Inspiring local stories featured on 'Humans of New York'

Inspiring local stories featured on 'Humans of New York'

Founder of the Humans of New York photo blog Brandon Stanton is in Johannesburg, ready to share our stories with the world. 

humans of ny in sa
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Photographer Brandon Stanton founded his photo blog Humans of New York in 2010, using simple portraits and short profiles to tell the poignant stories of New York's people. In the years since, Brandon's photos have garnered a large following worldwide, with over eight million people tuning in for updates on Instagram. 

Brandon has travelled to South Asia and is now turning his lens on Africa. After a turn in Nigeria and Rwanda, where his stories of the lives of refugees had people calling for Brandon to be awarded a Nobel Prize, the photographer has arrived in South Africa. His stories from Johannesburg have sparked a new conversation about what life in our country is really like. 

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“My younger sister passed away last year from an unexpected stroke. So I’m raising both my daughter and my niece. In our culture, it’s an automatic. It just kicks in. She belongs to me now. I’m a single mother so it’s not easy. There are definitely months when I add up income and expenses and the numbers don’t work. And both of them are thirteen so their moods are all over the place. Today is like this, and tomorrow is like that. But God has given us favor as well. We can afford to share an ice cream. We have shelter. We have food. And after four months of no work, I just found a new management position. So we’ve come a long way. My niece is beginning to heal. Her grades are improving at school. She still speaks of her mother in the present tense, but there’s no more crying at night. And I’ve grown a lot as well. Because more than I want to acknowledge --the struggle has given me meaning. This is my purpose. I have a little family. And we share what little we have.” (Johannesburg, South Africa)

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The story of a single mother who did not hesitate to step in and raise her niece after her own mother passed away highlights the importance of strong family bonds in South Africa. The young mother tells Brandon: "So I’m raising both my daughter and my niece. In our culture, it’s an automatic. It just kicks in. She belongs to me now." 

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“I have nothing to complain about. I’m originally from Sudan. I love it there. So many happy memories. I got so much love from my family because I was the youngest. Since then I’ve lived in five different countries and I’ve enjoyed every single one. I don’t have a partner, but I have plenty of great friends. I don’t have children, but I’m a lovely uncle. I don’t take any medicine. I sleep well. I can walk around. I don’t know what to say. Every time I think about it, I conclude that I’m happy. I wake up smiling. I lived in Germany for several years. And they have these cameras along the highway that photograph you when you’re speeding. I’ve got a huge collection of photos because I love to speed. It’s always just me alone in my car. And I’m smiling in every one of them.” (Johannesburg, South Africa)

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A man originally from Sudan shared some tips about creating your own idea of happiness and holding onto it: "I don’t have a partner, but I have plenty of great friends. I don’t have children, but I’m a lovely uncle. I don’t take any medicine. I sleep well. I can walk around. I don’t know what to say. Every time I think about it, I conclude that I’m happy. I wake up smiling." 

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“I’m trying to give Mom a chance to do other things. She wants to wash her hair and cook dinner, but the baby started crying. So I brought him outside to see if it would help. We’ve gone about thirty minutes without screaming. We’re from Mozambique. I originally came here to find work as a ceiling installer, but I brought my wife along when we found out she was pregnant. The healthcare is much better in this country. It’s too early for them to go back home because the child was born premature, but I’ll feel safer when they’re gone. It’s too dangerous for them here. South Africa is a good place to work, but they don’t like us being here so much. The abuse mainly comes from other black people. They call us names. They tell us to go home. They attack us because they think we’re stealing their jobs. But I’m just doing what I know. They don’t understand what it’s like in my country. You can’t survive with kids. I’m just making the only choice I have.” (Johannesburg, South Africa)

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One man, who is originally from Mozambique, spoke about his experience of being a foreigner in the country trying to keep his small family together: "The healthcare is much better in this country. It’s too early for them to go back home because the child was born premature, but I’ll feel safer when they’re gone. It’s too dangerous for them here. South Africa is a good place to work, but they don’t like us being here so much." 

Brandon's portraits reveal the inner lives of ordinary people who no one would think to pay any special attention to; the short profiles tell the stories of the people who keep the cities Brandon visits pulsing. 

South Africa's feature on the photo blog comes three years after a local photographer, inspired by Brandon's work, started their own "Humans of South Africa" series on thesouthafrican.com. 

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