Jen Ziel Klewitz Photography

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  • Image from an immigration rights march held in downtown Los Angeles, Calif., on March 27,  2009.  Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-25.jpg
  • Locals and tourists alike watch the sunset from the ruins of the Forte de Ponta Fortress, Morro de São Paulo, Bahia, Brazil. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Brazil-21.jpg
  • Koji Ah-Choo, foreground, a member of the Bardi Aboriginal clan of the northwestern Kimberly region of Australia,  rests with Sam Bright, of southwestern Australia, near a leafy spring on Sunday Island. Sunday island one of a chain of islands that make up part of the Bardi's traditional ancestral lands. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Australia-20.jpg
  • Alberto Lopez, left, and Eduardo Martinez, right, musicians and musical scholars both originally from Colombia, pose for a portrait while playing traditional Afro-Colombian instruments. The photo was taken in Los Angeles, California  on August 31, 2009. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    LosAngelesPeople-28.jpg
  • Residents of Havana, Cuba, sit -and walk- on the Malecon, or seafront wall, on a particularly hot summer afternoon, while watching swimmers on the rocks and in the water below. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Cuba-41.jpg
  • Image from an immigration rights march held in downtown Los Angeles, Calif., on March 27,  2009.  Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-24.jpg
  • Image from an immigration rights march held in downtown Los Angeles, Calif., on March 27,  2009.  Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-23.jpg
  • Image from an immigration rights march held in downtown Los Angeles, California, on March 27,  2009.  Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-22.jpg
  • An unidentified day laborers listen to Antonio Bernabe (not shown) speak at the Balboa Day Labor Center in Van Nuys, California, on Dec. 7, 2009. The man in this image reads one of the informational flyers Bernabe has handed out regarding the legal rights of day laborers. Bernabe was visiting the center on behalf of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), delivering an educational program informing laborers of a new city ordinance that affects their right to hold employers accountable who fail to pay them for their day's work. Bernabe, originally of Guanajuato, Mexico, and now U.S. citizen and resident of Van Nuys, California, is a day laborer organizer and has worked for CHIRLA for 12 years. In his current position, he is responsible for executing educational programs for day laborers in the greater Los Angeles area. Bernabe's programs include campaigns to inform workers of their rights, inform them about immigration and work law, and to inform them about access to social services such as health care, English classes, and paths to residency and citizenship. Bernabe, who was once himself a day laborer, works for the betterment of the community and for immigrant rights.  Day laborers are workers in manual labor fields, such as home construction and painting, who solicit temporary work, often from public street corners. Day laborers are made up of American citizens, documented immigrants, and most commonly, undocumented immigrants, all of whom are unable to find other work or regular employment. A majority of the day laborers in the Los Angeles area are from Central America and are Spanish speakers. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-21.jpg
  • Unidentified day laborers listen to Antonio Bernabe (not shown) speak at the Balboa Day Labor Center in Van Nuys, Calif., on Dec. 7, 2009. Bernabe was visiting the center on behalf of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), delivering an educational program informing laborers of a new city ordinance that affects their right to hold employers accountable who fail to pay them for their day's work. Bernabe, originally of Guanajuato, Mexico, and now U.S. citizen and resident of Van Nuys, California, is a day laborer organizer and has worked for CHIRLA for 12 years. In his current position, he is responsible for executing educational programs for day laborers in the greater Los Angeles area. Bernabe's programs include campaigns to inform workers of their rights, inform them about immigration and work law, and to inform them about access to social services such as health care, English classes, and paths to residency and citizenship. Bernabe, who was once himself a day laborer, works for the betterment of the community and for immigrant rights.  Day laborers are workers in manual labor fields, such as home construction and painting, who solicit temporary work, often from public street corners. Day laborers are made up of American citizens, documented immigrants, and most commonly, undocumented immigrants, all of whom are unable to find other work or regular employment. A majority of the day laborers in the Los Angeles area are from Central America and are Spanish speakers. Photo by Jen Klewitz..Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-20.jpg
  • Day laborers, who wished to remain unidentified, wait for work at the North Hollywood Day Labor Center, in North Hollywood, California, on December 4, 2009. They are seated in front of the community vegetable garden sponsored by the center. Day laborers are workers in manual labor fields, such as home construction and painting, who solicit temporary work, often from public street corners. Day laborers are made up of American citizens, documented immigrants, and most commonly, undocumented immigrants, all of whom are unable to find other work or regular employment. A majority of the day laborers in the Los Angeles area are from Central America and are Spanish speakers. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-17.jpg
  • Antonio Bernabe talks to two Guatemalan immigrant day laborers near the corner of Kester Blvd. and Oxnard Ave., in Van Nuys, California, on Dec. 9, 2009. The two men he is speaking to, who wished to remain unidentified, were young Guatemalans, of 17 and 18 years of age, who had crossed both the Guatemala-Mexico, and U.S.-Mexico borders in perilous circumstances in the hope of having a better life in the U.S., and income to send back to their impoverished families in Guatemala. Bernabe was visiting the day laborers waiting on the street corner for work on behalf of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA). He spoke to the men and handed out flyers informing laborers of a new city ordinance that affects their right to hold employers accountable who fail to pay them for their day's work.  Bernabe, originally of Guanajuato, Mexico, and now U.S. citizen and resident of Van Nuys, California, is a day laborer organizer and has worked for CHIRLA for 12 years. In his current position, he is responsible for executing educational programs for day laborers in the greater Los Angeles area. Bernabe's programs include campaigns to inform workers of their rights, inform them about immigration and work law, and to inform them about access to social services such as health care, English classes, and paths to residency and citizenship. Bernabe, who was once himself a day laborer, works for the betterment of the community and for immigrant rights.  Day laborers are workers in manual labor fields, such as home construction and painting, who solicit temporary work, often from public street corners. Day laborers are made up of American citizens, documented immigrants, and most commonly, undocumented immigrants, all of whom are unable to find other work or regular employment. A majority of the day laborers in the Los Angeles area are from Central America and are Spanish speakers. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-16.jpg
  • Antonio Bernabe pauses on the corner of Kester Blvd. and Oxnard Ave., in Van Nuys, Calif., on Dec. 9, 2009. Bernabe was visiting the day laborers waiting on the street corner for work on behalf of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA). He spoke to the men and handed out flyers informing laborers of a new city ordinance that affects their right to hold employers accountable who fail to pay them for their day's work. Bernabe, originally of Guanajuato, Mexico, and now U.S. citizen and resident of Van Nuys, California, is a day laborer organizer and has worked for CHIRLA for 12 years. In his current position, he is responsible for executing educational programs for day laborers in the greater Los Angeles area. Bernabe's programs include campaigns to inform workers of their rights, inform them about immigration and work law, and to inform them about access to social services such as health care, English classes, and paths to residency and citizenship. Bernabe, who was once himself a day laborer, works for the betterment of the community and for immigrant rights.  Day laborers are workers in manual labor fields, such as home construction and painting, who solicit temporary work, often from public street corners. Day laborers are made up of American citizens, documented immigrants, and most commonly, undocumented immigrants, all of whom are unable to find other work or regular employment. A majority of the day laborers in the Los Angeles area are from Central America and are Spanish speakers. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-14.jpg
  • An unidentified member of the band Journaleros del Norte, whose members are all immigrant day laborers, surveys the crowd from the back of a flatbed truck serving as a rolling stage during a concert at a peaceful Thanksgiving march to honor immigrant rights. The Journaleros del Norte play original music with lyrics that tell of the lives and challenges of journaleros, or day laborers. Some marchers in the crowd carried white crosses to represent those who died attempting to cross the U.S.-Mexico border during the previous year. The crosses are labeled with the names of men and women, their age, and the approximate date of their death.  The march was put on by the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), an immigration rights group based in Los Angeles, Calif., and took place in North Hollywood, California on November 25, 2009.  Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-13.jpg
  • Ricardo Perez pauses to survey the crowd during a peaceful Thanksgiving march to honor immigrant rights, put on by the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), an immigration rights group based in Los Angeles, California. The march took place in North Hollywood, California, on November 25, 2009. Some marchers, including Perez, carried white crosses to represent those who died attempting to cross the U.S.-Mexico border during the previous year. The crosses are labeled with the names of men and women, their age, and the approximate date of their death. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-10.jpg
  • Docent Jeanne Lamont, of Calabasas, Calif., sits  inside the Leonis Adobe Museum in Calabasas, Calif., on Wednesday June 17, 2009. Lamont has been a docent at the museum for over 10 years. She is seated in front of a historic photograph of the original buildings and gardens that once sat on the current property of the museum.  The museum, which is a California Historic Landmark, fills the buildings of several historic houses on the large ranch property, and tells the history of the West San Fernando Valley from the 1800's to the present. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    LosAngelesPeople-43.jpg
  • Alberto Lopez and Eduardo Martinez,  musicians and musical scholars both originally from Colombia, pose for a portrait while playing traditional Afro-Colombian instruments. The photo was taken in Los Angeles, California  on August 31, 2009. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    LosAngelesPeople-29.jpg
  • Nalva Lindauer, originally from Salvador, Brazil, and now a permanent resident of Los Angeles, California, cooks traditional Brazilian food at Zabumba Restaurant in Culver City, California, on February 8, 2009. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    LosAngelesPeople-21.jpg
  • Residents of Havana, Cuba, swim and socialize on the rocks, and in the Banos del Mar, or sea baths located just below the Malecon, or seafront wall and walkway, bordering the edge of the city.  The sea baths, which are exposed at low tide, were cut out of the reef decades before the construction of the Malecon began in 1901. The baths are about 12 feet square and 6-8 feet deep, with rock steps for access and gaps to allow waves to wash in and out. The baths were originally designated before the turn of the century with separate areas for men, women, and negros. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Cuba-26.jpg
  • Image from an immigration rights march held in Chinatown, Los Angeles, Calif., on December 18, 2009, in honor of International Migrant's Day. Multiple immigrant rights groups from the Los Angeles community were in attendance. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-26.jpg
  • Antonio Bernabe, left, talks with day laborer Luis Flores, right, at the North Hollywood Labor Center, in North Hollywood, California, on December 4, 2009. Flores, who had recently suffered a back injury that left him in a great deal of pain and made him unable to perform manual labor, was discussing options for financial and medical help with Bernabe. Bernabe was visiting the center on behalf of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), delivering an educational program informing laborers of a new city ordinance that affects their right to hold employers accountable who fail to pay them for their day's work. Bernabe, originally of Guanajuato, Mexico, and now U.S. citizen and resident of Van Nuys, California, is a day laborer organizer and has worked for CHIRLA for 12 years. In his current position, he is responsible for executing educational programs for day laborers in the greater Los Angeles area. Bernabe's programs include campaigns to inform workers of their rights, inform them about immigration and work law, and to inform them about access to social services such as health care, English classes, and paths to residency and citizenship. Bernabe, who was once himself a day laborer, works for the betterment of the community and for immigrant rights.  Day laborers are workers in manual labor fields, such as home construction and painting, who solicit temporary work, often from public street corners. Day laborers are made up of American citizens, documented immigrants, and most commonly, undocumented immigrants, all of whom are unable to find other work or regular employment. A majority of the day laborers in the Los Angeles area are from Central America and are Spanish speakers. Photo by Jen KlewitzPhoto by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-19.jpg
  • Day Laborers, who wished to remain unidentified, listen to Antonio Bernabe speak at the North Hollywood Day Laborer Center, in North Hollywood, California, on December 4, 2009. Bernabe was visiting the center on behalf of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), delivering an educational program informing laborers of a new city ordinance that affects their right to hold employers accountable who fail to pay them for their day's work. Bernabe, originally of Guanajuato, Mexico, and now U.S. citizen and resident of Van Nuys, California, is a day laborer organizer and has worked for CHIRLA for 12 years. In his current position, he is responsible for executing educational programs for day laborers in the greater Los Angeles area. Bernabe's programs include campaigns to inform workers of their rights, inform them about immigration and work law, and to inform them about access to social services such as health care, English classes, and paths to residency and citizenship. Bernabe, who was once himself a day laborer, works for the betterment of the community and for immigrant rights.  Day laborers are workers in manual labor fields, such as home construction and painting, who solicit temporary work, often from public street corners. Day laborers are made up of American citizens, documented immigrants, and most commonly, undocumented immigrants, all of whom are unable to find other work or regular employment. A majority of the day laborers in the Los Angeles area are from Central America and are Spanish speakers. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-18.jpg
  • Day laborers pose for a photo in the early morning light while waiting for work on the corner of Kester Blvd. and Oxnard Ave., in Van Nuys, California, on December 9, 2009. Day laborers are workers in manual labor fields, such as home construction and painting, who solicit temporary work, often from public street corners. Day laborers are made up of American citizens, documented immigrants, and most commonly, undocumented immigrants, all of whom are unable to find other work or regular employment. A majority of the day laborers in the Los Angeles area are from Central America and are Spanish speakers. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-15.jpg
  • Day laborers line up to participate in a peaceful Thanksgiving march to honor immigrant rights, put on by the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), an immigration rights group based in Los Angeles, California. The march  included multiple community groups and organizations and took place in North Hollywood, California, on November 25, 2009. Photo by Jen Klewitz.
    Immigration-12.jpg
  • Community members line up along Sherman Way, in North Hollywood, California, to participate in a peaceful Thanksgiving march to honor immigrant rights, put on by the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), an immigration rights group based in Los Angeles, California. The march took place in North Hollywood, California, on November 25, 2009. Some marchers carried white crosses to represent those who died attempting to cross the U.S.-Mexico border during the previous year. The crosses are labeled with the names of men and women, their age, and the approximate date of their death. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Immigration-11.jpg
  • A male folkloric dancer dances an Orisha, or,  in Portuguese, Orixás, a diety in the Candomblé religion, at a pubic performance in the village of Morro de São Paulo, Bahia, Brazil. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Brazil-13.jpg
  • Aboriginal petroglyphs found on Murujuga, also known as the Burrup Peninsula , in the Pilbara region of Australia. The peninsula contains the world's largest collection of petroglyphs, all of which are currently threatened by nearby natural gas mining operations.  The original creators of the petroglyphs-ancestors of the Yaburara people- no longer exist. The current claimants/custodians are the Ngarluma Yindjibarndi, Wong-goo-tt-oo and Yaburara Mardudhunera Aboriginal peoples. Photo by Jen Klewitz  Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Australia-23.jpg
  • Traditional bush food of the Bardi Aboriginal people, including billygoat plum, wild yam roots, and shellfish. Sunday Island, the Kimberly, Australia. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Australia-49.jpg
  • Elina Miro Rodriguez keeps score on an old chalkboard during an afternoon match of Dominoes between four people in Centro Habana, Cuba. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Cuba-50.jpg
  • Sunset view from Sunday Island, the traditional land of the Bardi Aboriginal people, in the Buccaneer Archipelago, the Kimberly, Australia. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Australia-51.jpg
  • A visiting hiker descends to a beach on Sunday Island, the traditional land of the Bardi Aboriginal people. The Kimberly, Australia. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Australia-22.jpg
  • Small notes announcing a desire to make a trade, or permuta, of state-managed habitation, are tacked to at tree on Havana, Cuba's Prado, at a designated meeting location where people gather once or twice a month to advertise and discuss trades. The notes list the location and details of the habitation to be traded.  Since all housing is state issued and managed, and no one holds legal ownership of property, trades for habitations of similar size to the one originally issued to an individual or family by the government are acceptable. The state distributes housing based on family size and needs.   In a trade, for example, a three or four member family originally living in a two bedroom apartment with a kitchen may be looking to trade for two small, separate apartments-one for the parents, and the other for a newly married adult child and partner. Trades can also be made between those wishing to move into or outside of the city of Havana, or within different neighborhoods of a given city. All final trades must be approved by the government. Photo by Jen Klewitz
    Cuba-39.jpg
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