Top 11 Quotes & Sayings by Lisa Kristine

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American photographer Lisa Kristine.
Last updated on November 3, 2024.
Lisa Kristine

Lisa Kristine is an American humanitarian photographer, activist, and speaker. Her photography has documented indigenous cultures and social causes, such as modern slavery, in more than 100 countries. Through her work, Kristine has supported numerous charities and humanitarian organizations. Kristine has delivered keynote and appeared on panels at conferences held at the Vatican, United Nations, Thomson Reuters, Trust London. She is a member of the Explorer's Club.

The stones in your driveway may have come from the slaves who spend all day breaking rocks because it's cheaper for the company to get them from India, where the labor is free. We are all connected. And we all have human value. That's what my work is about.
Oddly, I'd been to most of the locations where I started photographing slavery many times before. I even considered some of them homes-away-from-home. But there can be dark corners in familiar places.
When people think of slavery, they think of an era from the distant past. Grainy photographs from Civil War times. And yet it goes on. — © Lisa Kristine
When people think of slavery, they think of an era from the distant past. Grainy photographs from Civil War times. And yet it goes on.
Slavery is illegal everywhere, but it exists all over the world.
My son, who is five, was adopted from Ethiopia. My daughter was adopted from Guatemala. Her parents died of typhoid and malaria. We got her from an orphanage. They are the lights of my life.
My work is about the establishment of trust. For someone to share their authenticity with me is a soul-to-soul thing. It's not a lens-to-soul thing.
I see myself as a witness to humanity.
One advantage of photography is that it's visual and can transcend language.
Around the world, human traffickers trick many people into slavery by false promises of good jobs or good education, only to find themselves forced to work without pay, under the threat of violence.
In 2009, at the Vancouver Peace Summit, I met a supporter of Free the Slaves, an NGO dedicated to eradicating modern-day slavery; weeks later, I flew down to Los Angeles and met with the director of Free the Slaves; thus began my journey into exploring modern-day slavery.
There are more than 27 million people enslaved in the world today - that's double the amount of people taken from Africa during the entire trans-Atlantic slave trade.
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