Mei-Chun Jau: Community Journalism

Part 3 of 5 in our series on Christian photojournalists.

Mei-Chun Jau
Mei-Chun Jau
Click here forsamples of Jau’s workClick each name for other samples • Joanna Pinneo • Jon Warren • Greg Schneider • John H. White

Mei-Chun Jau describes herself as a “closet Texan” who is documenting her hometown. There is no typical day at a big city newspaper. “Anything can happen,” Jau says. “As a newspaper photographer, you have to be ready for that.” Her shift might start in a skyscraper with a CEO’s portrait for the business section, and while there she may get dispatched to a police standoff that could last for hours.

“I like the diversity, that kind of schedule,” Jau says. When the more mundane assignments come along, they end up being a welcome break because she often works on “a lot of exhaustive, tear-jerking stories.”

Jau, a staff photographer for The Dallas Morning News, was born in Taiwan but has lived most of her life in north Texas. In 2001 she received the Barbara Jordan Media Award for coverage of people with disabilities. Her job is introducing her neighbors to one another through the pages of the newspaper. She helps the community find its identity. “I don’t find community news boring.”

Over time, she builds relationships with sources, something almost impossible in international journalism. She might go to a fire, and the homeowners recognize her face because they saw her at their children’s elementary school. “They trust you,” she notes.

Jau specializes in photographing the most vulnerable members of society. “I think it’s important to be a good listener.”

She spent much of the last two years photographing Egyptian conjoined twins Ahmed and Mohamed Ibrahim, who gained national attention when they were surgically separated in October 2003.

Spending so much time with a family, Jau developed a close relationship with them. The friendship was cross-cultural on many levels. The Ibrahims are devout Muslims. “They know I’m Christian,” Jau says. A common goal—telling the story of the boys’ recovery—brought them together. But Jau also reacted on a spiritual level. “We prayed for the same purpose—a successful surgery for the boys.”

Jau says there’s obviously a balancing act between work and faith. A good journalist knows how to act professional and stay neutral but still show compassion. “I’m also a human being. Because I’m a sensitive person, I can still look for sensitive moments.”

Copyright © 2004 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

The Dallas Morning News has more information about Mei-Chun Jau.

Monday, we featured Joanna Pinneo.

Yesterday, we featured Jon Warren.

More about Christians in Photojournalism, including more pictures, is available on their website.

Other Christianity Today photo essays include:

Saving Strangers | The journey of one Somali Bantu family in the largest group resettlement of African refugees in U.S. history. (July 02, 2004)

River Deep Mercy Wide | A medical journey on the Rio Negro in Brazil’s Amazon Basin (Feb. 06, 2004)

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The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

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Wooing the Faithful

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John Kerry's Open Mind

Salt-and-Pepper Politics

Jon Warren: Eyewitness to Suffering

Land of Warlords

Living with Fundamentalists

Not Far from the Brahmin Tree

Ordinary Terrorists

Pick Your Shibboleths Wisely

Poetry, Parables, and Prose

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Quotation Marks

Sin and Evil

John H. White: Mercy Over Justice

Second-Best Kid Lit Ever

Senate's Top Democrat in the Cross Hairs

Smuggling Cats for a Gay Celebrity

The Ecstatic Heresy

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Passages

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Charley's No Angel

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Building Alliances to Save Lives

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'Termites to National Security'

A Stopped Pulse

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California's Prop. 71 Stem-Cell 'Scam'

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From Sex Pistols to <em>Shadowmancer</em>

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