed her dream that her business will grow big enough to allow her to support other fledgling entrepreneurial endeavors, giving back as she was given to when she won $25,000 in startup money from Redeemer’s business plan competition in 2008.
Anderson describes herself as a nurturer. Although she doesn’t have children yet, in a church like Redeemer, God has given her countless “nephews” and “nieces,” for whom she cares as a provider of goods for their nursing mothers: “And that’s a Jesus thing.”
It’s also a business thing. Redeemer is a church of some 5,000 members, among whom word of a new business venture travels far (entrants in the EI Business Plan Competition don’t have to be Redeemer members, but they do have to be from churches willing to work and partner with Redeemer).
“Networking is sort of the secular equivalent of fellowship,” Anderson said. “At Redeemer, word spreads fast.”
What cultural good are you uniquely created to craft?
How can you integrate your faith into the way you live and work?
Editor's note: This article was originally published on the
Faith and Leadership blog
and is posted here with permission. The image above was taken by Jackson, a participant in 100cameras Sudan.
Click here
to view more of his images.
Tweet
Comments
Mike
I liked the idea of the 100 cameras, but I can't find anything on the site about how it's advancing the gospel. Where can I find more information on that?
Angela Francine Bullock
Mike, thanks for checking out the website!
100cameras is not a faith-based organization by definition, therefore, our website does not explain the relationship between the mission and the gospel.
Though not a part of our corporate mission, all co-founders do have their own story for how they individually experience God, and this faith does motivate our vision. It is because of these experiences that we joined together to start this organization. And we do our best to live this connection outwardly throughout our everyday.
All published words aside, we seek to speak & listen with grace. To love with action.
And to live & serve others in the context of truth - written and made right by the gospel.
This is our root. Therefore, it is our fruit.
The mission is both inspired by these roots and motivated by our belief that children have the right to live free from oppression, violence and poverty. We are committed to the future of the global community through implementing the essence of neighbor-serving-neighbor as best as possible. All for the hope of peace. All through the voice of photography.
100cameras is simply our best effort at pulling our time, talents, and resources together to create outlets for positive change in the world. Since our team is grounded in the love and freedom that we have experienced from the gospel, we desire to share it. We seek to follow the model that Jesus exemplified through his love by meeting the needs of people and by giving purpose to the human perspective.
Hope this helps explain how the gospel has inspired the mission. Let us know if you have any more questions. Happy to talk more!
Leave a Comment
Name:
Email:
Comment:
Verify Code:
Please keep me informed with the latest updates from Q
ALSO BY JASON BYASSEE
Loving the Large Church (and Worrying About It)
Church
ALSO IN SOCIAL SECTOR
The 2012 Praxis Fellows
by Dave Blanchard and Josh Kwan
Capitalizing with the Poor
by Jeff Keenan and John Terrill and Kenman Wong
Curbing Environmental Corruption
by Gary Bergel