Portraits from rural Kenya

“They are farmers, mothers, entrepreneurs, and the first to wake and the last to rest.”

When I first arrived in Kenya, I met women who carry entire families — and entire communities — on their backs.

Their days revolve around their household, centered on food: growing it, preparing it, and stretching it to last through the lean months.
In a world where the rains are no longer predictable and the soil grows tired, their strength is what keeps households alive.



Organized for Change
These women are part of SANGO-Kenya, a grassroots organization that helps smallholder farmers adapt to climate change.
Through training and cooperation, they learn sustainable agriculture, nutrition, and financial management — tools to improve their families’ food security and resilience.



But beyond the practical knowledge, SANGO has given them something equally powerful: each other.


Organizing together creates a social fabric that provides a support group, camaraderie, and a social network.
They share seeds, savings, childcare, advice, and sometimes just quiet companionship.
A Strength That Doesn’t Need to Announce Itself



The women I photograph don’t perform resilience; they live it.
They don’t need to smile for the camera to show their strength.
In Kenya, smiling is not a social reflex as it often is in the West. People smile when there’s something to smile about — not to fill silence.
For a photographer, that means earning trust slowly. You cannot arrive and expect instant openness.
You sit, you listen, you return, that’s a start, but by no means a guarantee of acceptance.



Eventually, you become part of the background — and that’s when the real portraits begin to emerge.
Photographing Light and Shadow
Kenya’s light is both a gift and a challenge. The sun is fierce, the contrasts extreme.
Dark, beautiful skin tones against blinding midday light create images that the camera can’t always read honestly.


The post-processing is not for aesthetics but for truth: to let the light fall naturally on the people overcoming the harsh environment.
What I Found
Through these portraits, I discovered a new definition of resilience.
It is not just endurance — it is intelligence, grace, humor, and community.




These women are not waiting for help. They are learning, organizing, and leading their families toward a more secure future in the face of climate change and the hardships inherent to the area.



I came to photograph farmers.
I left admiring the women doing the farming.
…and you can see more of my photos here: https://www.rozinphotos.com/
