Life on Earth Pictures

  • Archive
  • Search
  • Recent
  • Subscribe
  • Website
Show Navigation
Cart Lightbox Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
{ 107 images found }

Loading ()...

  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn. Here he displays some of the peanuts he harvested.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-081.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn. Here he displays some of the peanuts he harvested.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-080.jpg
  • Joice Naumba winnows peanuts (ground nuts) in Bazungua, a small community near the war-torn village of Riimenze, South Sudan. The woman participates in a women's group, supported by Solidarity with South Sudan, focused on improving the quality and quantity of food they produce.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-riimenze-B1...jpg
  • Joice Naumba winnows peanuts (ground nuts) in Bazungua, a small community near the war-torn village of Riimenze, South Sudan. The woman participates in a women's group, supported by Solidarity with South Sudan, focused on improving the quality and quantity of food they produce.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-riimenze-B1...JPG
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn. Here he displays some of the peanuts he harvested.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-086.jpg
  • closeup of freshly harvested peanuts in a Del Campo farmers' field in Chinandega, Nicaragua.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_Del_Campo_20111221_...jpg
  • A girl poses with groundnuts (peanuts) she has harvested at the Loreto Girls Secondary School in Maker Kuei, Rumbek, South Sudan. The school educates girls from throughout Africa's newest country.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-A579.jpg
  • A woman displaced by armed conflict shells peanuts in a camp for internally displaced persons that formed around the Our Lady of Assumption Catholic Church in Riimenze, South Sudan. The parish has provided food, shelter material, and health care, and the presence of the local priest and a group of religious has contributed to a sense of relative safety.
    south-sudan-2018-jeffrey-riimenze-id...jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Nejent Justin fled from the fighting to Mundri, where she has relatives. She has survived there thanks to the hospitality of her relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Her uncle let Justin, 16, use some land to farm peanuts. Here she displays some of her harvest.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-054.jpg
  • A year after Hurricane Matthew ravaged their farms and homes, these farmers weeding peanuts near Bombardopolis in Haiti's poverty-wracked northwest have rebuilt their agricultural base with help from Lutheran World Relief, a member of the ACT Alliance.
    haiti-2017-jeffrey-3181.JPG
  • Habiza Begum weeds her peanuts in West Fasura, a village on an island in the Brahmaputra River in northern Bangladesh.
    bangladesh-2017-jeffrey-flooding-B31...JPG
  • Girls pose with groundnuts (peanuts) they have harvested at the Loreto Girls Secondary School in Maker Kuei, Rumbek, South Sudan. The school educates girls from throughout Africa's newest country.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-A570.jpg
  • Mariana David and her children shell peanuts in a camp for more than 5,000 displaced people in Riimenze, in South Sudan's Gbudwe State, what was formerly Western Equatoria. Families here were displaced at the beginning of 2017, as fighting between government soldiers and rebels escalated.<br />
<br />
Two Catholic groups, Caritas Austria and Solidarity with South Sudan, have played key roles in assuring that the displaced families here have food, shelter and water.
    south-sudan-2017-jeffrey-riimenze-id...jpg
  • Mariana David and her children shell peanuts in a camp for more than 5,000 displaced people in Riimenze, in South Sudan's Gbudwe State, what was formerly Western Equatoria. Families here were displaced at the beginning of 2017, as fighting between government soldiers and rebels escalated.<br />
<br />
Two Catholic groups, Caritas Austria and Solidarity with South Sudan, have played key roles in assuring that the displaced families here have food, shelter and water.
    south-sudan-2017-jeffrey-riimenze-id...jpg
  • Agnes Tembo poses with peanuts she harvested from her farm in Edundu, Malawi. Families in the village have benefited from intercropping, crop rotation, and composting practices they learned from the Malawi Farmer-to-Farmer Agro-Ecology project of the Ekwendeni Mission Hospital AIDS Program, a program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-C758.JPG
  • Girls harvest groundnuts (peanuts) at the Loreto Girls Secondary School in Maker Kuei, Rumbek, South Sudan. The school educates girls from throughout Africa's newest country.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-A605.jpg
  • Girls harvest groundnuts (peanuts) at the Loreto Girls Secondary School in Maker Kuei, Rumbek, South Sudan. The school educates girls from throughout Africa's newest country.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-A597.jpg
  • Girls harvest groundnuts (peanuts) at the Loreto Girls Secondary School in Maker Kuei, Rumbek, South Sudan. The school educates girls from throughout Africa's newest country.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-A591.jpg
  • A girl poses with groundnuts (peanuts) she has harvested at the Loreto Girls Secondary School in Maker Kuei, Rumbek, South Sudan. The school educates girls from throughout Africa's newest country.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-A580.jpg
  • Susie Matthews plants ground nuts (peanuts) at a church-sponsored demonstration farm at Riimenze, South Sudan. The project is a joint project of the Roman Catholic diocese of Tombura-Yambio and Caritas Austria.
    south-sudan-2015-jeffrey-riimenze-13.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Nejent Justin fled from the fighting to Mundri, where she has relatives. She has survived there thanks to the hospitality of her relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Her uncle let Justin, 16, use some land to farm peanuts. Here she displays some of her harvest.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-065.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war spread to Malakal in late 2013, Rose Apol (right) fled with her three children, walking through the bush for a month to arrive in Mundri, where she lives with a brother. She has survived thanks to the hospitality of her relatives and food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Here she works with members of her extended family to shell peanuts she has harvested.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-039.jpg
  • A girl feeds her sibling as part of a supplemental feeding program for malnourished children and mothers run by the clinic of the Loreto School in Rumbek, South Sudan. The school is run by the Institute for the Blessed Virgin Mary--the Loreto Sisters--of Ireland. Behind them, their mother shells peanuts that are used in the preparation of the food.
    south-sudan-2017-jeffrey-K113.JPG
  • Golda Nicola, 5, shells peanuts in a camp for displaced families around the Catholic Cathedral of St. Mary in Wau, South Sudan. The church has provided food, shelter material, and health care, and the presence of priests and religious has fostered a sense of relative safety for thousands of people who first occupied the cathedral grounds when fighting enveloped the city in 2016.
    south-sudan-2018-jeffrey-E133.jpg
  • Five-year old Rimar Sebit sells peanuts in a camp for more than 12,000 internally displaced persons located on the grounds of the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. Mary in Wau, South Sudan. Most of the families here were displaced in June, 2016, when armed conflict engulfed Wau.<br />
<br />
Norwegian Church Aid, a member of the ACT Alliance, has provided relief supplies to the displaced in Wau, and has supported the South Sudan Council of Churches as it has struggled to mediate the conflict in Wau.
    south-sudan-2017-jeffrey-wau-idps-60...JPG
  • Agnes Tembo and her son Sopani consolidate peanuts she harvested from her farm in Edundu, Malawi. Families in the village have benefited from intercropping, crop rotation, and composting practices they learned from the Malawi Farmer-to-Farmer Agro-Ecology project of the Ekwendeni Mission Hospital AIDS Program, a program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-C768.JPG
  • Mercy Tembo harvests peanuts, known locally as groundnuts, in Edundu, Malawi. She and other farmers in her village have benefited from intercropping and crop rotation practices they learned from the Malawi Farmer-to-Farmer Agro-Ecology project of the Ekwendeni Mission Hospital AIDS Program, a program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-C081.JPG
  • Girls harvest groundnuts (peanuts) at the Loreto Girls Secondary School in Maker Kuei, Rumbek, South Sudan. The school educates girls from throughout Africa's newest country.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-A600.jpg
  • Susie Matthews plants ground nuts (peanuts) at a church-sponsored demonstration farm at Riimenze, South Sudan. The project is a joint project of the Roman Catholic diocese of Tombura-Yambio and Caritas Austria.
    south-sudan-2015-jeffrey-riimenze-07.jpg
  • A woman threshes peanuts in a camp for more than 5,000 displaced people in Riimenze, in South Sudan's Gbudwe State, what was formerly Western Equatoria. Families here were displaced at the beginning of 2017, as fighting between government soldiers and rebels escalated.<br />
<br />
Two Catholic groups, Caritas Austria and Solidarity with South Sudan, have played key roles in assuring that the displaced families here have food, shelter and water.<br />
The camp formed around the Catholic Church in Riimenze as people fled violence in nearby villages for what they perceived as the safety offered by the church.
    south-sudan-2017-jeffrey-riimenze-id...jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Nejent Justin fled from the fighting to Mundri, where she has relatives. She has survived there thanks to the hospitality of her relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Her uncle let Justin, 16, use some land to farm peanuts. Here she displays some of her harvest.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-064.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war spread to Malakal in late 2013, Rose Apol (second from right) fled with her three children, walking through the bush for a month to arrive in Mundri, where she lives with a brother. She has survived thanks to the hospitality of her relatives and food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Here she works with members of her extended family to shell peanuts she has harvested.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-038.jpg
  • A girl feeds her sibling as part of a supplemental feeding program for malnourished children and mothers run by the clinic of the Loreto School in Rumbek, South Sudan. The school is run by the Institute for the Blessed Virgin Mary--the Loreto Sisters--of Ireland. Behind them, their mother shells peanuts that are used in the preparation of the food.
    south-sudan-2017-jeffrey-K104.JPG
  • Golda Nicola, 5, shells peanuts in a camp for displaced families around the Catholic Cathedral of St. Mary in Wau, South Sudan. The church has provided food, shelter material, and health care, and the presence of priests and religious has fostered a sense of relative safety for thousands of people who first occupied the cathedral grounds when fighting enveloped the city in 2016.
    south-sudan-2018-jeffrey-E139.jpg
  • Golda Nicola, 5, shells peanuts in a camp for displaced families around the Catholic Cathedral of St. Mary in Wau, South Sudan. The church has provided food, shelter material, and health care, and the presence of priests and religious has fostered a sense of relative safety for thousands of people who first occupied the cathedral grounds when fighting enveloped the city in 2016.
    south-sudan-2018-jeffrey-E126.jpg
  • Mercy Tembo and her husband Abel Moyo harvest peanuts, known locally as groundnuts, on thir farm in Edundu, Malawi. They and other farmers in the village have benefited from intercropping and crop rotation practices they learned from the Malawi Farmer-to-Farmer Agro-Ecology project of the Ekwendeni Mission Hospital AIDS Program, a program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-C134.JPG
  • A year after Hurricane Matthew ravaged their farms and homes, these farmers weeding peanuts near Bombardopolis in Haiti's poverty-wracked northwest have rebuilt their agricultural base with help from Lutheran World Relief, a member of the ACT Alliance.
    haiti-2017-jeffrey-3037.JPG
  • Delbor Ali weeds his peanuts in West Fasura, a village on an island in the Brahmaputra River in northern Bangladesh.
    bangladesh-2017-jeffrey-flooding-B30...JPG
  • A woman shells peanuts, also known as ground nuts, in Bazungua, a small community near the war-torn village of Riimenze, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-riimenze-B1...jpg
  • Women shell peanuts, also known as ground nuts, during a meeting of farmers in Bazungua, a small community near the war-torn village of Riimenze, South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-riimenze-B1...jpg
  • A boy sells peanuts in an internally displaced persons camp in Manangui, South Sudan. Families started arriving here shortly after fighting broke out in December 2013, and new families continued to arrive in March 2014 as fighting continued. Many are living in the open and under trees. The ACT Alliance is providing the displaced families and the host communities affected by their presence with a variety of support, including new wells.
    south_sudan-2014-jeffrey-warrap31901...JPG
  • Jessie Chiumia grinds peanuts in Kaluhoro, Malawi. With support from the Ekwendeni Hospital AIDS Program, she and other villagers participate in a Building Sustainable Livelihoods program, working together to earn and save money, raise more nutritious food, and receive vocational training.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-E068.JPG
  • Jessie Chiumia grinds peanuts in Kaluhoro, Malawi. With support from the Ekwendeni Hospital AIDS Program, she and other villagers participate in a Building Sustainable Livelihoods program, working together to earn and save money, raise more nutritious food, and receive vocational training.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-E058.JPG
  • Agnes Tembo and her son Sopani consolidate peanuts she harvested from her farm in Edundu, Malawi. Families in the village have benefited from intercropping, crop rotation, and composting practices they learned from the Malawi Farmer-to-Farmer Agro-Ecology project of the Ekwendeni Mission Hospital AIDS Program, a program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-C765.JPG
  • Agnes Tembo (right) and her husband Geoffrey Nkhambule, along with her mother-in-law Evelyn Nkhambule, harvest peanuts they've grown on their farm in Edundu, Malawi. Families in the village have benefited from intercropping, crop rotation, and composting practices they learned from the Malawi Farmer-to-Farmer Agro-Ecology project of the Ekwendeni Mission Hospital AIDS Program, a program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-C693.JPG
  • Agnes Tembo and her husband Geoffrey Nkhambule harvest peanuts on their farm in Edundu, Malawi. Families in the village have benefited from intercropping, crop rotation, and composting practices they learned from the Malawi Farmer-to-Farmer Agro-Ecology project of the Ekwendeni Mission Hospital AIDS Program, a program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-C659.JPG
  • Mercy Tembo harvests peanuts, known locally as groundnuts, as her husband Abel Moyo works the ground behind her in Edundu, Malawi. They and other farmers in the village have benefited from intercropping and crop rotation practices they learned from the Malawi Farmer-to-Farmer Agro-Ecology project of the Ekwendeni Mission Hospital AIDS Program, a program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-C116.JPG
  • A woman weeds her peanuts in West Fasura, a village on an island in the Brahmaputra River in northern Bangladesh.
    bangladesh-2017-jeffrey-flooding-B08...JPG
  • A woman shells peanuts in a camp for more than 5,000 displaced people in Riimenze, in South Sudan's Gbudwe State, what was formerly Western Equatoria. Families here were displaced at the beginning of 2017, as fighting between government soldiers and rebels escalated.<br />
<br />
Two Catholic groups, Caritas Austria and Solidarity with South Sudan, have played key roles in assuring that the displaced families here have food, shelter and water.
    south-sudan-2017-jeffrey-riimenze-id...jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war spread to Malakal in late 2013, Rose Apol (right) fled with her three children, walking through the bush for a month to arrive in Mundri, where she lives with a brother. She has survived thanks to the hospitality of her relatives and food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Here she works with members of her extended family to shell peanuts she has harvested.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-014.jpg
  • A woman weeds her peanuts in West Fasura, a village on an island in the Brahmaputra River in northern Bangladesh.
    bangladesh-2017-jeffrey-flooding-B08...JPG
  • Mariet Hara and her husband Pressing Moyo beat peanut plants to free the nuts on their farm in Edundu, Malawi. They and other farmers in the village have benefited from intercropping and crop rotation practices they learned from the Malawi Farmer-to-Farmer Agro-Ecology project of the Ekwendeni Mission Hospital AIDS Program, a program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-C812.JPG
  • A year after Hurricane Matthew ravaged their farms and homes, this woman and her neighbors near Bombardopolis in Haiti's poverty-wracked northwest have rebuilt their agricultural base with help from Lutheran World Relief, a member of the ACT Alliance.
    haiti-2017-jeffrey-3068.JPG
  • A year after Hurricane Matthew ravaged their farms and homes, this woman and her neighbors near Bombardopolis in Haiti's poverty-wracked northwest have rebuilt their agricultural base with help from Lutheran World Relief, a member of the ACT Alliance.
    haiti-2017-jeffrey-3073.JPG
  • A year after Hurricane Matthew ravaged their farms and homes, this man and his neighbors near Bombardopolis in Haiti's poverty-wracked northwest have rebuilt their agricultural base with help from Lutheran World Relief, a member of the ACT Alliance.
    haiti-2017-jeffrey-3066.JPG
  • A year after Hurricane Matthew ravaged their farms and homes, these farmers near Bombardopolis in Haiti's poverty-wracked northwest have rebuilt their agricultural base with help from Lutheran World Relief, a member of the ACT Alliance.
    haiti-2017-jeffrey-3076.JPG
  • 30 May 2019, Mokolo, Cameroon: A woman fills a basket with peanuts at the marketplace in Minawao. Today is market day, and refugees and host communities alike gather to sell and buy goods in Minawao. The Minawao camp for Nigerian refugees, located in the Far North region of Cameroon, hosts some 58,000 refugees from North East Nigeria. The refugees are supported by the Lutheran World Federation, together with a range of partners.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190530_AH1_276...jpg
  • At the "House for the Dying", a hospice for AIDS patients and other seriously ill patients run by the Sisters of Charity in Port au Prince, Haiti, Guerto Toussaint enjoys a package of Plumpy'nut, a a high protein and high energy peanut-based paste that is used as a ready-to-use therapeutic food. The boy suffers from glandular tuberculosis. .
    haiti-2009-jeffrey-266.jpg
  • At the "House for the Dying", a hospice for AIDS patients and other seriously ill patients run by the Sisters of Charity in Port au Prince, Haiti, Guerto Toussaint enjoys a package of Plumpy'nut, a a high protein and high energy peanut-based paste that is used as a ready-to-use therapeutic food. The boy suffers from glandular tuberculosis. .
    haiti-2009-jeffrey-269.jpg
  • At the "House for the Dying", a hospice for AIDS patients and other seriously ill patients run by the Sisters of Charity in Port au Prince, Haiti, Guerto Toussaint enjoys a package of Plumpy'nut, a a high protein and high energy peanut-based paste that is used as a ready-to-use therapeutic food. The boy suffers from glandular tuberculosis. .
    haiti-2009-jeffrey-268.jpg
  • At the "House for the Dying", a hospice for AIDS patients and other seriously ill patients run by the Sisters of Charity in Port au Prince, Haiti, Guerto Toussaint enjoys a package of Plumpy'nut, a a high protein and high energy peanut-based paste that is used as a ready-to-use therapeutic food. The boy suffers from glandular tuberculosis. .
    haiti-2009-jeffrey-267.jpg
  • At the "House for the Dying", a hospice for AIDS patients and other seriously ill patients run by the Sisters of Charity in Port au Prince, Haiti, Guerto Toussaint enjoys a package of Plumpy'nut, a a high protein and high energy peanut-based paste that is used as a ready-to-use therapeutic food. The boy suffers from glandular tuberculosis. .
    haiti-2009-jeffrey-265.jpg
  • Thillaiaml Nallaperumal grins after getting a microcredit loan from a church group for the equivalent of $500. She’s going to use it to grow peanuts this coming season her village of Karadianaru, Sri Lanka. She was displaced during Sri Lanka’s bloody civil war.
    sri-lanka-2018-jeffrey-1020-253.jpg
  • A woman and her daughter selecting peanuts in Thiokéthian, Senegal.
    senegal_hawkey_20121211_065.jpg
  • Khadilla Abdulah Ibrahim (right) plows land at the edge of the Bilel Camp for internally displaced persons, along with her 18-year old daughter Hawaia. They have been displaced by government-supported violence against farming villages in the Darfur region of Sudan. They are planting peanuts and sorghum with seeds and a plow provided by ACT-Caritas, a joint effort of the world's Catholic and Protestant communities.
    sudan-2007-jeffrey-darfur-066.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Nejent Justin fled from the fighting to Mundri, where she has relatives. She has survived there thanks to the hospitality of her relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Here she prepares some land for planting. Her uncle let Justin, 16, use this parcel to farm peanuts and corn.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-066.jpg
  • Cecilia Asha is a member of the United Methodist Women in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women say they spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X42.jpg
  • Cecilia Akuyu (right) works in a cooperative farming project run by United Methodist Women in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. Behind her is Cecilia Asha. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women say they spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X40.jpg
  • Cecilia Akuyu is a member of the United Methodist Women in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women say they spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X19.jpg
  • Esther Maoriba is a member of the United Methodist Women in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women say they spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X17.jpg
  • Cecilia Akuyu (left to right), Esther Maoriba, and Cecilia Asha participate in a cooperative farming project run by United Methodist Women in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X14.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn. Here he carries thatch for roofing huts.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-085.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn. Here he carries thatch for roofing huts.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-084.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-075.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn. Here he prepares the ground for planting.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-067.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Nejent Justin fled from the fighting to Mundri, where she has relatives. She has survived there thanks to the hospitality of her relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Here she prepares some land for planting. Her uncle let Justin, 16, use this parcel to farm peanuts and corn.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-063.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Nejent Justin fled from the fighting to Mundri, where she has relatives. She has survived there thanks to the hospitality of her relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Her uncle let Justin, 16, use some land to farm peanuts and corn.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-057.jpg
  • Cecilia Asha carries water home in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. Asha is a member of United Methodist Women. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women say they spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X43.jpg
  • Cecilia Akuyu is a member of the United Methodist Women in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women say they spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X41.jpg
  • Cecilia Asha is a member of the United Methodist Women in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women say they spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X18.jpg
  • Esther Maoriba works in a cooperative farming project run by United Methodist Women in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. Behind her is Cecilia Akuyu. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women say they spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X13.jpg
  • Cecilia Akuyu works in a cooperative farming project run by United Methodist Women in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women say they spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X11.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn. Here he prepares the ground for planting.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-073.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn. Here he prepares the ground for planting.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-074.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn. Here he prepares the ground for planting.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-072.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Nejent Justin fled from the fighting to Mundri, where she has relatives. She has survived there thanks to the hospitality of her relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Here she prepares some land for planting. Her uncle let Justin, 16, use this parcel to farm peanuts and corn.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-062.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Nejent Justin fled from the fighting to Mundri, where she has relatives. She has survived there thanks to the hospitality of her relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Her uncle let Justin, 16, use some land to farm peanuts and corn.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-052.jpg
  • A child with a bottle of milk in a supplemental feeding program for malnourished children and mothers run by the clinic of the Loreto School in Rumbek, South Sudan. The school is run by the Institute for the Blessed Virgin Mary--the Loreto Sisters--of Ireland. Behind them, their mother shells peanuts that are used in the preparation of the food.
    south-sudan-2017-jeffrey-K130.JPG
  • Cecilia Akuyu is a member of the United Methodist Women in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women say they spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X16.jpg
  • Esther Maoriba works in a cooperative farming project run by United Methodist Women in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women say they spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X12.jpg
  • Esther Maoriba works in a cooperative farming project run by United Methodist Women in the Southern Sudan village of Pisak. The village UMW is farming peanuts, pineapple, corn, sorghum and beans as a way to raise money for the women's families. The women say they spend most of the proceeds on school costs of their children and medicines for their families. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-yei-X09.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-076.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn. Here he cuts brush with a machete to prepare for planting.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-077.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus (second from right) fled from the fighting to Mundri, where his relatives, including those pictured here, provided him refuge. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-070.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn. Here he prepares the ground for planting.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-071.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Nejent Justin fled from the fighting to Mundri, where she has relatives. She has survived there thanks to the hospitality of her relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Here she prepares some land for planting. Her uncle let Justin, 16, use this parcel to farm peanuts and corn.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-056.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Nejent Justin fled from the fighting to Mundri, where she has relatives. She has survived there thanks to the hospitality of her relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Her uncle let Justin, 16, use some land to farm peanuts and corn.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-053.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Peter Frisus fled from the fighting to Mundri, where he has relatives. He has survived there thanks to the hospitality of his relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. His uncle let him use some land to farm peanuts and corn. Here he carries thatch for roofing huts.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-069.jpg
  • When South Sudan's civil war broke out in Juba in December 2013, Nejent Justin fled from the fighting to Mundri, where she has relatives. She has survived there thanks to the hospitality of her relatives, along with food and agricultural tools provided by the Mundri Relief and Development Association, which is supported by the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund. Here she clears brush from some land to prepare for planting. Her uncle let Justin, 16, use this parcel to farm peanuts and corn.
    south-sudan-2014-jeffrey-mundri-061.jpg
  • Peanut harvesting near Chinandega, Nicaragua
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_Del_Campo_20111221_...jpg
Next