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  • The Kurds
    5198
    The Kurds
    Iraqi Kurdish refugees in the rubble of Penjwin, Iraq. 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5198
    The Kurds
    Iraqi Kurdish refugees in the rubble of Penjwin, Iraq. 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • Hôtels sans étoiles
    4654
    Hôtels sans étoiles
    Noëlle 42 ans, vit dans une chambre de 10 m2 avec ses quatre enfants, Sheylan 4 ans, Shanel 6 ans, Djamel 7 ans et Marina 17 ans.
    © Diane Grimonet
    24/04/2012
    4654
    24/04/2012
    Hôtels sans étoiles
    Noëlle 42 ans, vit dans une chambre de 10 m2 avec ses quatre enfants, Sheylan 4 ans, Shanel 6 ans, Djamel 7 ans et Marina 17 ans.
    © Diane Grimonet

     

  • Héritage toxique
    3606
    Héritage toxique
    Moscou / Russie
    Décharge d'ordures de Dolgoprudinskaya où les gens cherchent des choses comestibles comme du pain ou des fruits, des bouteilles, des matériaux de construction, des déchets d'usines de cigarettes, etc.
    © Gerd Ludwig
    11/08/2008
    3606
    11/08/2008
    Héritage toxique
    Moscou / Russie
    Décharge d'ordures de Dolgoprudinskaya où les gens cherchent des choses comestibles comme du pain ou des fruits, des bouteilles, des matériaux de construction, des déchets d'usines de cigarettes, etc.
    © Gerd Ludwig

     

  • The Kurds
    5200
    The Kurds
    Throughout Iraqi Kurdistan, students are finally studying Kurdish history, which was forbidden under Iraqi rule. It is the only place in Kurdistan where classes are held in Kurdish. Without the money to print their own text books, students are forced to make do with what the Iraqis left behind, sometimes filling up notebooks and erasing them to be used. These students are in a classroom of a bombed out school in Penjwin, Iraq, near the border with Iran.

    Iraq 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5200
    The Kurds
    Throughout Iraqi Kurdistan, students are finally studying Kurdish history, which was forbidden under Iraqi rule. It is the only place in Kurdistan where classes are held in Kurdish. Without the money to print their own text books, students are forced to make do with what the Iraqis left behind, sometimes filling up notebooks and erasing them to be used. These students are in a classroom of a bombed out school in Penjwin, Iraq, near the border with Iran.

    Iraq 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5197
    The Kurds
    Kurdish Family Around a Fire December 1991 Penjwin, Iraq

    Having fled their war-torn home near Kirkuk, Iraq, a Kurdish family battles the elements in the ruins of Penjwin, Iraq on the border of Iran.

    Iraqi Kurds returned to their homes and the rubble of Penjwin, Iraq, after the Gulf War of 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5197
    The Kurds
    Kurdish Family Around a Fire December 1991 Penjwin, Iraq

    Having fled their war-torn home near Kirkuk, Iraq, a Kurdish family battles the elements in the ruins of Penjwin, Iraq on the border of Iran.

    Iraqi Kurds returned to their homes and the rubble of Penjwin, Iraq, after the Gulf War of 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5172
    The Kurds
    A dying Kurdish soldier lays on his back with his amputated leg elevated while his cheek is cleaned by a fellow soldier in Zakho, Iraq on July 15, 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5172
    The Kurds
    A dying Kurdish soldier lays on his back with his amputated leg elevated while his cheek is cleaned by a fellow soldier in Zakho, Iraq on July 15, 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5199
    The Kurds
    Throughout Iraqi Kurdistan, students are finally studying Kurdish history, which was forbidden under Iraqi rule. It is the only place in Kurdistan where classes are held in Kurdish. Without the money to print their own text books, students are forced to make do with what the Iraqis left behind, sometimes filling up notebooks and erasing them to be used. These students are in a classroom of a bombed out school in Penjwin, Iraq, near the border with Iran.

    Iraq 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5199
    The Kurds
    Throughout Iraqi Kurdistan, students are finally studying Kurdish history, which was forbidden under Iraqi rule. It is the only place in Kurdistan where classes are held in Kurdish. Without the money to print their own text books, students are forced to make do with what the Iraqis left behind, sometimes filling up notebooks and erasing them to be used. These students are in a classroom of a bombed out school in Penjwin, Iraq, near the border with Iran.

    Iraq 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5169
    The Kurds
    Lives hang in the balance in what is left of Qala Diza. The Iraqi army destroyed this city of over 100,000 residents in the 1980's but after the Gulf War in 1991, it's Kurdish residents were able to return and start to rebuild their lives and homes. Iraq 1991

    The Iraqi government has imposed a strict blockade of food and fuel to the region known as Free Kurdistan, where families struggle to rebuild amid the wreckage.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5169
    The Kurds
    Lives hang in the balance in what is left of Qala Diza. The Iraqi army destroyed this city of over 100,000 residents in the 1980's but after the Gulf War in 1991, it's Kurdish residents were able to return and start to rebuild their lives and homes. Iraq 1991

    The Iraqi government has imposed a strict blockade of food and fuel to the region known as Free Kurdistan, where families struggle to rebuild amid the wreckage.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5165
    The Kurds
    Lives hang in the balance in what is left of Qala Diza. The Iraqi army destroyed this city of over 100,000 residents in the 1980's but after the Gulf War in 1991, it's Kurdish residents were able to return and start to rebuild their lives and homes. Iraq 1991

    The Iraqi government has imposed a strict blockade of food and fuel to the region known as Free Kurdistan, where families struggle to rebuild amid the wreckage.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5165
    The Kurds
    Lives hang in the balance in what is left of Qala Diza. The Iraqi army destroyed this city of over 100,000 residents in the 1980's but after the Gulf War in 1991, it's Kurdish residents were able to return and start to rebuild their lives and homes. Iraq 1991

    The Iraqi government has imposed a strict blockade of food and fuel to the region known as Free Kurdistan, where families struggle to rebuild amid the wreckage.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5159
    The Kurds
    The stuggle of the Kurds, who constitute one of the largest ethnic groups in the world without a country of its own.
    A 54 year old woman wears the scars of Halabja, an Iraqi town that was annihilated by poison gas in 1988. Twenty-five of her relatives died in that attack, and now her daughter attends to wounds that continue to burn three years later. July 1991
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5159
    The Kurds
    The stuggle of the Kurds, who constitute one of the largest ethnic groups in the world without a country of its own.
    A 54 year old woman wears the scars of Halabja, an Iraqi town that was annihilated by poison gas in 1988. Twenty-five of her relatives died in that attack, and now her daughter attends to wounds that continue to burn three years later. July 1991
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5148
    The Kurds
    A tourist rest stop in Northern Iraq serves as a shelter for Kurdish refugees, who have returned from camps in Turkey but are afraid to go deeper into Iraq to their hometowns. Near Dohuk, Iraq. 1991
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5148
    The Kurds
    A tourist rest stop in Northern Iraq serves as a shelter for Kurdish refugees, who have returned from camps in Turkey but are afraid to go deeper into Iraq to their hometowns. Near Dohuk, Iraq. 1991
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5147
    The Kurds
    This seven year old Kurdish boy was blinded and burned by an Iraqi phosphorous bomb.The Iraqi army dropped bombs on the fleeing Kurds after the failed Kurdish uprising in the wake of the Gulf War. Shaqlawa, Iraq 1991
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5147
    The Kurds
    This seven year old Kurdish boy was blinded and burned by an Iraqi phosphorous bomb.The Iraqi army dropped bombs on the fleeing Kurds after the failed Kurdish uprising in the wake of the Gulf War. Shaqlawa, Iraq 1991
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5128
    The Kurds
    Kurdish refugees from Iraq stayed in the Ishikveren Camp in Turkey after the Gulf War in 1991. Here a family waits in their tent for their baby to die from malnutrition. Turkey 1991
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5128
    The Kurds
    Kurdish refugees from Iraq stayed in the Ishikveren Camp in Turkey after the Gulf War in 1991. Here a family waits in their tent for their baby to die from malnutrition. Turkey 1991
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5126
    The Kurds
    The Ishikveren Refugee Camp in Turkey was home to 200,000 Kurds from Iraq who fled after the Gulf War in 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5126
    The Kurds
    The Ishikveren Refugee Camp in Turkey was home to 200,000 Kurds from Iraq who fled after the Gulf War in 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5124
    The Kurds
    Kurdish refugees from Iraq stayed in the Ishikveren Camp in Turkey after the Gulf War in 1991. Here a family buries their baby, who had just died from malnutrition. Turkey 1991
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5124
    The Kurds
    Kurdish refugees from Iraq stayed in the Ishikveren Camp in Turkey after the Gulf War in 1991. Here a family buries their baby, who had just died from malnutrition. Turkey 1991
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5168
    The Kurds
    The stuggle of the Kurds, who constitute one of the largest ethnic groups in the world without a country of its own.
    Children play in the ruins of Qala Diza. The Iraqi army destroyed this city of over 100,000 residents in the 1980's but after the Gulf War in 1991, its Kurdish residents were able to return and start to rebuild their lives and homes.

    The Iraqi government has imposed a strict blockade of food and fuel to the region known as Free Kurdistan, where families struggle to rebuild amid the wreckage.


    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5168
    The Kurds
    The stuggle of the Kurds, who constitute one of the largest ethnic groups in the world without a country of its own.
    Children play in the ruins of Qala Diza. The Iraqi army destroyed this city of over 100,000 residents in the 1980's but after the Gulf War in 1991, its Kurdish residents were able to return and start to rebuild their lives and homes.

    The Iraqi government has imposed a strict blockade of food and fuel to the region known as Free Kurdistan, where families struggle to rebuild amid the wreckage.


    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5196
    The Kurds
    Kurdish students learn Kurdish history in a classroom in Penjwin, Iraq on Dec. 17, 1991. Throughout Iraqi Kurdistan, students are finally studying Kurdish history, which was forbidden under Iraqi rule. It is the only place in Kurdistan where classes are held in Kurdish. Without the money to print their own text books, students are forced to make do with what the Iraqis left behind, sometimes filling up notebooks and erasing them to be used.

    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5196
    The Kurds
    Kurdish students learn Kurdish history in a classroom in Penjwin, Iraq on Dec. 17, 1991. Throughout Iraqi Kurdistan, students are finally studying Kurdish history, which was forbidden under Iraqi rule. It is the only place in Kurdistan where classes are held in Kurdish. Without the money to print their own text books, students are forced to make do with what the Iraqis left behind, sometimes filling up notebooks and erasing them to be used.

    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • Russie
    2845
    Russie
    Colonie pénitentiaire industrielle. Kolpino, Quartier des mineurs,
    Saint-Pétersbourg, Russie. La hiérarchie parmi les prisonniers est visible jusque sur les mains des détenus, comme en témoigne la marque que les « dominants » ont tatouée sur un « dominé ». Le repas au réfectoire ne dure que trois minutes effectives. Un gardien regarde sa montre et donne un coup de sifflet dès que le temps est écoulé. Les jeunes détenus doivent s'arrêter de manger même si le repas, déjà maigre, n'est pas terminé et sortir les mains en l'air pour prouver qu'ils n'ont rien emporté à manger avec eux. Le repas, composé de pain noir et de kacha, sorte de blé bouilli ne couvre, selon l'OMS, que 30 % des besoins alimentaires quotidiens…
    © Lizzie SADIN
    2845
    Russie
    Colonie pénitentiaire industrielle. Kolpino, Quartier des mineurs,
    Saint-Pétersbourg, Russie. La hiérarchie parmi les prisonniers est visible jusque sur les mains des détenus, comme en témoigne la marque que les « dominants » ont tatouée sur un « dominé ». Le repas au réfectoire ne dure que trois minutes effectives. Un gardien regarde sa montre et donne un coup de sifflet dès que le temps est écoulé. Les jeunes détenus doivent s'arrêter de manger même si le repas, déjà maigre, n'est pas terminé et sortir les mains en l'air pour prouver qu'ils n'ont rien emporté à manger avec eux. Le repas, composé de pain noir et de kacha, sorte de blé bouilli ne couvre, selon l'OMS, que 30 % des besoins alimentaires quotidiens…
    © Lizzie SADIN

     

  • Russie
    2844
    Russie
    Colonie pénitentiaire industrielle, Kolpino, Quartier des mineurs,
    Saint-Pétersbourg, Russie. Le repas au réfectoire ne dure que trois minutes effectives. Un gardien regarde sa montre et donne un coup de sifflet dès que le temps est écoulé. Les jeunes détenus doivent s'arrêter de manger, même si le repas, déjà maigre, n'est pas terminé et sortir les mains en l'air pour prouver qu'ils n'ont rien emporté à manger avec eux. Le repas, composé de pain noir et de kacha, sorte de blé bouilli ne couvre, selon l'OMS, que 30 % des besoins alimentaires quotidiens…
    © Lizzie SADIN
    2844
    Russie
    Colonie pénitentiaire industrielle, Kolpino, Quartier des mineurs,
    Saint-Pétersbourg, Russie. Le repas au réfectoire ne dure que trois minutes effectives. Un gardien regarde sa montre et donne un coup de sifflet dès que le temps est écoulé. Les jeunes détenus doivent s'arrêter de manger, même si le repas, déjà maigre, n'est pas terminé et sortir les mains en l'air pour prouver qu'ils n'ont rien emporté à manger avec eux. Le repas, composé de pain noir et de kacha, sorte de blé bouilli ne couvre, selon l'OMS, que 30 % des besoins alimentaires quotidiens…
    © Lizzie SADIN