Storytelling For Change

Storytelling for Change ft. Eman Mohammed

Photographers Without Borders Season 3 Episode 6

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 59:51

In this Storytelling for Change session, Eman Mohammed shares her journey of documenting the Palestinian genocide and the toll it takes, especially on children. The conversation moved beyond statistics as Eman shared the lived reality of survival and loss without romanticizing resilience. 


“This project has made me radically more intentional, deliberate, and mindful in every aspect of my storytelling. I deepened my science informed checklist for reporting under/about trauma, ensuring that documentation never becomes extraction and that ethical witness means sustained care, not just capture and run. I refuse to soften language for Western comfort: this is genocide, families are annihilated, and Gaza's healthcare system was deliberately targeted, I know first hand, how much precision holds resistance. By collaborating with the Irish Palestine Solidarity Campaign and Physicians for Palestine, I placed Rozan's story directly before audiences whose taxes and governments enable this violence, because true solidarity requires confronting complicity. And I no longer view publication as the end, securing Rozan's laptop, tablet, and shelter is part of the work. If we document destruction, we must help rebuild. I don't tell stories differently now, just better.” - Eman Mohammed 


Eman Mohammed is a Palestinian photojournalist and writer from Gaza whose work confronts the realities of occupation and genocide through intimate, long-term storytelling. A Senior TED Fellow, she focuses on Indigenous communities resisting erasure, using photography and written journalism as both evidence and witness.