I was spending my days with what society considers the winners and certainly monetarily the winners. I was, you know, working on Wall Street. And ... I was spending my nights with what society considers losers, and the losers were no lazier, no less gifted, weren't any dumber, they were just dealt a very bad hand. - Chris Arnade
Quitting Wall Street To Tell A Prostitute's Story
Each week, Weekend Edition Sunday brings listeners an unexpected side of the news by talking with someone personally affected by the stories making headlines.
Chris Arnade spent 20 years working on Wall Street, but after the financial crisis of 2008, he found himself increasingly disillusioned with his profession. So, in the summer of 2012, he quit and began walking the streets of New York, camera in hand.
Arnade was drawn to the Hunts Point neighborhood in the Bronx, known for its crime, drug trade and prostitution. There, he met , a prostitute, outside an old monastery with a high, barbed-wire wall a block long.
"It was a Sunday afternoon, and she called me over and saw me with my camera and had seen me before, and asked me to take her picture," Arnade tells NPR's Jennifer Ludden. He did, and then chatted with her at length about her life and how she ended up on the streets.
Takeesha's hard story and her honesty had a tremendous impact on
Arnade. "She was raped by a relative at 11, had her first child at 12,
and was put out on the streets by her mother, who was also a prostitute,
at the age of 13." Takeesha has been on the streets now for almost 25
years.
"When I finished up talking to her for that hour and a
half ... I asked [her] how [she] wanted to be described," Arnade
remembers. "She said, 'As who I am: a prostitute, a mother of six, and a
child of God.'"
Arnade says Takeesha has always been very supportive of his photography, which he's published in a series called .
"One of the things that's been told to me, I forget who exactly told it
to me, was 'Being a homeless junkie, I often get offered people who
want to buy me lunch. But very rarely does anybody ever ask me who I
am.' "
The photography project has challenged Arnade's beliefs —
particularly his atheism. "I walked into Hunts Point and naively
thought that I would see the same cynicism towards faith that I had, and
I saw the exact opposite."
Takeesha says the person who gives
her hope is God, and in the crackhouses he visits — abandoned buildings
at three in the morning, with no electricity or plumbing — he almost
always finds a bible. "You have to respect how people get to their
beliefs, and why they get to their beliefs."
Arnade hopes
people look at the people he photographs for several seconds at a time,
reading their stories and thinking about inequality. "There are people
in this world ... who have very little. Not due to their own problems,
not due to their own failings but to society. Everybody, homeless,
prostitute and a Wall Street trader is as valid as anybody else."
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