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When I was 24 I met a guy through Tinder. After two month of talking online, I asked him out on a first date. Both being pretty shy, a concert was ideal for us. Although it was a normal first date, I knew I wanted to see him again. At the time, I never had had a boyfriend, so I was eager to get to know him better and I made sure a second date would come. Then the attacks on Brussels Airport and the metro happened, which threw us off and postponed our date. An old woman decided to celebrate the Pride day by distributing water bottles and rainbow flags to the people from a full colored track, Milan, Italy, They are Marvy and Sagaya. Before this time, they had never spent time together and it was wonderful, and even funny, to give life to this project, to see their embarrassment gradually dissolving and to be there, posing awkwardly and hilariously, next to each other. At some point I witnessed their empathy, even though at the beginning they felt uncomfortable and not much uninhibited. This, in spite of the fact they were strangers to each other. It was moving. Thanks to both. We have been together for 4 years, our relationship is nurtured by the love, by the strenght and at the same time by the irrationality. We have been together for 4 years, our relationship is nurtured by the love, by the strength and at the same time by the irrationality. During the search and preparation for the opening of Cabaret Mademoiselle, the idea of doing drag came alive in my mind again. The realization opens the door, liberating and empowering. It was a huge step for me. All the frustration I accumulated got lifted then disappeared. With the skills and experiences I had acquired throughout the years, I felt more confident and ready. So I started to practice as a drag queen, learning to perfect makeup skills, making costumes for me, attending Gay Pride in Brussels, Antwerp, Namur in drag. Most importantly I started to have fun in drag. Alexis and I were very good friends from the start. I was there when he got infected with HIV. Alexis believed him. So simple it was. Many people get inflected because their sex partners are unaware of their status. It has nothing to do with being a slut as many people might perceive. Alexis started having treatment. Since we were very close, I knew he was taking his medications everyday. When our relationship developed further we started to have sex. My HIV status was and still negative. I was not afraid at all of sleeping with him, even without condom, because I knew with his treatment the virus load was undetectable. Young guys demonstrate in pursuit of the right to be himself. The right to be different from everybody else and, at the same time, equal before the law. An elegant young migrant comes back home by bike. Robert Kyagulanyi Sentamu a. An Indian Farmer protesting against the Indian Government, carrying real skulls of the ones who committed suicide. The farmers battled the disastrous drought that took place in Tamil Nadu, India in , breaking the record of years. Led by Mr. Molder Ravi Chandra earns rupees a day, not enough to properly support his family, yet he continues to sweat for their future. Picture was taken in Irani cafe in the old city of Ahmedabad, India. It portrays the joy on the faces of the workers after long working hours. The cafe offers a quaint place within the chaos amidst the core of the older city and allows people from every section of the society to have their famous tea and Maskabun Bread and Butter alongside each other. A city with the maligned history of communal riots , , such places are forerunners in bearing the flag of unity in diversity and reconciliation of hope amongst people of different cast and creed. The fisherman lost his hand collecting scrap metal in Vietnam. A bomb maimed it and other parts of his body. He could no longer collect scrap metal or fish and had to rely on his family instead of them on him. He is part of a group of mainly men damaged by explosive remnants from the war with the US. Around 7. An estimated , tons failed to detonate, contaminating around 20 percent of the land. More than , people have been killed or injured since This Image was captured just after the Nirbhaya Rape case which happened in winters of in Delhi,India. This horrific crime lead Indian youth to come out of their closets and take actions, demand answers and seek justice. This picture was taken on March. I visited Cox bazar, a Rohingya refugee camp. That I saw a full boated people come from Myanmer. They are helpless and homeless by their government. To save life they fled from there. This photo depicts how miserable life they are leading to unknown fortune. Girls with disabilities face the most severe educational inequities as they are confronted with stigma and constrained by traditional gender roles. Investing in inclusive education is one of the most effective ways to break the cycle of discrimination and poverty. It brings better social, academic, health and economic outcomes and improves the quality of life for all learners. Together with two friends we decided helping these people somehow and we decided start giving spanish lessons for them. At the begeinning by ourselves and later on our school, Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales, got involved and helped us shaping up the project. I got to spend six years working with senegalese migrants and sharing not only spanish lessons but getting to know their houses, their culture, religion and their personal stories. Although it is celebrated predominantly in rural Bengal, the festival is till celebrated in some pockets of the Metro city of Kolkata. Hindus celebrate the festival mainly on the last two days of the month of Chaitra. This period is known as Chaitra Sankranti, when Sun will enter Pisces sign. Chaitra Sankranti begins on 14th March of every year. People observe fast during this period devoting themselves to their God. Discussing in details about this festival can take a long space, so I will try to be compact and brief as possible. Annually, the Buddhists of the region gather in a sacred place by a lonely poplar in the steppe and conduct a ritual of offering the buddha. Russia Kalmykia. Catalog Download. Shakira This picture is part of my ongoing project Possible Playgrounds, where I experience Bucharest through the eyes of the young generation. The project visualizes their needs, fears, memories and dreams in relation to their immediate surroundings, in a city where their voice is almost completely missing. At the same time, the participants are taught the basics of photography, and continue to portray their stories. The title comments on the lack of playgrounds and urban life in many areas of the city, where the young residents are pushing for places to meet and play. Using photography for mapping, and intervening in the cityscape, the project creates images of protest and engagement. The girl in the picture has named herself Shakira and is one of the estimated , unregistered Roma in the city. She lives in Giulesti Sarbi, a poor suburb, and has no legal rights, no social security number, and cannot go to school. The old train station where the picture is shot, is one of her many alternative and somewhat dangerous playgrounds. Few months after the picture was shot, Shakira moved to Western Europe with her family. That night, he entered the list of Nazism, fascism and their crimes must never be forgotten. Never forget, never stop being vigilant and standing up for what is right. Be like Lucie. More than twenty years after that tragedy, we have the duty to keep our memory and question our consciences so that similar events are repeated. Only if there is justice will it be possible to soothe the enormous suffering of all those who have lost their loved ones. Only in the name of justice will it be possible to complete a path of genuine reconciliation between different ethnicities and religions. Moving in the most tragic moments of its history, Bosnia and Herzegovina is called today to look forward to its future. The whole of Europe must take on this historical responsibility today in the name of all the victims of those wars and the Balkan peoples. Emanuele Amighetti, Unrecognized nation, forgotten war Italy, One year after the April War an ordinary life is going on among villages and streets of the Nagorno-Karabakh unrecognized nation. They believe in a better future to live for the next generations. The conflict started in and escalated into full-scale war when the Soviet Union collapsed in Armenians went to war with Azerbaijan, with backing from Armenia. The conflict left 65, ethnic Armenians and 40, ethnic Azeris displaced. Clashes between the Azerbaijani and ethnic Armenian forces over the breakaway enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh last year were the worst violence the region has seen since the ethnic war over the territory ended in In Stepanakert, the capital, a military academy substituted the traditional high-school. Male and female teenagers aged are learning maths, history and english after physical exercises and marches. Unemployment is high, salaries are low, opportunities are few; the young continue to leave in search of better futures abroad. When Artsakh men reach 18 years-old they are whisked away for two years of military national service. Here, young police cadets observe the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day. Hundreds of people walk to the Genocide Memorial to lay flowers at the eternal flame. Tafadzwa Ufumelii, Freedom of Assembly? Harare, Zimbabwe, Refugees getting evicted from the refugee camp of the Jungle in Calais, France. Listen to the noise, to our feelings, understand to improve. The girl, walking on the iron faces of the million victims of the Holocaust, partly relives the pain of those people, while leaving behind the suffering. She is walking towards a better future and transforming a thunder of agony into a sweet symphony. Although this amusement park was abandoned by people who intended to return shortly afterwards, nature and time did not heed their intentions. The way that the elements erode this site over time only strengthens the message that the ongoing conflict between Russia and Ukraine is situated in events of the past. As in Tunisia, Morocco, Sicily and other mediterranen countries fishermen today still use traps made of ceramics to harvest polyps from the sea and sell them to feed their family. These and other cultural traditions have been preserved over the centuries and connect the various Mediterranean countries to the memory of a common history and destiny. While I was walking through this ex Clandestine detention center, now known as a space for memory and human rights, I looked for something that would represent life and joy where 40 years ago sadness, torture and death took place. I was looking for a butterfly, or a bird, when I saw this little girl. Too young to go by herself but old enough to understand who where those people and what happened to them, she surprised me by giving me the image I was looking for: life after death, happines after sadness, memory after oblivion. How to represent the substrate of memory, its shape and its visual mutation? Memory is a space that is constantly recreated by our experiences. A parallel, otherworldly, invisible place where we go, sometimes consciously and other times, inevitably. The photos of our past mutate whenever we bring them back to the present; they are doors that allow us to interact with our memory, this intangible place. I believe that our memory is like a network of images where our identity is held, and it contains shapes that are beyond our understanding. We live in the middle of these parallel worlds in which sometimes the evocation saves us with the same force it terrifies us. In this process, I used photos from my childhood that later were merged into a double exposure with more recent personal images to give shape to the intangible. Children play in a sandstorm in Gorkha, the epicentre of the earthquake. Their school was destroyed and they currently study in a temporary shelter. A memory may never fade if it is the one that forced you to flee from your family, home and country. When you sit cold and cramped together in a ramshackle boat among hundreds of others like you, crossing the dark sea that swallows bodies without mercy, the memory will never fade. A memory will never fade from your struggle to enter a train in the Balkans among thousands of others with similar memories that they and you dream to reconcile with a future in peace in a European country. Reconciliation may come albeit the path is filled with memories. On March 16, , Iraqi government aircraft shot chemical gas on the Kurdish city of Halabja, immediately killing 5,, and wounding another 10, For the Kurds, acknowledgment has an important psychological value that goes toward safeguarding the community from a repeat of similar brutality, and taking power over their fears. The 20th century has left an unforgivable heritage of countless scars in the collective memories all over the world. Technological progress has allowed for conflicts, atrocities and crimes to be widely documented on an unprecedented scale. The tremendous power of these images has opened a new era in the struggle of dealing with the past, substituting the necessity to evoke the abstract with the crude and direct portrayal of events. The violent dismemberment of Socialist Federal Yugoslavia , according to many the most documented war in history, has marked an epoch and left an indelible trace in the conception of public remembrance. Since 50 years people in the West Bank have lived under the Israeli occupation. Gardening, farming and agriculture have been the most important activities in the West Bank villages for ages. After due to the growth of settlements the cultivation died in many villages, and the settlers have stolen water. In Palestine most of the agriculture lies in Area C, which is entirely under Israeli control. Even in the area A, the Israeli are able to come and demolish the gardens. In many cases houses and gardens are destroyed by military vehicles. Palestinian people dream to live in a country without separation walls and checkpoints. They resist by bringing the positive change to their lifestyle, surroundings and community. One of the examples is the upcycling their gardens with tires and palettes. In society, women are often felt the need to look at other women and feel competitive. Hopefully affecting change for women whom are constrained by other forces. In , the Comuna 13 in Medellin was a bloody battleground. A merciless war opposed the military forces of Colombia, and extreme right wing paramilitaries fought against left wing groups and guerrillas. The colourful walls and the powerful messages have now replaced the bullets and the despair. In , Nepal was able to transform its government from a monarchy to a democracy through series of civil wars, violence and a wide array of human rights violations. Will this become the start of the long-awaited progress for the Nepali society? They say we will have to move if the mine comes. How will we make a living then? This is all we know. This image forms part of an ongoing larger body of work which comprises a collection of natural portraits and observations of the AmaPondo people and their environment, unchanged from their day-to-day routines, except for the wearing of gas masks as an act of protest against their exploitation and potential loss of way of life. The use of gas masks is highly symbolic. In popular iconography it has come to represent both oppression and defiance. During 70s and 80s Ivan Kovalev participated in human rights movement in Russia. Many dissidents were severely punished for exercising their rights and freedoms, especially freedom of speech. This way, Ivan Kovalev, his wife and his father became prisoners of conscience. The Masked Woman is a self- portrait series that explores representation of gender in Nigerian society through a performative lens. The image mirrors her stigmatization in a society that has limiting and strictly defined roles of what a proper woman should be. By diverting the status-quo and exercising freedom of choice, such women in Nigeria are perceived as extreme, eccentric, and outside of the polite society. Italy, and other European countries, are at the center of serious violations of human rights with the detention and forced deportation of thousands of migrants. The existence of CIEs is extremely hard to explain. These are not regular prisons and detainees are not regular prisoners. Yet, their stay in these poorly built structures corresponds to a de facto detention, as they are deprived of their freedom and subjected to a regime of abuse and coercion. The Centers very often resemble prisons, with prisons impenetrable distinctive features: from barbed wire fences, barking dogs to militarized personnel. The Centers are off limits to Italian civil society, journalists and families of detainees who are thus abandoned and in deep distress. The themes of this demonstration on Labor Day were opposition to low salaries and to the use of temporary workers. This shows that we are free to demonstrate against exploitation. These people, no matter young or old, are holding self-made signs to show their anger from the bottom of their heart. In a naturalistic intact environment, described as paradisiac for the common sense of developed country, you can find all kind of waste. Sometimes the waste is easily attributable to heavy tourism exploitation, at other times it is typically and locally designed. Here, it is all brought to a new aesthetic dimension: the fine and white sand transforms it, ascribing to these pieces a new identity, a new landscape which is alien, array anthropomorphic. The themes of these images are: the sea as a wall dividing populations, the bid farewell to an old life to be born beyond the sea where dreams seem to be reachable, the free movement of people to find a better place to live, the price paid for the trip, the risk around the corner, the abandonment of their land and their possessions. This photo represents the basis of « Freedom ». It deals with faith freedom and sexual liberty. Both of the people shown in the photo fought for their rights to be who they are. Roberto Gonzalez is an Argentinian gay pastor who suffered from discrimination and was not allowed to work for evangelical church. The transgender faithful stands for the right to be part of the LGBT community and at the same time to believe in God. Despite centuries of discrimination by the Catholic Church many gays and transgenders have faith in God and want to be accepted. He was not satisfied with the dowry her parents paid. After two years of marriage, he wanted more. Her mother, who sells rice cakes to earn a living, refused to pay more. At the time she was Forced to grow rice in the Kazakh desert, she worked until her hands fractured. They lived in holes dug in the ground and were surrounded by Soviet troops to ensure they would not leave their designated area. They were denied the right to learn their own Soviet Korean dialect, which is now almost extinct, but she still remembers songs they used to sing while working in the field. A year-old boy smokes marijuana with his friends. Children smoke as a way of enjoying life in their own spaces. In Mozambique, marijuana circulates widely among street children, who either sell it or smoke it with their friends. In his photography, he deals with the complex reality of human labor and the environmental conditions evolving over the times, using the images he captures as a form of visual confrontation that state a line of reflection to the reality. Sarah, a young sub-Saharan migrant tries on the lifejacket she will use in her attempt to cross the Mediterranean. Since the start of the year, more than 1, migrants perished in the Mediterranean, more than 30 times higher than during the same period of The tightening of European migration policies, the construction of higher and higher fences, and the inhumane treatment by the border police, makes their journey increasingly dangerous. Crossing by boat, has different prices, depending on the boat, and the presence of an engine. Most of the migrant women, would try to cross this way. This girl fled Afghanistan to Greece. The borders of the EU are being fortified while refugees search for access to the promised continent via ever more dangerous routes. Although the girl was not free to enter Europe, she gained the freedom to demonstrate, to utter her opinion and thoughts through her gestures and speech. She exercised these freedoms and thereby tried to belong in an increasingly unapologetic and inhospitable Europe. She and millions like her have fled their country of origin. Exercising human rights in a new country is a step towards belonging and finding a new home. On November 7th the government found ashes in a dumpster near Iguala. These, presumably, could have been remains of the missing students. Mexican society has been silenced, hurt, alienated. The government, to date, has not explained what really happened in Iguala that night. Students in Hong Kong were claiming their right to universal suffrage. Each illuminated face becomes a symbol of the desire to share the protest with the rest of the world. This photograph is part of a conceptual series inspired by the women of The Republic of Chad, a region in the West of Africa that went through a civil war in the period between and It brings special attention to women in conflict zones in Africa. Women and girls are often tortured, raped and forced to take up arms. Gender based violence in post conflict societies is highly tolerated resulting in impunity of perpetrators. Most of these women in order to move on with their lives often remain silent and have to pick up new identities to remain in their societies hiding the shame of these acts under veils of suppressed emotions. The subject in this series is a local Chadian visual artist Salma Alio. The series is performative and includes audio recordings, text and images. This image is part of a reportage made in in the Balkans BalkanAF self publish book. She buys food from the border shop thanks to the money gifts from the tourists. Luigi Storto Bucharest street children are also known as boschetari, an abusive term used to refer to homeless people living under bridges, in sewers or parks boschete. A child forced to live as a refugee in Algeria since he was born. Due to high temperatures and growing draughts this is considered one of the most inhospitable areas in the world. When in close contact with families forced to live in these conditions, it soon becomes apparent that their situation is hardly bearable and that solution cannot lie with humanitarian aid but in the long overdue recognition of the referendum of self- determination promised by the UN. The long wait is killing the identity and culture of a group that has more than two thousand years of history and lives only in the hope of one day being able to return to its land, freed of all oppression from the Moroccan government. A young marero or gangster with the 18th street gang looks out of his heavily overcrowded jail cell in the district of Soyapango. This image is part of a larger body of work that looks at the challenges young people face. It depicts both Salvadorian youth as it tries to cut spaces of normality for themselves amidst the rising tide of gang related violence, but also young gangsters themselves trapped in a life that will either lead them to be jailed or killed. El Salvador has recently become the most murderous nation in the world outside a war zone, with an average of homicides per day, with the overwhelming majority of them being youths. The insecurity that results from such violence has rocked every section of society causing widespread distrust amongst its citizens along with a collective sense of fear and trauma. This image speaks of psychological prisons; it depicts a prisoner of thought, of prejudice, of fear. We have bars in our heads. The photo bears witness to the courage of all those who try to be finally free, and many people are not free… They are behind bars. According to the International Organization for Migration, South Africa hosts the second highest number of migrants in Africa. From the horn of Africa to its heart, and throughout its length and breath, South Africa draws Africa in. With this diversity should come the understanding of the role it can therefore play as the glue of Africa and as such, issues like xenophobic attacks against migrants should become a distant past! Migrant workers in a labor camp receiving food for Iftar during Ramadan, a community action! Is it as good as it gets!? Amir is from Bamiyan in Afghanistan. He fled in the ies, when the Russians invaded his country. His journey brought him to Tehran. Alas, the Iran — Iraq war soon put his life at risk, and he decided to flee to Masshad in the east of Iran. He has lived there ever since, where he has applied his skills as a trained carpet weaver. A trade that is particularly important in Iran. It therefore gave Amir an opportunity to integrate locally. The bustling carpet bazar in Masshad is a melange of Afghans and Iranians, who are working as equals. I saw and approached this fainted man near the cathedral of Milan. I do not remember how I explained my presence or my camera to him, but I do remember he asked me no questions except for water. I witnessed one of the most callous human rights abuses where a man surrounded by police was not getting any medical help because of his color and migrant status. This indelible unkindness of human being left an impression in my mind that in the country of civilizations — migrants still does not enjoy a right to equality in totality. Schools no longer in use, without working showers, laundry rooms, kitchens are now being transformed into reception centers. The Red Cross provides migrants with necessities such as hygiene kits and involves community leaders and children in these centers in hygiene promotion activities. I felt very terrible after visiting them. The government of Thailand, under the Royal Patronage of Queen Sirikit, created a mini village to house the indigenous refugees from Myanmar. Their motion is limited within the mini village, and they were made into a tourist attraction. Some of them are stateless. The children who were born in Thailand are not granted with citizenship. Yet, they are happy and with no other options contented because they found a safer home in the mini village rather than staying in Myanmar where their lives will be at risk with the on-going hostilities. No one has written, or could write, an article about the issue on the mini village because Thailand has a state law that talking ill against the royal family is a crime. I am hoping that these indigenous people will be granted with all the rights and privileges as indigenous and as refugees in Thailand. This picture was taken during the Regional declaration for the abandonment of FGC and child marriage, Casamance, Senegal. While working on an education- based program in Senegal, we realized that it is also important to work in parallel with the diaspora present in Europe, to make sure that migrants are well aware about the social changes that happen in their communities nowadays. Migration becomes a necessary type of community action in the face of widespread and ethnic-based conflict. Over , South Sudanese, largely women and children, have fled South Sudan to Ethiopia following the break out of acute ethnic violence in South Sudan in December In the case of these refugees, as well as many other migrants around the world, community action and support offers a chance of survival. A woman sells sweet potatoes from the side of the road in central Harare, Zimbabwe. Her son works as a taxicab driver in Cape Town. Many Zimbabweans cross into South Africa to find work; often leaving women, children and elderly persons behind. When it comes to migrants and community action, we should expand the scope and also focus on those who remain. Those who have had to find creative ways to survive and take care of their families between remittance checks. Refugees, women and children involved in Human Rights in Rio de Janeiro. Students from poor communities of Rio had their first contact with the cause and cheered for the teams as if they were in the World Cup! The photo shows the migrant workers from the Middle East and the Horn of Africa tying to get the work permit or renew. Most work permits in South Africa expire after just 6 months. This partly explains the reason there are very long queues everyday. There are also reports of corruption for quicker processing of the permits. Many people who cannot stand the stampede to get an entrance, let alone, getting the permit, suffer a lot very frequently. The women, particularly, are the victims. Some too give up in despair. La Veuve from Brussels During the search and preparation for the opening of Cabaret Mademoiselle, the idea of doing drag came alive in my mind again. Jewel Chakma, Look true the lens Bandarban, Indigenous child grow up with the nature. Krishnasis Ghosh, Moulding Worker Kolkata, India, Molder Ravi Chandra earns rupees a day, not enough to properly support his family, yet he continues to sweat for their future. Flavia Arato, Girl with visual impairment during Eye Health outreach Dano, Burkina Faso, 65 million children in low income countries are out of school, and half of them have a disability. Artem Markin, Ritual Russia Kalmykia, Annually, the Buddhists of the region gather in a sacred place by a lonely poplar in the steppe and conduct a ritual of offering the buddha. Maja Nydal Eriksen, Shakira Bucharest, Shakira This picture is part of my ongoing project Possible Playgrounds, where I experience Bucharest through the eyes of the young generation. Emanuele Amighetti, Unrecognized nation, forgotten war Italy, One year after the April War an ordinary life is going on among villages and streets of the Nagorno-Karabakh unrecognized nation. Filippo Andreetta, Hearing the noise, feeling the pain Jewish Museum Berlin, Listen to the noise, to our feelings, understand to improve. Leo Dong, No Such Thing As Frozen In Time Pripyat, Ukraine, Although this amusement park was abandoned by people who intended to return shortly afterwards, nature and time did not heed their intentions. Karolina Sobel, palm tree Bethlehem, Since 50 years people in the West Bank have lived under the Israeli occupation. Lucy Black, Marching in Paris Paris, In society, women are often felt the need to look at other women and feel competitive. John Christian Dinco, After 20 years Nepal, In , Nepal was able to transform its government from a monarchy to a democracy through series of civil wars, violence and a wide array of human rights violations. Jenevieve Aken, The Masked Woman Lagos, Nigeria, The Masked Woman is a self- portrait series that explores representation of gender in Nigerian society through a performative lens. Mario Badagliacca, Chessboard Identification and Expulsion Centers CIE Bari Palese, Italy, Italy, and other European countries, are at the center of serious violations of human rights with the detention and forced deportation of thousands of migrants. Yi-Jie Chen, Freedom of expression Taiwan, Republic of China, The themes of this demonstration on Labor Day were opposition to low salaries and to the use of temporary workers. Myriam Meloni, A dream called Europe Tanger, Morocco, Sarah, a young sub-Saharan migrant tries on the lifejacket she will use in her attempt to cross the Mediterranean. Federico Sutera Sardo, Waiting for freedom Saharawi refugee camps Tindouf, Algery, A child forced to live as a refugee in Algeria since he was born. Patrick Tombola, Not free to be young Soyapango, El Salvador, A young marero or gangster with the 18th street gang looks out of his heavily overcrowded jail cell in the district of Soyapango. Margherita Vitagliano, Untitled Italy, This image speaks of psychological prisons; it depicts a prisoner of thought, of prejudice, of fear. Seun Bakare, Violation of right to food Rights violation in the midst of plenty resources. Anand Deo, Respect for migrants Milan, 18 September I saw and approached this fainted man near the cathedral of Milan. Hashmatullah Kahn, Education awareness Pakistan, This picture was captured in in one community school for Afghan refugees in Pakistan. Sally Hurt, Those who remain, those left behind A woman sells sweet potatoes from the side of the road in central Harare, Zimbabwe. Carla Miranda, Contating — say hello to the stranger!

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