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  • NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 28, 2011: A crowd of Luo youth listen to exhortations from a community leader in Kisumundogo village during a weekly "kamkunji" gathering. During the post-election violence of 2007 and 2008, many Kenyan youth were killed while carrying out acts of violence on behalf of corrupt Ministers of Parliament. "They have realized that they were used by other people," one Kenyan explained about the youth, "so they've promised to never to do that again. They are the ones who preach peace, because they were most affected."<br />
<br />
Various grassroots initiatives led by youth have begun to improve the quality of life for those living in the direst of conditions, and young people of different tribes are using gardening, waste removal, education and athletics to encourage their peers toward a self-respecting and self-sustaining community. Termed “youth groups” on the street, these initiatives could represent the future of long-term socioeconomic development in Kenya while laying the groundwork for a more peaceful election in 2013. During the post-election violence of 2007 and 2008, impoverished youth in Kenya were routinely bribed by the nation's political elite to carry out acts of violence in their communities. Idleness among the youth, combined with the nation's history of tribal rivalries, were cited as a key factors to the violence, culminating in the deaths of over 1,200 Kenyans and the displacement of over 600,000. Since the violence, many youth have begun to seize active roles in the reform of their nation. In 2010 United States Ambassador Michael Ranneberger said he sensed “a sea change of attitude” among youths, “a tidal wave below the surface. The youth have woken up.”
    110828_Kamkunji_©BobMiller_111.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 28, 2011: A community leader addresses a crowd of predominantly Luo youth at a weekly "kamkunji" in Kisumundogo village. Kamkunji is Swahili for "small gathering," and is a weekly venue for individuals to speak out about issues considered vital to community development. The gathering was started in 1990 when Kenyans were fighting for a multiparty government.<br />
<br />
Various grassroots initiatives led by youth have begun to improve the quality of life for those living in the direst of conditions, and young people of different tribes are using gardening, waste removal, education and athletics to encourage their peers toward a self-respecting and self-sustaining community. Termed “youth groups” on the street, these initiatives could represent the future of long-term socioeconomic development in Kenya while laying the groundwork for a more peaceful election in 2013. During the post-election violence of 2007 and 2008, impoverished youth in Kenya were routinely bribed by the nation's political elite to carry out acts of violence in their communities. Idleness among the youth, combined with the nation's history of tribal rivalries, were cited as a key factors to the violence, culminating in the deaths of over 1,200 Kenyans and the displacement of over 600,000. Since the violence, many youth have begun to seize active roles in the reform of their nation. In 2010 United States Ambassador Michael Ranneberger said he sensed “a sea change of attitude” among youths, “a tidal wave below the surface. The youth have woken up.”
    110828_Kamkunji_©BobMiller_036.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 27, 2011: Youth leader Moses Omondi (center) raises his hands in support at the Kenyans For Kenya gathering in Uhuru Park downtown. Kenyans For Kenya was organized in 2011 as a way for Kenyans to support those suffering from drought and famine in the eastern part of the country.<br />
<br />
Various grassroots initiatives led by youth have begun to improve the quality of life for those living in the direst of conditions, and young people of different tribes are using gardening, waste removal, education and athletics to encourage their peers toward a self-respecting and self-sustaining community. Termed “youth groups” on the street, these initiatives could represent the future of long-term socioeconomic development in Kenya while laying the groundwork for a more peaceful election in 2013. During the post-election violence of 2007 and 2008, impoverished youth in Kenya were routinely bribed by the nation's political elite to carry out acts of violence in their communities. Idleness among the youth, combined with the nation's history of tribal rivalries, were cited as a key factors to the violence, culminating in the deaths of over 1,200 Kenyans and the displacement of over 600,000. Since the violence, many youth have begun to seize active roles in the reform of their nation. In 2010 United States Ambassador Michael Ranneberger said he sensed “a sea change of attitude” among youths, “a tidal wave below the surface. The youth have woken up.”
    110827_Moses_©BobMiller_163.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 28, 2011: A community leader addresses a crowd of predominantly Luo youth at a weekly "kamkunji" in Kisumundogo village. Kamkunji is Swahili for "small gathering," and is a weekly venue for individuals to speak out about issues considered vital to community development. The gathering was started in 1990 when Kenyans were fighting for a multiparty government.<br />
<br />
Various grassroots initiatives led by youth have begun to improve the quality of life for those living in the direst of conditions, and young people of different tribes are using gardening, waste removal, education and athletics to encourage their peers toward a self-respecting and self-sustaining community. Termed “youth groups” on the street, these initiatives could represent the future of long-term socioeconomic development in Kenya while laying the groundwork for a more peaceful election in 2013. During the post-election violence of 2007 and 2008, impoverished youth in Kenya were routinely bribed by the nation's political elite to carry out acts of violence in their communities. Idleness among the youth, combined with the nation's history of tribal rivalries, were cited as a key factors to the violence, culminating in the deaths of over 1,200 Kenyans and the displacement of over 600,000. Since the violence, many youth have begun to seize active roles in the reform of their nation. In 2010 United States Ambassador Michael Ranneberger said he sensed “a sea change of attitude” among youths, “a tidal wave below the surface. The youth have woken up.”
    110828_Kamkunji_©BobMiller_090.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 28, 2011: A community leader addresses a crowd of predominantly Luo youth at a weekly "kamkunji" in Kisumundogo village. Kamkunji is Swahili for "small gathering," and is a weekly venue for individuals to speak out about issues considered vital to community development. The gathering was started in 1990 when Kenyans were fighting for a multiparty government.<br />
<br />
Various grassroots initiatives led by youth have begun to improve the quality of life for those living in the direst of conditions, and young people of different tribes are using gardening, waste removal, education and athletics to encourage their peers toward a self-respecting and self-sustaining community. Termed “youth groups” on the street, these initiatives could represent the future of long-term socioeconomic development in Kenya while laying the groundwork for a more peaceful election in 2013. During the post-election violence of 2007 and 2008, impoverished youth in Kenya were routinely bribed by the nation's political elite to carry out acts of violence in their communities. Idleness among the youth, combined with the nation's history of tribal rivalries, were cited as a key factors to the violence, culminating in the deaths of over 1,200 Kenyans and the displacement of over 600,000. Since the violence, many youth have begun to seize active roles in the reform of their nation. In 2010 United States Ambassador Michael Ranneberger said he sensed “a sea change of attitude” among youths, “a tidal wave below the surface. The youth have woken up.”
    110828_Kamkunji_©BobMiller_057.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 27, 2011: A young boy waves the Kenyan flag over the crowd at a Kenyans For Kenya gathering in Uhuru Park near downtown Nairobi. Kenyans For Kenya was organized in 2011 as a way for Kenyans to support those suffering from drought and famine in the eastern part of the country.<br />
<br />
Various grassroots initiatives led by youth have begun to improve the quality of life for those living in the direst of conditions, and young people of different tribes are using gardening, waste removal, education and athletics to encourage their peers toward a self-respecting and self-sustaining community. Termed “youth groups” on the street, these initiatives could represent the future of long-term socioeconomic development in Kenya while laying the groundwork for a more peaceful election in 2013. During the post-election violence of 2007 and 2008, impoverished youth in Kenya were routinely bribed by the nation's political elite to carry out acts of violence in their communities. Idleness among the youth, combined with the nation's history of tribal rivalries, were cited as a key factors to the violence, culminating in the deaths of over 1,200 Kenyans and the displacement of over 600,000. Since the violence, many youth have begun to seize active roles in the reform of their nation. In 2010 United States Ambassador Michael Ranneberger said he sensed “a sea change of attitude” among youths, “a tidal wave below the surface. The youth have woken up.”
    110827_Moses_©BobMiller_192.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 27, 2011: Youth leader Moses Omondi (left) raises his hand in support at the Kenyans For Kenya gathering in Uhuru Park downtown. Kenyans For Kenya was organized in 2011 as a way for Kenyans to support those suffering from drought and famine in the eastern part of the country.<br />
<br />
Various grassroots initiatives led by youth have begun to improve the quality of life for those living in the direst of conditions, and young people of different tribes are using gardening, waste removal, education and athletics to encourage their peers toward a self-respecting and self-sustaining community. Termed “youth groups” on the street, these initiatives could represent the future of long-term socioeconomic development in Kenya while laying the groundwork for a more peaceful election in 2013. During the post-election violence of 2007 and 2008, impoverished youth in Kenya were routinely bribed by the nation's political elite to carry out acts of violence in their communities. Idleness among the youth, combined with the nation's history of tribal rivalries, were cited as a key factors to the violence, culminating in the deaths of over 1,200 Kenyans and the displacement of over 600,000. Since the violence, many youth have begun to seize active roles in the reform of their nation. In 2010 United States Ambassador Michael Ranneberger said he sensed “a sea change of attitude” among youths, “a tidal wave below the surface. The youth have woken up.”
    110827_Moses_©BobMiller_182.jpg
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  • A gentleman stands outside the Uwinkingi Health Center in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province. The Mudasomwa Area Development Program (ADP) located here is one of many long-term development initiatives led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs work within communities like Nyamagabe over a period of several years, providing developmental resources to foster long-term, sustainable growth in the economic and physical well being of the community.
    130327_Rwanda_0557-2.jpg
  • A gentleman stands outside the Uwinkingi Health Center in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province. The Mudasomwa Area Development Program (ADP) located here is one of many long-term development initiatives led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs work within communities like Nyamagabe over a period of several years, providing developmental resources to foster long-term, sustainable growth in the economic and physical well being of the community.
    130327_Rwanda_0563.jpg
  • A woman walking in Butare, Rwanda on March 25, 2013. The Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) is one of several new a new ADP initiatives in Rwanda led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs provide developmental resources for communities to promote long-term, sustainable improvements to the economic and physical well being of a community.
    130325_Rwanda_0297.jpg
  • A woman walking in Butare, Rwanda on March 25, 2013. The Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) is one of several new a new ADP initiatives in Rwanda led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs provide developmental resources for communities to promote long-term, sustainable improvements to the economic and physical well being of a community.
    130325_Rwanda_0315.jpg
  • A child in Butare, Rwanda on March 25, 2013. The Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) is one of several new a new ADP initiatives in Rwanda led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs provide developmental resources for communities to promote long-term, sustainable improvements to the economic and physical well being of a community.
    130325_Rwanda_0257.jpg
  • A child in Butare, Rwanda on March 25, 2013. The Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) is one of several new a new ADP initiatives in Rwanda led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs provide developmental resources for communities to promote long-term, sustainable improvements to the economic and physical well being of a community.
    130325_Rwanda_0250.jpg
  • A child in Butare, Rwanda on March 25, 2013. The Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) is one of several new a new ADP initiatives in Rwanda led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs provide developmental resources for communities to promote long-term, sustainable improvements to the economic and physical well being of a community.
    130325_Rwanda_0240.jpg
  • A child carries a broom amongst other youth in Butare, Rwanda on March 25, 2013. The Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) in Butare is one of several new development initiatives in Rwanda led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs provide developmental resources for communities to promote long-term, sustainable growth in the economic and physical well being of the communities they serve.
    130325_Rwanda_0165.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 25, 2013. The Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) in Butare is one of several new development initiatives in Rwanda led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs provide developmental resources for communities to promote long-term, sustainable growth in the economic and physical well being of the communities they serve.
    130325_Rwanda_0157.jpg
  • An elderly woman in Butare, Rwanda on March 25, 2013. The Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) in Butare is one of several new development initiatives in Rwanda led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs provide developmental resources for communities to promote long-term, sustainable growth in the economic and physical well being of the communities they serve.
    130325_Rwanda_0137.jpg
  • Butare, Rwanda. March 25, 2013. The Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) is one of several new a new ADP initiatives in Rwanda led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs provide developmental resources for communities to promote long-term, sustainable improvements to the economic and physical well being of a community.
    130325_Rwanda_0013.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - MARCH 18, 2010: In a community gym, young athletes prepare for their turn to compete in a bout featuring the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club, Kenya Prisons and the Kenya Police and Armed Forces (AFABA). Without a sponsor, equipment and supplies for the Kibera Olympic Boxing Team are in short supply. What little equipment they own is passed between teammates before each bout. Each year, Kibera Olympic boxers aspire individually to make the national team, and the opportunity to compete in the annual Kenya Open boxing tournament. In previous years, boxers from Kibera slum have gone on to win tournaments on both the national and international stage.<br />
<br />
Within Kenya's progressive youth culture is the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club, a group of low-income adolescents from the slum whose leader uses boxing as a way to engage with idle youth. The group's ethnic diversity is remarkable given Kenya's 2008 post-election violence in which people from several tribes were forced violently out of slums. Together, these boxers represent a nascent trend of cross-tribe brotherhood in a healing nation.
    100318_Kibera-Olympic_005_02-Edit.jpg
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  • A gentleman stands outside the Uwinkingi Health Center in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province. The Mudasomwa Area Development Program (ADP) located here is one of many long-term development initiatives led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs work within communities like Nyamagabe over a period of several years, providing developmental resources to foster long-term, sustainable growth in the economic and physical well being of the community.
    130327_Rwanda_0568.jpg
  • A woman walking in Butare, Rwanda on March 25, 2013. The Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) is one of several new a new ADP initiatives in Rwanda led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs provide developmental resources for communities to promote long-term, sustainable improvements to the economic and physical well being of a community.
    130325_Rwanda_0312.jpg
  • A child in Butare, Rwanda on March 25, 2013. The Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) is one of several new a new ADP initiatives in Rwanda led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs provide developmental resources for communities to promote long-term, sustainable improvements to the economic and physical well being of a community.
    130325_Rwanda_0278.jpg
  • A child in Butare, Rwanda on March 25, 2013. The Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) is one of several new a new ADP initiatives in Rwanda led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs provide developmental resources for communities to promote long-term, sustainable improvements to the economic and physical well being of a community.
    130325_Rwanda_0234.jpg
  • HOOVER, AL – MARCH 1, 2016: Martin Ennis, 68, walking his dog Lucy in the Moss Rock Preserve neighborhood. "I'm a conservative but not Republican," Ennis said. "The last 8 years the progressives have taken over everything. We've gotten away from the constitution in many ways. Politics is about choices, not ideals. So if it's between trump and Clinton, yeah, I'm gonna vote for Trump. I worry, but that's what I'll do. And I feel conflicted in that because I feel he is not the answer."<br />
<br />
On Super Tuesday, voters in the economically vibrant city of Hoover turned out to voice their support for a presidential candidate. Located in the Appalachian foothills, Hoover is the largest suburb of Birmingham and is home to several planned communities with idyllic neighborhoods tailored for the upper middle class. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The Wall Street Journal<br />
OLDCITIES
    160301_WSJ-OLDCITIES_BobMiller_0697.jpg
  • HOOVER, AL – MARCH 1, 2016: Houses and sidewalks are neatly kept in the Moss Rock Preserve neighborhood in Hoover. <br />
<br />
On Super Tuesday, voters in the economically vibrant city of Hoover turned out to voice their support for a presidential candidate. Located in the Appalachian foothills, Hoover is the largest suburb of Birmingham and is home to several planned communities with idyllic neighborhoods tailored for the upper middle class. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The Wall Street Journal<br />
OLDCITIES
    160301_WSJ-OLDCITIES_BobMiller_0677.jpg
  • HOOVER, AL – MARCH 1, 2016: Martin Ennis, 68, walking his dog Lucy in the Moss Rock Preserve neighborhood. "I'm a conservative but not Republican," Ennis said. "The last 8 years the progressives have taken over everything. We've gotten away from the constitution in many ways. Politics is about choices, not ideals. So if it's between trump and Clinton, yeah, I'm gonna vote for Trump. I worry, but that's what I'll do. And I feel conflicted in that because I feel he is not the answer."<br />
<br />
On Super Tuesday, voters in the economically vibrant city of Hoover turned out to voice their support for a presidential candidate. Located in the Appalachian foothills, Hoover is the largest suburb of Birmingham and is home to several planned communities with idyllic neighborhoods tailored for the upper middle class. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The Wall Street Journal<br />
OLDCITIES
    160301_WSJ-OLDCITIES_BobMiller_0701.jpg
  • HOOVER, AL – MARCH 1, 2016: Martin Ennis, 68, walking his dog Lucy in the Moss Rock Preserve neighborhood. "I'm a conservative but not Republican," Ennis said. "The last 8 years the progressives have taken over everything. We've gotten away from the constitution in many ways. Politics is about choices, not ideals. So if it's between trump and Clinton, yeah, I'm gonna vote for Trump. I worry, but that's what I'll do. And I feel conflicted in that because I feel he is not the answer."<br />
<br />
On Super Tuesday, voters in the economically vibrant city of Hoover turned out to voice their support for a presidential candidate. Located in the Appalachian foothills, Hoover is the largest suburb of Birmingham and is home to several planned communities with idyllic neighborhoods tailored for the upper middle class. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The Wall Street Journal<br />
OLDCITIES
    160301_WSJ-OLDCITIES_BobMiller_0683.jpg
  • HOOVER, AL – MARCH 1, 2016: Houses and sidewalks are neatly kept in the Moss Rock Preserve neighborhood in Hoover. <br />
<br />
On Super Tuesday, voters in the economically vibrant city of Hoover turned out to voice their support for a presidential candidate. Located in the Appalachian foothills, Hoover is the largest suburb of Birmingham and is home to several planned communities with idyllic neighborhoods tailored for the upper middle class. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The Wall Street Journal<br />
OLDCITIES
    160301_WSJ-OLDCITIES_BobMiller_0653.jpg
  • Pedestrians walk along a dirt road in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province. The Mudasomwa Area Development Program (ADP) located here is one of many long-term development initiatives led by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs work within communities like Nyamagabe over a period of several years, providing developmental resources to foster long-term, sustainable growth in the economic and physical well being of the community.
    130327_Rwanda_0661.jpg
  • A young girl playing outside swings on a tree branch.
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  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: A Kenyan woman harvests pears in an orchard behind her home in rural Limuru, Kenya.
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  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_830.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_829-bw.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: A Kenyan woman harvests pears in an orchard behind her home in rural Limuru, Kenya.
    100313_CFA_813.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: A Kenyan woman harvests pears in an orchard behind her home in rural Limuru, Kenya.
    100313_CFA_804.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: A Kenyan woman harvests pears in an orchard behind her home in rural Limuru, Kenya.
    100313_CFA_788-color.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_778-border.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_775.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_417-2.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_435.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
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  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 14, 2010: Portrait of a disabled man who is HIV positive.
    100313_CFA_322.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 14, 2010: Portrait of a disabled man who is HIV positive.
    100313_CFA_320.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_300.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_252.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_215.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_113.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_024.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_017.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 11, 2010: Portrait of an African mother and daughter in the hut where they sell charcoal on the streets.
    100311_CFA_275.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 11, 2010: Portrait of an African mother and daughter in the hut where they sell charcoal on the streets.
    100311_CFA_251.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 10, 2010: Portrait of an African man and his baby boy with handmade jewelry.
    100310_CFA_402.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 10, 2010: Portrait of an African man.
    100310_CFA_340.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 10, 2010: Portrait of an African man and his baby boy with handmade jewelry.
    100310_CFA_398.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_503.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: Portrait of an African woman.
    100309_CFA_465.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: Portrait of an African man.
    100309_CFA_450.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: Portrait of an African woman.
    100309_CFA_438.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_323.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_319.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_294.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_229.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_277.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_171.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_825.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_821.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: A Kenyan woman harvests pears in an orchard behind her home in rural Limuru, Kenya.
    100313_CFA_820.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: A Kenyan woman harvests pears in an orchard behind her home in rural Limuru, Kenya.
    100313_CFA_807-2.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: A Kenyan woman harvests pears in an orchard behind her home in rural Limuru, Kenya.
    100313_CFA_802.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_773.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_772.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_768.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_395.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_415-2.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 14, 2010: Portrait of a disabled man who is HIV positive.
    100313_CFA_323.jpg
  • LIMURU, KENYA – MARCH 13, 2010: Fredeick Chege Gichere is the resident caretaker, watchman and farmer at a local church. Gichere contracted HIV in 1999 after his wife left with their baby girl. "When you have tested positive in Kenya, most people think that is the end of you. So I thought life had come to an end, but it was not the end. I have seen God working wonders in my life.” In 2008, Gichere began receiving assistance from CARE for AIDS, an nonprofit dedicated to caring for the physical and spiritual needs of families affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Through the assistance, Gichere was equipped with the farming and agricultural skills he needed to begin raising various vegetables at the church compound where he works.
    100313_CFA_293.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 11, 2010: Portrait of an African man who is HIV positive.
    100311_CFA_298.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 11, 2010: Portrait of an African woman who is HIV positive.
    100311_CFA_050.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 11, 2010: Portrait of an African woman who is HIV positive.
    100311_CFA_285.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 11, 2010: A Kenyan Care for AIDS staff member.
    100311_CFA_043.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 10, 2010: Portrait of a blind African man who is HIV positive.
    100310_CFA_410.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 10, 2010: Portrait of a blind African man who is HIV positive.
    100310_CFA_407.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 10, 2010: Portrait of an African man.
    100310_CFA_363.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_507.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_504.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_502.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_493.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_475.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA – MARCH 9, 2010: An African woman with HIV tends to her livestock.
    100309_CFA_332.jpg
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