Kathy overcame tragedy by helping others tackle challenges

kathy-eldon

Anyone who knows Kathy Eldon will tell you to beware – she just might change your life. The filmmaker, activist, author, and foundation chief executive officer says that in a world that often sees unlimited challenges, people instead need to “see limitless possibilities.”

Already a filmmaker living in London when she lost her photojournalist son, Dan Eldon, in Somalia in 1993, Ms. Eldon decided to honor him by starting the nonprofit Creative Visions Foundation (CVF), which supports creative artists and sponsors projects that have touched the lives of millions.

She founded CVF partly to commemorate Dan and his remarkable body of work, which includes paintings, drawings, and sketches featured in books and galleries around the world, as well as in a collection of his journals, whose title is an anthem for his generation: “The Journey is the Destination.”

CVF is a force for social activism across five continents. Since 1998, it has supported more than 90 media and art projects, helped produce 15 documentaries, and touched the lives of 30 million people. CVF assists filmmakers, artists, musicians, writers, environmentalists, and social activists of all ages who want to use their talents to tackle challenges in their communities.

Eldon also has written 20 books, including her soon-to-be-published memoir, “In the Heart of Life.”

Making things happen started early for Eldon. After graduating from Wellesley College in Wellesley, Mass., she went home to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, to await a Peace Corps assignment. Instead she accepted a marriage proposal and moved to London with her British husband, Mike Eldon.

Kathy gave birth to Dan in 1970, and a daughter, Amy, in 1974. Frustrated because so few jobs were open to women in her chosen fields of TV and publishing, Kathy turned to writing children’s books.

When Dan was 7 and Amy was 4, Mike’s company transferred him to Nairobi, Kenya. “Moving to Africa transformed me,” Eldon says. “That was when my life exploded into a Technicolor dream.” She worked for famed anthropologist Richard Leakey and his brother Philip, while her children went to an international school.

Eldon kept writing, everything from guidebooks to cookbooks. She also worked as a journalist and in other jobs, absorbing a lesson that has served her well. “People in Kenya were ‘creative activists,’ ” she says. That meant “you didn’t wait for other people to approve. You just did it.”

That no-limits attitude sank in with her children, especially Dan.

source : http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Making-a-difference/2012/0312/Kathy-Eldon-overcame-tragedy-by-helping-others-tackle-challenges