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PHOTOS: A Peephole Into The Lives Of Coal Miners, Teen Moms, City Folk

The dignified-looking procession is actually a line of coal thieves at a mine in Jharia, India, snatching chunks early in the morning before officials arrive.
Ronny Sen/Getty Images Instagram Grant Recipient 2016
The dignified-looking procession is actually a line of coal thieves at a mine in Jharia, India, snatching chunks early in the morning before officials arrive.

It's a puzzling image — with a crime story behind it.

Women in colorful saris — hot pink, highlighter yellow, teal and royal blue — snake up a dusty gray quarry, carrying baskets of coal over their heads. It's early in the morning; they're stealing from the mine before officials come in for the day.

It's certainly not your typical Instagram photo — selfies, #TBTs or food porn. But it won Ronny Sen, a photographer from India, one of the top spots in Getty Images second annual Instagram Grant.

Yesterday, the photo agency awarded $10,000 each to Sen and two others, Christian Rodriguez of Uruguay and Girma Berta of Ethiopia, for using Instagram, the photo-sharing app, to highlight stories of underrepresented people around the world, including the poor, the elderly and children. In addition to cellphone photos, this year's grant was expanded to include videographers and visual artists.

The winners are established photojournalists and artists in their own right. Rodriguez's work has been published in National Geographicand The New York Times and he's the founder of an international film festival in Uruguay. Sen's photography has been featured in exhibitions in the Netherlands, India and Poland. And Berta, a graphic artist and painter, is the art director of GBOX Creative Studios, an ad agency in Addis Ababa.

For the winners, posting photos on Instagram feels more personal and allows them to let loose. "Working with my cellphone makes me feel freer," wrote Rodriguez in an email to Goats and Soda. "I don't feel any pressure at the time I'm taking a picture because I almost do it for fun."

Still, their images touch on serious topics. Rodriguez's photos highlight the resilience of teen mothers across Latin America. Sen focuses on the plight of coal miners in India. And Berta captures vibrant street life in Ethiopia's capital through a series of mixed-media images.

There were hundreds of entrants from over 90 countries. Submissions were judged by a panel including Adriana Zehbrauskas, one of last year's winners, plus photo experts like Nicolas Jimenez, director of photography for Le Monde, and Azu Nwagbogu, director of the Lagos Photo Festival. On top of the cash prize, the photographers will have their work exhibited at , a festival in New York, from September 21 to 25.

We asked each photographer to tell us about their winning images.

is a documentary photographer from Uruguay. He covered the Israeli-Hezbollah conflict in Lebanon in 2006 and has worked for news agencies like AFP, AP and Reuters. His winning work comes from a series called Teen Mom, depicting teen pregnancy in Latin America. "It can be very difficult for girls," he says. "But I want to portray them with the dignity and courage they have."

His advice for people who want to up their game on Instagram? "Don't do it for the 'likes,' " he says. "Do it because you really believe in it."

Angela Mieres, 15, hugged her sister during labor. Angela's boyfriend was shot to death 20 days before the couple's baby was born.
/ Christian Rodriguez/Getty Images Instagram Grant Recipient 2016
/
Christian Rodriguez/Getty Images Instagram Grant Recipient 2016
Angela Mieres, 15, hugged her sister during labor. Angela's boyfriend was shot to death 20 days before the couple's baby was born.

is a documentary photographer based in Calcutta who's working on a book, an exhibit for a festival in the Netherlands and a solo show in Bombay. He used both photography and video to capture the stories of the mine workers and their families in the mineral-rich town of Jharia.

The inspiration behind his photos? "Doomsday," he says. "I wanted them to look like a post-apocalyptic world on the edge, like the last day of the world's existence."

This laborer at a mine in Jharia earned $2 for loading four trucks with coal.<strong> </strong>
/ Ronny Sen/Getty Images Instagram Grant Recipient 2016
/
Ronny Sen/Getty Images Instagram Grant Recipient 2016
This laborer at a mine in Jharia earned $2 for loading four trucks with coal.

Children wait for their parents — coal pickers at a mine in Jharia — to return from work.
/ Ronny Sen/Getty Images Instagram Grant Recipient 2016
/
Ronny Sen/Getty Images Instagram Grant Recipient 2016
Children wait for their parents — coal pickers at a mine in Jharia — to return from work.

is an Addis Ababa-based artist who often infuses street photography with a mix of artistic approaches to draw attention to his subjects. His project, Moving Shadows, won him this year's Getty Grant for its street scenes superimposed against a bold backdrop of color.

A member of @everydayafrica, an Instagram account that showcases images of life across the continent, Berta is an advocate of phone photos. "Instagram is a peephole to the stories I create," he says. "It enables the world to look into what I have created and take something from it."

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Girma Berta captures images of ordinary people in Addis Ababa, then places them against backdrops of color to offer an "imagined interpretation of everyday life," he says.
/ Girma Berta/Getty Images Instagram Grant Recipient 2015
/
Girma Berta/Getty Images Instagram Grant Recipient 2015
Girma Berta captures images of ordinary people in Addis Ababa, then places them against backdrops of color to offer an "imagined interpretation of everyday life," he says.

This image of two street workers in Addis Ababa was created and designed on Berta's mobile phone.
/ Girma Berta/Getty Images Instagram Grant Recipient 2016
/
Girma Berta/Getty Images Instagram Grant Recipient 2016
This image of two street workers in Addis Ababa was created and designed on Berta's mobile phone.

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Malaka Gharib is the deputy editor and digital strategist on NPR's global health and development team. She covers topics such as the refugee crisis, gender equality and women's health. Her work as part of NPR's reporting teams has been recognized with two Gracie Awards: in 2019 for How To Raise A Human, a series on global parenting, and in 2015 for #15Girls, a series that profiled teen girls around the world.