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  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-06.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-04.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-19.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-07.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-05.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-02.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-22.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-21.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-20.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-18.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-17.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-16.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-15.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-11.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-12.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-10.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-08.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-01.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-05.nef
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-04.nef
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-24.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-23.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-14.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-13.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-09.jpg
  • Members of Minnesota's Hmong community, joined by others, protest outside the headquarters of KDWB, a Minneapolis radio station that broadcast a song making fun of Hmongs. The song claimed that Hmong women are pregnant by the time they're 16, and that Hmongs live 30 people to a house, packed like sardines and sleeping on the floor. The song, broadcast on the morning Dave Ryan in the Morning Show, has provoked outrage among many in the Twin Cities, and caused several companies to pull their advertising from the popular show. Officials of the station, which is owned by Clear Channel Communications, have apologized, but Hmong leaders are demanding a greater response from the station.
    usa-2011-jeffrey-hmong-protest-03.jpg
  • Women (and a few men) sing and dance a song about global climate change in Chidyamanga, a village in southern Malawi that has been hard hit by drought in recent years, leading to chronic food insecurity, especially during the "hunger season," when farmers are waiting for the harvest. "We are always hungry because of climate change, droughts and floods," states the song's chorus. Indeed, climate change has produced dramatic shifts in the area's rains in recent years, creating a real crisis for formers who have long lived from rain-fed crops.
    malawi-2011-jeffrey-063.jpg
  • Women and children sing and dance a song about global climate change in Chidyamanga, a village in southern Malawi that has been hard hit by drought in recent years, leading to chronic food insecurity, especially during the "hunger season," when farmers are waiting for the harvest. "We are always hungry because of climate change, droughts and floods," states the song's chorus. Indeed, climate change has produced dramatic shifts in the area's rains in recent years, creating a real crisis for formers who have long lived from rain-fed crops.agricultural yields.
    malawi-2011-jeffrey-061.jpg
  • Women sing and dance a song about global climate change in Chidyamanga, a village in southern Malawi that has been hard hit by drought in recent years, leading to chronic food insecurity, especially during the "hunger season," when farmers are waiting for the harvest. "We are always hungry because of climate change, droughts and floods," states the song's chorus. Indeed, climate change has produced dramatic shifts in the area's rains in recent years, creating a real crisis for formers who have long lived from rain-fed crops. agricultural yields.
    malawi-2011-jeffrey-060.jpg
  • Women sing and dance a song about global climate change in Chidyamanga, a village in southern Malawi that has been hard hit by drought in recent years, leading to chronic food insecurity, especially during the "hunger season," when farmers are waiting for the harvest. "We are always hungry because of climate change, droughts and floods," states the song's chorus. Indeed, climate change has produced dramatic shifts in the area's rains in recent years, creating a real crisis for formers who have long lived from rain-fed crops. agricultural yields.
    malawi-2011-jeffrey-059.jpg
  • Women sing and dance a song about global climate change in Chidyamanga, a village in southern Malawi that has been hard hit by drought in recent years, leading to chronic food insecurity, especially during the "hunger season," when farmers are waiting for the harvest. "We are always hungry because of climate change, droughts and floods," states the song's chorus. Indeed, climate change has produced dramatic shifts in the area's rains in recent years, creating a real crisis for formers who have long lived from rain-fed crops.agricultural yields.
    malawi-2011-jeffrey-058.jpg
  • Women sing and dance a song about global climate change in Chidyamanga, a village in southern Malawi that has been hard hit by drought in recent years, leading to chronic food insecurity, especially during the "hunger season," when farmers are waiting for the harvest. "We are always hungry because of climate change, droughts and floods," states the song's chorus. Indeed, climate change has produced dramatic shifts in the area's rains in recent years, creating a real crisis for formers who have long lived from rain-fed crops.agricultural yields.
    malawi-2011-jeffrey-057.jpg
  • Women sing and dance a song about global climate change in Chidyamanga, a village in southern Malawi that has been hard hit by drought in recent years, leading to chronic food insecurity, especially during the "hunger season," when farmers are waiting for the harvest. "We are always hungry because of climate change, droughts and floods," states the song's chorus. Indeed, climate change has produced dramatic shifts in the area's rains in recent years, creating a real crisis for formers who have long lived from rain-fed crops. agricultural yields.
    malawi-2011-jeffrey-056.jpg
  • Women sing and dance a song about global climate change in Chidyamanga, a village in southern Malawi that has been hard hit by drought in recent years, leading to chronic food insecurity, especially during the "hunger season," when farmers are waiting for the harvest. "We are always hungry because of climate change, droughts and floods," states the song's chorus. Indeed, climate change has produced dramatic shifts in the area's rains in recent years, creating a real crisis for formers who have long lived from rain-fed crops. agricultural yields.
    malawi-2011-jeffrey-062.jpg
  • 11 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: A woman mimes to a song outside the Scottish Event Campus in Glasgow, location of COP26, standing in front of a banner reading 'Marca la cancha, Argentina' and 'que los países ricos pague la deuda económica' ('that the rich countries pay the economic debt').  Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211111_AH1_283...jpg
  • Women displaced by violence in Sudan's Darfur region put the finishing touches on a thatched roof, celebrating with song and dance as they go, in the Abu Jabra IDP Camp.
    sudan-2005-jeffrey-darfur-70.jpg
  • Students sing a song with hand motions in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-46.jpg
  • Students sing a song with hand motions in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-45.jpg
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F163.JPG
  • A girl pushes her mouth into a smile during a song that involves hand movements in the Mitchell Woods Preschool run by InterServ Community Services in St. Joseph, Missouri. The preschool includes children from six weeks to 5 years of age. InterServ is an ecumenical ministry long supported by United Methodist Women.
    usa-2014-jeffrey-missouri-community-...jpg
  • A girl touches her mouth during a song that involves hand movements in the Mitchell Woods Preschool run by InterServ Community Services in St. Joseph, Missouri. The preschool includes children from six weeks to 5 years of age. InterServ is an ecumenical ministry long supported by United Methodist Women.
    usa-2014-jeffrey-missouri-community-...jpg
  • A girl touches her mouth during a song that involves hand movements in the Mitchell Woods Preschool run by InterServ Community Services in St. Joseph, Missouri. The preschool includes children from six weeks to 5 years of age. InterServ is an ecumenical ministry long supported by United Methodist Women.
    usa-2014-jeffrey-missouri-community-...jpg
  • A girl touches her mouth during a song that involves hand movements in the Mitchell Woods Preschool run by InterServ Community Services in St. Joseph, Missouri. The preschool includes children from six weeks to 5 years of age. InterServ is an ecumenical ministry long supported by United Methodist Women.
    usa-2014-jeffrey-missouri-community-...jpg
  • Students sing a song in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. Encouraging them is their teacher, Regina John Thabo (left, standing), who is studying to be a better teacher in a program sponsored by Solidarity with Southern Sudan, an international network of Catholic groups supporting Southern Sudan with educational personnel and prayer. Irish Sister Elizabeth Ryan, FCJ (right), supervises Thabo's progress. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-57.jpg
  • Students sing a song in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. Encouraging them is their teacher, Regina John Thabo, who is studying to be a better teacher in a program sponsored by Solidarity with Southern Sudan, an international network of Catholic groups supporting Southern Sudan with educational personnel and prayer. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-54.jpg
  • Students sing a song in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. Encouraging them is their teacher, Regina John Thabo, who is studying to be a better teacher in a program sponsored by Solidarity with Southern Sudan, an international network of Catholic groups supporting Southern Sudan with educational personnel and prayer. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-55.jpg
  • Students sing a song with hand motions in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. Encouraging them is their teacher, Regina John Thabo, who is studying to be a better teacher in a program sponsored by Solidarity with Southern Sudan, an international network of Catholic groups supporting Southern Sudan with educational personnel and prayer. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-53.jpg
  • Students sing a song with hand motions in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-51.jpg
  • Students sing a song in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. Encouraging them is their teacher, Regina John Thabo, who is studying to be a better teacher in a program sponsored by Solidarity with Southern Sudan, an international network of Catholic groups supporting Southern Sudan with educational personnel and prayer. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-52.jpg
  • Students sing a song in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-49.jpg
  • Students sing a song with hand motions in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-48.jpg
  • Students sing a song with hand motions in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-47.jpg
  • Teachers sing a song about their experiences during a ceremony closing a special teacher training course in Agok, a town in Abyei along the contested border between Sudan and South Sudan where more than 100,000 Dinka Ngok fled in 2011 after attacks by northern soldiers and militias on their villages in Abyei. The training course was conducted by Solidarity with South Sudan, an international network of Catholic groups that assists the world's newest country with training of teachers, health care professionals and pastoral workers
    south-sudan-2013-jeffrey-abyei-210.jpg
  • A woman sings an educational song in a community care choir in Kaluhoro, Malawi. With support from the Ekwendeni Hospital AIDS Program, villagers here 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-E478.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance outside a Catholic church in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F216.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance outside a Catholic church in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F211.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance outside a Catholic church in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F209.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance outside a Catholic church in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F201.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance outside a Catholic church in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F197.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance outside a Catholic church in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F186.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F170.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F150.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance outside a Catholic church in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F144.JPG
  • The church band plays a traditional Roma song outside the United Methodist Roma congregation in Jabuka, Serbia..
    serbia-2012-jeffrey-roma-396.jpg
  • A girl touches her face during a song that involves hand movements in the Mitchell Woods Preschool run by InterServ Community Services in St. Joseph, Missouri. The preschool includes children from six weeks to 5 years of age. InterServ is an ecumenical ministry long supported by United Methodist Women.
    usa-2014-jeffrey-missouri-community-...jpg
  • A girl touches her face during a song that involves hand movements in the Mitchell Woods Preschool run by InterServ Community Services in St. Joseph, Missouri. The preschool includes children from six weeks to 5 years of age. InterServ is an ecumenical ministry long supported by United Methodist Women.
    usa-2014-jeffrey-missouri-community-...jpg
  • Students sing a song in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. Encouraging them is their teacher, Regina John Thabo (center), who is studying to be a better teacher in a program sponsored by Solidarity with Southern Sudan, an international network of Catholic groups supporting Southern Sudan with educational personnel and prayer. Irish Sister Elizabeth Ryan, FCJ (right), supervises Thabo's progress. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-56.jpg
  • Students sing a song with hand motions in a Catholic school in Malakal, Southern Sudan. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-malakal-50.jpg
  • A woman sings an educational song in a community care choir in Kaluhoro, Malawi. With support from the Ekwendeni Hospital AIDS Program, villagers here 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-E475.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance outside a Catholic church in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F206.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance outside a Catholic church in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F204.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F172.JPG
  • Members of a youth sexual and reproductive health club educate their peers using song and dance in Kacheche, Malawi. With assistance from the AIDS program of the Livingstonia Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, club members educate their peers about avoiding HIV transmission, resisting early marriages, and the prevention of school dropouts.
    malawi-2017-jeffrey-F160.JPG
  • The church band plays a traditional Roma song outside the United Methodist Roma congregation in Jabuka, Serbia..
    serbia-2012-jeffrey-roma-398.jpg
  • The church band plays a traditional Roma song outside the United Methodist Roma congregation in Jabuka, Serbia..
    serbia-2012-jeffrey-roma-395.jpg
  • Youth dance during an outdoor Mass in Christ the King Catholic parish in Malakal, Southern Sudan, on November 21, 2010. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-misc-017.jpg
  • Members of the Christ the King Catholic parish in Malakal, Southern Sudan, sing and dance during Mass on November 21, 2010. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-misc-035.jpg
  • Members of the Christ the King Catholic parish in Malakal, Southern Sudan, sing and dance during Mass on November 21, 2010. On the left is Msgr. Roko Taban Mousa, the apostolic administrator of the Diocese of Malakal. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-misc-036.jpg
  • Members of the Christ the King Catholic parish in Malakal, Southern Sudan, sing and dance during Mass on November 21, 2010. NOTE: In July 2011 Southern Sudan became the independent country of South Sudan.
    south-sudan-2010-jeffrey-misc-038.jpg
  • The Rev. Suzi Byrd of Houston, Texas, leads singing during a May 20, 2018, session of the the United Methodist Women Assembly 2018 in Columbus, Ohio.
    usa-2018-jeffrey-umw-assembly-060.jpg
  • 4 September 2022, Karlsruhe, Germany: Celebrating the occasion of the World Council of Churches' 11th Assembly, Sunday service is held at the Friedenskirche in Karlsruhe. The service, attended by a range of ecumenical guests, is televised live by German broadcaster ZDF (Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen), and attended by a 94-year-old woman who was present when the church was originally built -- then raised as a temporary structure (a so-called 'Notkirche') using bricks from the then bombed city hall in Karlsruhe. The church was inaugurated in 1949. The 11th Assembly of the World Council of Churches is held in Karlsruhe, Germany from 31 August to 8 September, under the theme "Christ's Love Moves the World to Reconciliation and Unity." Here, singer Tina Wiechmann of the band Enain.
    Germany-2022-Hillert-20220904_AH2_28...jpg
  • 24 May 2022, Shakhty, Russia: Local choir sings a Troparion named Hristos Vaskrese ('Christ is Risen') in Pokrov Cathedral in Shakhty. [PLEASE NOTE: This image was captured on assignment with the World Council of Churches and ACT Alliance, visiting Russia upon invitation from the Russian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate).]
    Russia-2022-Hillert-20220524_AH2_872...jpg
  • 24 May 2022, Shakhty, Russia: Local choir sings a Troparion named Hristos Vaskrese ('Christ is Risen') in Pokrov Cathedral in Shakhty. [PLEASE NOTE: This image was captured on assignment with the World Council of Churches and ACT Alliance, visiting Russia upon invitation from the Russian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate).]
    Russia-2022-Hillert-20220524_AH2_872...jpg
  • 24 May 2022, Shakhty, Russia: Local choir sings a Troparion named Hristos Vaskrese ('Christ is Risen') in Pokrov Cathedral in Shakhty. [PLEASE NOTE: This image was captured on assignment with the World Council of Churches and ACT Alliance, visiting Russia upon invitation from the Russian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate).]
    Russia-2022-Hillert-20220524_AH1_969...jpg
  • 3 April 2022, Palorinya settlement, Obongi district, Uganda: “We welcome you. Remember, remember, don’t forget us,” sings a group of women from the Glory Vocational School, as they participate in Sunday service with congregants from the Diocese of Kajo-Keji worship in Palorinya refugee settlement. Following the eruption of war in South Sudan, the Diocese of Kajo-Keji in the country’s Central Equatoria State, decided to move with some 350 congregants to seek refuge in neighboring Uganda. The diocese is since hosted under the auspices of the Diocesan office of the Anglican Church in Moyo, Uganda, and is able to continue to gather and worship as a congregation in the Palorinya settlement. The Palorinya refugee settlement, in Obongi district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 128,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. Palorinya is the second largest refugee settlement in Uganda. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220403_AH2_499...jpg
  • 3 April 2022, Palorinya settlement, Obongi district, Uganda: “We welcome you. Remember, remember, don’t forget us,” sings a group of women from the Glory Vocational School, as they participate in Sunday service with congregants from the Diocese of Kajo-Keji worship in Palorinya refugee settlement. Following the eruption of war in South Sudan, the Diocese of Kajo-Keji in the country’s Central Equatoria State, decided to move with some 350 congregants to seek refuge in neighboring Uganda. The diocese is since hosted under the auspices of the Diocesan office of the Anglican Church in Moyo, Uganda, and is able to continue to gather and worship as a congregation in the Palorinya settlement. The Palorinya refugee settlement, in Obongi district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 128,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. Palorinya is the second largest refugee settlement in Uganda. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220403_AH2_498...jpg
  • 3 April 2022, Palorinya settlement, Obongi district, Uganda: A group of women from the Mother's Union of the Episcopal Diocese of Kajo-Keji sing during Sunday service on the fifth Sunday of Lent at the Macedonia church in Palorinya refugee settlement, West Nile area of northern Uganda. Following the eruption of war in South Sudan, the Diocese of Kajo-Keji in the country’s Central Equatoria State, decided to move with some 350 congregants to seek refuge in neighboring Uganda. The diocese is since hosted under the auspices of the Diocesan office of the Anglican Church in Moyo, Uganda, and is able to continue to gather and worship as a congregation in the Palorinya settlement. The Palorinya refugee settlement, in Obongi district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 128,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. Palorinya is the second largest refugee settlement in Uganda. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220403_AH2_491...jpg
  • 3 April 2022, Palorinya settlement, Obongi district, Uganda: A group of women from the Mother's Union of the Episcopal Diocese of Kajo-Keji sing during Sunday service on the fifth Sunday of Lent at the Macedonia church in Palorinya refugee settlement, West Nile area of northern Uganda. Following the eruption of war in South Sudan, the Diocese of Kajo-Keji in the country’s Central Equatoria State, decided to move with some 350 congregants to seek refuge in neighboring Uganda. The diocese is since hosted under the auspices of the Diocesan office of the Anglican Church in Moyo, Uganda, and is able to continue to gather and worship as a congregation in the Palorinya settlement. The Palorinya refugee settlement, in Obongi district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 128,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. Palorinya is the second largest refugee settlement in Uganda. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220403_AH2_491...jpg
  • 3 April 2022, Palorinya settlement, Obongi district, Uganda: A group of women from the Mother's Union of the Episcopal Diocese of Kajo-Keji sing during Sunday service on the fifth Sunday of Lent at the Macedonia church in Palorinya refugee settlement, West Nile area of northern Uganda. Following the eruption of war in South Sudan, the Diocese of Kajo-Keji in the country’s Central Equatoria State, decided to move with some 350 congregants to seek refuge in neighboring Uganda. The diocese is since hosted under the auspices of the Diocesan office of the Anglican Church in Moyo, Uganda, and is able to continue to gather and worship as a congregation in the Palorinya settlement. The Palorinya refugee settlement, in Obongi district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 128,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. Palorinya is the second largest refugee settlement in Uganda. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220403_AH2_487...jpg
  • 2 April 2022, Palorinya settlement, Obongi district, Uganda: A group of South Sudanese refugee women from the Kuku ethnic group dance and sing as they gather at the 'God's Grace' women's self-help group in the Palorinya refugee settlement. The Palorinya refugee settlement, in Obongi district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 128,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. Palorinya is the second largest refugee settlement in Uganda. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220402_AH2_427...jpg
  • 2 April 2022, Palorinya settlement, Obongi district, Uganda: A group of South Sudanese refugee women from the Kuku ethnic group dance and sing as they gather at the 'God's Grace' women's self-help group in the Palorinya refugee settlement. The Palorinya refugee settlement, in Obongi district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 128,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. Palorinya is the second largest refugee settlement in Uganda. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220402_AH2_427...jpg
  • 2 April 2022, Palorinya settlement, Obongi district, Uganda: A group of South Sudanese refugee women from the Kuku ethnic group dance and sing as they gather at the 'God's Grace' women's self-help group in the Palorinya refugee settlement. The Palorinya refugee settlement, in Obongi district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 128,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. Palorinya is the second largest refugee settlement in Uganda. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220402_AH2_426...jpg
  • 2 April 2022, Palorinya settlement, Obongi district, Uganda: A group of South Sudanese refugee women from the Kuku ethnic group dance and sing as they gather at the 'God's Grace' women's self-help group in the Palorinya refugee settlement. The Palorinya refugee settlement, in Obongi district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 128,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. Palorinya is the second largest refugee settlement in Uganda. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220402_AH1_773...jpg
  • 27 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Choir sings as Sunday service gathers several hundred congregants in the Moshi Lutheran Cathedral, in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania’s northern diocese. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220327_AH2_1...jpg
  • 27 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Choir sings as Sunday service gathers several hundred congregants in the Moshi Lutheran Cathedral, in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania’s northern diocese. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220327_AH2_1...jpg
  • 27 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Choir sings as Sunday service gathers several hundred congregants in the Moshi Lutheran Cathedral, in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania’s northern diocese. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220327_AH2_1...jpg
  • 27 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Choir sings as Sunday service gathers several hundred congregants in the Moshi Lutheran Cathedral, in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania’s northern diocese. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220327_AH2_1...jpg
  • 27 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Congregants sing during Sunday service in the Moshi Lutheran Cathedral, in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania’s northern diocese. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220327_AH2_1...jpg
  • 27 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: A man looks at a hymn book as Sunday service gathers several hundred congregants in the Moshi Lutheran Cathedral, in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania’s northern diocese. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220327_AH2_1...jpg
  • 27 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Congregants sing during Sunday service in the Moshi Lutheran Cathedral, in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania’s northern diocese. [Image captured on assignment for the Lutheran World Federation, whose member churches and partners can use it free of charge to report about the LWF’s work, with credit to LWF/Albin Hillert upon publication.]
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220327_AH2_1...jpg
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