Kurdes
92 résultat(s)
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5114
The Kurds
Kurdish boys play soccer in the dusty "wild east" metropolis of Diyarbakir, Turkey on Aug. 23, 1991. Looming in the background is a remnant of the black basalt fortress walls that were begun under the Roman emperor Constantine in A.D. 348.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5114
The Kurds
Kurdish boys play soccer in the dusty "wild east" metropolis of Diyarbakir, Turkey on Aug. 23, 1991. Looming in the background is a remnant of the black basalt fortress walls that were begun under the Roman emperor Constantine in A.D. 348.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5115
The Kurds
A Kurdish girl and an American GI are mutually pleased to see each other. Without the Allied presence, Kurdish autonomy and perhaps this youngest girl's life would be crushed by Saddam Hussein's vengeance.
Northern Iraq 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5115
The Kurds
A Kurdish girl and an American GI are mutually pleased to see each other. Without the Allied presence, Kurdish autonomy and perhaps this youngest girl's life would be crushed by Saddam Hussein's vengeance.
Northern Iraq 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5116
The Kurds
A Kurdish child holds up a Turkish flag in Diyarbakir, Turkey on Nov. 11, 1991. This day is International Children's Day, a Turkish holiday, and children from a remote village are forced to take part in the festivities while commandos look on from the sidelines.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5116
The Kurds
A Kurdish child holds up a Turkish flag in Diyarbakir, Turkey on Nov. 11, 1991. This day is International Children's Day, a Turkish holiday, and children from a remote village are forced to take part in the festivities while commandos look on from the sidelines.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5117
The Kurds
Members of a Kurdish youth gang, called the Sioux, on the streets of Berlin.
Berlin, Germany, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5117
The Kurds
Members of a Kurdish youth gang, called the Sioux, on the streets of Berlin.
Berlin, Germany, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5118
The Kurds
A mother washes her baby near the remains of their bulldozed home in Qala Diza, Iraq on July 10, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5118
The Kurds
A mother washes her baby near the remains of their bulldozed home in Qala Diza, Iraq on July 10, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5119
The Kurds
The Yemesli refugee camp in Iraq was set up for displaced Iraqi Kurds after the Gulf War of 1991. It became home to 60,000 Kurdish refugees for months after the war but does not exist anymore. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5119
The Kurds
The Yemesli refugee camp in Iraq was set up for displaced Iraqi Kurds after the Gulf War of 1991. It became home to 60,000 Kurdish refugees for months after the war but does not exist anymore. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5120
The Kurds
Portrait of a Kurdish Pesh Merga fighter in northern Iraq after the Gulf War in 1991. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5120
The Kurds
Portrait of a Kurdish Pesh Merga fighter in northern Iraq after the Gulf War in 1991. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5121
The Kurds
A Kurdish man smoking on the streets of Zahko, Iraq on May 1, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5121
The Kurds
A Kurdish man smoking on the streets of Zahko, Iraq on May 1, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5122
The Kurds
Kurdish New Year Festivities, which coincide with the spring equinox, are normally held outdoors to celebrate the end of another forbidding winter. But under the prohibitions on Kurdish culture throughout Kurdistan, the most colorful celebrations are now held in exile. London, UK 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5122
The Kurds
Kurdish New Year Festivities, which coincide with the spring equinox, are normally held outdoors to celebrate the end of another forbidding winter. But under the prohibitions on Kurdish culture throughout Kurdistan, the most colorful celebrations are now held in exile. London, UK 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5123
The Kurds
Living under the pressure of the gun in a remote village of Turkish Kurdistan, a family waits for Turkish commandos to finish a sweep for PKK guerillas. Turkey 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5123
The Kurds
Living under the pressure of the gun in a remote village of Turkish Kurdistan, a family waits for Turkish commandos to finish a sweep for PKK guerillas. Turkey 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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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
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5125
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
5125
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
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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
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5127
The Kurds
A helicopter brings supplies to Kurds in Ishikveren, Turkey on Nov. 11, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5127
The Kurds
A helicopter brings supplies to Kurds in Ishikveren, Turkey on Nov. 11, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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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
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5129
The Kurds
The Yemesli refugee camp in Iraq was set up for displaced Iraqi Kurds after the Gulf War of 1991. It became home to 60,000 Kurdish refugees for months after the war but does not exist anymore. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5129
The Kurds
The Yemesli refugee camp in Iraq was set up for displaced Iraqi Kurds after the Gulf War of 1991. It became home to 60,000 Kurdish refugees for months after the war but does not exist anymore. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5130
The Kurds
A boy and his father walk through camp in Yemeshli, Iraq on April 24, 1991. The Yemesli refugee camp in Iraq was set up for displaced Iraqi Kurds after the Gulf War of 1991. It became home to 60,000 Kurdish refugees for months after the war but does not exist anymore.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5130
The Kurds
A boy and his father walk through camp in Yemeshli, Iraq on April 24, 1991. The Yemesli refugee camp in Iraq was set up for displaced Iraqi Kurds after the Gulf War of 1991. It became home to 60,000 Kurdish refugees for months after the war but does not exist anymore.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5131
The Kurds
The Yemesli refugee camp in Iraq was set up for displaced Iraqi Kurds after the Gulf War of 1991. It became home to 60,000 Kurdish refugees for months after the war but does not exist anymore. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5131
The Kurds
The Yemesli refugee camp in Iraq was set up for displaced Iraqi Kurds after the Gulf War of 1991. It became home to 60,000 Kurdish refugees for months after the war but does not exist anymore. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5132
The Kurds
Kurdish Pesh Mergas at an abandoned Iraqi army post outside of Zakho, Iraq after the Gulf War in 1991. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5132
The Kurds
Kurdish Pesh Mergas at an abandoned Iraqi army post outside of Zakho, Iraq after the Gulf War in 1991. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5133
The Kurds
In the continual tug of war between Turkey and Iraq over their restive Kurdish populations, this Iraqi Pesh Merga was pitted against his PKK (Kurdistan Workers Party) brothers and sisters. In exchange for allowing relief supplies to enter Iraqi Kurdistan and providing a base for U.S. jets to patrol the region, Turkey expected the Pesh Merga to help control the PKK. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5133
The Kurds
In the continual tug of war between Turkey and Iraq over their restive Kurdish populations, this Iraqi Pesh Merga was pitted against his PKK (Kurdistan Workers Party) brothers and sisters. In exchange for allowing relief supplies to enter Iraqi Kurdistan and providing a base for U.S. jets to patrol the region, Turkey expected the Pesh Merga to help control the PKK. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5134
The Kurds
Pesh Merga recruits line up for inspection in Iraq on Nov. 11, 1991. Pesh Merga recruits range in age from teenagers to men in their fifties. Their equipment, training, and numbers are no match for the best of the modern Iraqi army. Additional protection is provided by UN relief workers and a small but symbolic security contingent.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5134
The Kurds
Pesh Merga recruits line up for inspection in Iraq on Nov. 11, 1991. Pesh Merga recruits range in age from teenagers to men in their fifties. Their equipment, training, and numbers are no match for the best of the modern Iraqi army. Additional protection is provided by UN relief workers and a small but symbolic security contingent.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5135
The Kurds
A woman cleans her stoop in the city of Diyarbakir, Turkey on Aug. 23, 1991. During its 3,000 year history, the ancient Kurdish city of Diyarbakir, Turkey, with its warrens of cobblestone alleyways, has acquired a distinct timelessness.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5135
The Kurds
A woman cleans her stoop in the city of Diyarbakir, Turkey on Aug. 23, 1991. During its 3,000 year history, the ancient Kurdish city of Diyarbakir, Turkey, with its warrens of cobblestone alleyways, has acquired a distinct timelessness.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5136
The Kurds
A schoolyard in Diyarbakir,Turkey.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5136
The Kurds
A schoolyard in Diyarbakir,Turkey.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5137
The Kurds
A Kurdish family picnics on a hill above the Ataturk Dam in Sanliurfa, Turkey on April 30, 1991. The dam is part of the Grand Anatolian Project in Turkey. This project comprises a series of dams and barrages in the Kurdish region of Turkey that has flooded over 1,000 villages in the region with the promise of creating jobs and more arable land. This family lost their land to this project.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5137
The Kurds
A Kurdish family picnics on a hill above the Ataturk Dam in Sanliurfa, Turkey on April 30, 1991. The dam is part of the Grand Anatolian Project in Turkey. This project comprises a series of dams and barrages in the Kurdish region of Turkey that has flooded over 1,000 villages in the region with the promise of creating jobs and more arable land. This family lost their land to this project.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5138
The Kurds
Children play in a back alley of Diyarbakir, Turkey on Aug. 23, 1991. Because they have no homeland of their own, the Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani has called his people "the orphans of the universe".
© Ed Kashi / VII
5138
The Kurds
Children play in a back alley of Diyarbakir, Turkey on Aug. 23, 1991. Because they have no homeland of their own, the Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani has called his people "the orphans of the universe".
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5140
The Kurds
Diyarbakir is the unofficial capital of Turkish Kurdistan; more than 90 percent of its one million residents are Kurdish, which makes it the largest Kurdish city in the world.
Diyarbakir, Turkey 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5140
The Kurds
Diyarbakir is the unofficial capital of Turkish Kurdistan; more than 90 percent of its one million residents are Kurdish, which makes it the largest Kurdish city in the world.
Diyarbakir, Turkey 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5141
The Kurds
A soldier stands on guard at a United States checkpoint outside of Zakho, Iraq on May 4, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5141
The Kurds
A soldier stands on guard at a United States checkpoint outside of Zakho, Iraq on May 4, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5142
The Kurds
Kurdish traders at a livestock market in the town of Zahko, Iraq. 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5142
The Kurds
Kurdish traders at a livestock market in the town of Zahko, Iraq. 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5143
The Kurds
Celebrants of a Kurdish wedding in Turkey.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5143
The Kurds
Celebrants of a Kurdish wedding in Turkey.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5144
The Kurds
Zarean, a refugee camp outside of Khoy, Iran, holds over 50,000 Kurdish refugees from Iraq. This camp has been in existence since the late 1970's to take care of the constant influx of Kurdish refugees fleeing the oppression of Saddam Hussein's regime. Iran 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5144
The Kurds
Zarean, a refugee camp outside of Khoy, Iran, holds over 50,000 Kurdish refugees from Iraq. This camp has been in existence since the late 1970's to take care of the constant influx of Kurdish refugees fleeing the oppression of Saddam Hussein's regime. Iran 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5145
The Kurds
The stuggle of the Kurds, who constitute one of the largest ethnic groups in the world without a country of its own.
Girls in front of their make-shift shelter in the Ziveh refugee camp in Iran. The camp was created over 20 years ago to house Kurdish refugees from Iraqi persecution.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5145
The Kurds
The stuggle of the Kurds, who constitute one of the largest ethnic groups in the world without a country of its own.
Girls in front of their make-shift shelter in the Ziveh refugee camp in Iran. The camp was created over 20 years ago to house Kurdish refugees from Iraqi persecution.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5146
The Kurds
A tractor loaded with returning Kurdish refugees near the Turkish border. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5146
The Kurds
A tractor loaded with returning Kurdish refugees near the Turkish border. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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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
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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
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5150
The Kurds
Kurdish woman harvesting lentils on Arab owned land in Syria, along the border with Turkey. 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5150
The Kurds
Kurdish woman harvesting lentils on Arab owned land in Syria, along the border with Turkey. 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5151
The Kurds
Kurds and Arabs play dominoes and checkers in a late-night cafe in Qamashli, Syria on May 15, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5151
The Kurds
Kurds and Arabs play dominoes and checkers in a late-night cafe in Qamashli, Syria on May 15, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5152
The Kurds
A nervous Kurdish bride in the Syrian city of Afrin. At Kurdish weddings even ther terms of divorce are pre-arranged. Syria 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5152
The Kurds
A nervous Kurdish bride in the Syrian city of Afrin. At Kurdish weddings even ther terms of divorce are pre-arranged. Syria 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5154
The Kurds
Massoud Barzani, left, of the KDP or Kurdish Democratic Party talks with Jalal Talabani of the PUK or Patriotic Union of Kurdistan in Iraq on Nov. 11, 1991. They met in a burned out school in northern Iraq after the Gulf War in 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5154
The Kurds
Massoud Barzani, left, of the KDP or Kurdish Democratic Party talks with Jalal Talabani of the PUK or Patriotic Union of Kurdistan in Iraq on Nov. 11, 1991. They met in a burned out school in northern Iraq after the Gulf War in 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5155
The Kurds
Jalal Talabani of the PUK or Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, talks on a satellite phone in Iraqi Kurdistan. 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5155
The Kurds
Jalal Talabani of the PUK or Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, talks on a satellite phone in Iraqi Kurdistan. 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5156
The Kurds
Kurdish men receive training in Chalacholan, Iraq on July 8, 1991. These men are new recruits for the Pesh Merga, or "those who face death". The Pesh Merga in Iraq are aligned with the two main parties, the Kurdish Democratic Party and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. Training takes place in a former Iraqi army base in Chalacholan.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5156
The Kurds
Kurdish men receive training in Chalacholan, Iraq on July 8, 1991. These men are new recruits for the Pesh Merga, or "those who face death". The Pesh Merga in Iraq are aligned with the two main parties, the Kurdish Democratic Party and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. Training takes place in a former Iraqi army base in Chalacholan.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5157
The Kurds
Even the Pesh Merga have a dress code, and every morning they must go through the meticulous exercise of carefully donning the uniform of baggy pants, cumberbund, and headdress.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5157
The Kurds
Even the Pesh Merga have a dress code, and every morning they must go through the meticulous exercise of carefully donning the uniform of baggy pants, cumberbund, and headdress.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5158
The Kurds
Kurdish Pesh Merga recruits of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan train in a former Iraqi army base in Chalacholan, Iraq on July 8, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5158
The Kurds
Kurdish Pesh Merga recruits of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan train in a former Iraqi army base in Chalacholan, Iraq on July 8, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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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
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5160
The Kurds
A Kurdish guerrilla inspects an unexploded chemical bomb from the 1988 atack that killed 5,000 Kurds in Halabja, Iraq on July 8, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5160
The Kurds
A Kurdish guerrilla inspects an unexploded chemical bomb from the 1988 atack that killed 5,000 Kurds in Halabja, Iraq on July 8, 1991.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5161
The Kurds
Kurdish men in northern Iraq train as new recruits for the Pesh Merga, or "those who face death", after the Gulf War in Iraq on July 8, 1991. The Pesh Merga in Iraq are aligned with the two main parties, the Kurdish Democratic Party and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.
© Ed Kashi / VII
5161
The Kurds
Kurdish men in northern Iraq train as new recruits for the Pesh Merga, or "those who face death", after the Gulf War in Iraq on July 8, 1991. The Pesh Merga in Iraq are aligned with the two main parties, the Kurdish Democratic Party and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.
© Ed Kashi / VII
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5162
The Kurds
Kurdish men in northern Iraq train as new recruits for the Pesh Merga, or "those who face death", after the Gulf War of 1991. The Pesh Merga in Iraq are aligned with the two main parties, the KDP and PUK. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII
5162
The Kurds
Kurdish men in northern Iraq train as new recruits for the Pesh Merga, or "those who face death", after the Gulf War of 1991. The Pesh Merga in Iraq are aligned with the two main parties, the KDP and PUK. Iraq 1991
© Ed Kashi / VII