{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/66d218adc7651a10d3468afb/69e59c5dabe143da5b0a0fca?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Through Her Lens: Cameras For Girls with Amina Mohamed","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/66d218adc7651a10d3468afb/1778188553583-5754e057-31de-47c1-8abb-80f0291bdb85.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>On this episode of Co-Created we're joined by Amina Mohamed, the Founder and Executive Director of Cameras For Girls, to talk about what happens when a founder story becomes a digital story and why that format can reveal the “three-dimensional” truth you can’t always reach in a talk, a webinar, or a standard nonprofit promo.</p><p>Amina takes us from her family’s refugee journey from Uganda to Canada, through years in film and television, and back to Uganda where she meets young women facing  limits on education and opportunity. From that turning point, Cameras For Girls grows into a practical pathway into media careers, combining photography training, ethical storytelling, business skills, and the gift of a camera with the real goal: helping young women enter male-dominated media spaces and land fair paid jobs in places like Uganda and Tanzania.</p><p><strong>Episode Key Messages</strong></p><ul><li>Amina’s origin story from Uganda to Canada and back again</li><li>Why Cameras for Girls focuses on fair paid jobs</li><li>Teaching photography, business skills, and ethical storytelling</li><li>Rejecting extractive storytelling and top-down development</li><li>Turning a “why” into a three-minute digital story</li><li>Editing surprises and choosing images responsibly</li><li>Using a founder video for donors, funding, and social media</li><li>Encouraging participants to tell their own stories in their own voice</li></ul><p><strong>Other Links Mentioned</strong></p><ul><li>Read this&nbsp;<a href=\"https://commonlanguagedst.org/blog/through-her-lens\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">episode's&nbsp;blog post</a></li><li>Watch <a href=\"https://youtu.be/WY4Kt9dpYrk?si=SZYDv4v3IrtYGMRN\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">Amina's digital story</a></li><li>Learn more about <a href=\"https://www.camerasforgirls.org/\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">Cameras For Girls</a></li></ul><p><strong>About Our Guest</strong></p><p>Amina Mohamed is the Founder and Executive Director of Cameras For Girls, a Canadian charity she launched in 2018 to address gender inequality in Africa’s male-dominated media industry. Born in Uganda, Amina came to Canada as a refugee after her family was exiled under the regime of Idi Amin. Growing up between cultures, she discovered photography as a powerful way to express herself when words failed. That early experience shaped the vision behind Cameras For Girls: creating opportunities for young women across Africa to find their voice through visual storytelling.Through a year-long training program combining photography, ethical storytelling, and business skills, Cameras For Girls equips young women with the tools, training, and mentorship needed to build sustainable careers in media. Participants receive professional cameras, hands-on instruction, and ongoing career support designed to help them enter and succeed in the workforce. To date, the organization has trained nearly 200 women through in-person programs across East Africa and has reached more than 2,000 additional participants through its Online Learning Hub. Amina is also a leading advocate for ethical storytelling, challenging outdated and colonial narratives often present in international media. Her work emphasizes dignity-centered storytelling that honours the lived experiences of the women and communities whose stories are shared. Her leadership and impact have earned international recognition. Amina has spoken at the Vital Voices Global Leadership Summit, been featured in publications including Vogue, and received the Estée Lauder Beautiful Forces Grant in recognition of her work advancing women’s leadership.Today, Amina continues to expand Cameras For Girls’ programs across Africa while advocating for gender equality, ethical media practices, and new pathways for women to build sustainable careers in storytelling and journalism.</p><p><br></p>","author_name":"Snack Labs"}