Stories
The Baby
September, 2009 | Submitted by Kristin Esch, Editor
Kristin is communications director for Art Works Projects and a project coordinator for Congo/Women: Portraits of War, the Democratic Republic of Congo. Kristin is interested in communicating news and events through various forms of media in order to connect the stories and reality of human rights abuses with the general public.

There is no blood in this picture.
A baby girl is rinsed off. Brand-new and unadorned, her family forms a circle around her. Her body seems to glow.
I feel the awe and reverence that accompanies new life. An air of hope tucks itself into my lungs, as the baby girl provides an oasis from the desolation that Congo/Women’s surrounding images foster. Maybe a baptism? A similar custom?
I tuck her image back into my short-term memory, awaiting her photo’s explanatory caption as I survey neighboring images.
Moving toward the adjacent wall, I zero in on the correct caption. And gasp.
“The body of eight month old Sakura Lisi is washed for burial. She died of anemia brought on by malaria, a preventable yet common affliction in a region with almost no healthcare.”
The baby girl is dead. I had been holding my breath for her story, yet it is already over.
