Photographic Skills for Little Wonders
A Community Development Initiative
By Rawan Da’as
How it Began
It all started with my visit to a refugee camp in Jordan called Gaza camp – located in Jerash, a city near Amman, Jordan. I saw three kids who were playing with stones. They appeared to be enjoying themselves, regardless of their less-than-ideal surrounding environment in the refugee camp. They inspired me to take their photo, and I later won the Arab Participant prize for that photo. At that moment, I decided that I wanted to start teaching kids in at-risk areas how to take photographs.

I saw great potential in photography as a way to inspire new vision and new ideas. Based on that idea, I came up with a proposal for a program called “Photographic Skills for Little Wonders.” The vision for the program is to meet the needs of the youth development process in the context of the overall community with a focus on developing creative and critical thinking. The key objectives for the program are to develop creative thinking while teaching kids basic photography skills, and to encourage youth to get engaged in their communities.
Intended Outcomes
Observed results in the Youth who have participated in the program include:
- Development of creative thinking
- Increased Curiosity
- Developed communications skills
- Developed time management skills
- Individual youth empowerment

We use photography as a tool to create opportunities for youth in the local community. With our photography workshops, the participants develop their own critical thinking skills and are better able to contribute to community development.
“I learned that I can build my community when I share my knowledge and collaborate with others. Now I am keen to start a new group to spread this knowledge and raise awareness on the importance of art in community development.” Ali Abu Roman, 16
About Rawan Da’as
Rawan is a graduate of the University of Jordan, Amman. In 2012, she was an AMENDS delegate at Stanford University (American Middle Eastern Network for Dialogue). Rawan is a member of the Jordanian Photographic Society, and has participated in the Karama Film Festival, organized by the Royal Cultural Center and Human Rights Association of Jordan. She received the Arab Participant Prize, and second prize at the 8th International Photography Festival of Jordan.
See Rawan’s initiative featured on Jordanian TV. Watch the segment here.
See Rawan’s Flickr photostream here.







You might well ask, “Has it taken you 10 years to tell this story?” The answer is that the story must continue to be told. As powerful as images are, they have a limited shelf life – they grow stale. The newsletters, slideshows, grant proposals, and publicity/fundraising materials that Bread & Roses continually produces must contain fresh imagery in order to retain the enthusiasm of existing supporters, and to finally win over that financial angel who has been on the fence during the last three fundraising campaigns.
I have noted with mock irony, while packing up my cameras, lights, umbrellas, cables, and battery packs — long after the singer with her acoustic guitar, or the puppeteer with his furry family, has packed up and headed home: “Isn’t it interesting that I have so much more gear than the performer… but I’m so much less entertaining!” But the staff at Bread & Roses constantly reminds me of the value of my contributions, and I am honored and humbled to state that, notwithstanding the amazingly talented entertainers who perform for them, time and time again, I have been more than once designated their Volunteer of the Year.