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  • Children play near the Magnificent Cooperative bakery 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_1054.jpg
  • A youth stands alone near a home 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_0875.jpg
  • Children visit 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_0461.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0856.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0070.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0048.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0019.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: Stephanie Rossman, 29, (left) and daughter Shayla Rossman, 7, worship at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry in Alabama that is widely known for its club atmosphere and large crowds. The Basement was founded in 2004 by Matt Pitt, a former drug dealer turned evangelist who began organizing worship services in his basement after abandoning a life of drugs. Pitt was arrested on August 20, 2013 for impersonating a police officer. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_0857.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: Ike Ubasineke speaks to a crowd of onlookers at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry in Alabama that is widely known for its club atmosphere and large crowds. Ubasineke helped lead the service in the absence of The Basement's founder, Matt Pitt, who was arrested for impersonating a police officer on August 20, 2013. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_0835.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: Casey "Bird" Holland delivers a message at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry in Alabama that is widely known for its club atmosphere and large crowds. Holland helped lead the service in the absence of The Basement's founder, Matt Pitt, who was arrested for impersonating a police officer on August 20, 2013. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_0540.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: Students wait for the worship service to start at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry in Alabama. The worship gathering, held at the B-Studio in Trussville, was the first meeting since The Basement's founder Matt Pitt was arrested for impersonating a police officer on August 20, 2013. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_0386.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: Mason Rule (left) worships with his nephew during a service at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry widely known for its club atmosphere and large crowds. The worship gathering, held at the B-Studio in Trussville, was the first meeting since The Basement's founder Matt Pitt was arrested for impersonating a police officer on August 20, 2013. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_0317.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: Ike Ubasineke (left) leads a crowd of worshippers at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry in Alabama that is widely known for its club atmosphere and large crowds. Ubasineke helped lead the service in the absence of The Basement's founder, Matt Pitt, who was arrested for impersonating a police officer on August 20, 2013. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_0226.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: Bryan Qualls stands with his son and daughter as they await the start of a worship service at The Basement. The Basement was founded in 2004 by Matt Pitt, a former drug dealer turned evangelist who began organizing worship services in his basement after abandoning a life of drugs. Pitt was arrested on August 20, 2013 for impersonating a police officer, and this service was the first meeting of the congregation since his arrest. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_0006.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: Youth dance to worship music during a service at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry in Alabama widely known for its club atmosphere and large crowds. The worship gathering, held at the B-Studio in Trussville, was the first meeting for The Basement since founder Matt Pitt was arrested for impersonating a police officer on August 20, 2013. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_0123.jpg
  • African students practice sustainable gardening and agriculture at Kuna Primary School in North Kamagambo, Kenya.
    130509_DIG_KENYA_0477.jpg
  • African students practice sustainable gardening and agriculture at Kuna Primary School in North Kamagambo, Kenya.
    130509_DIG_KENYA_0463.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 16, 2011: Kamau "Kelly" Ng'ang'a changes clothes in his one room apartment after excercising. Unable to find regular work in the slum, Ng'ang'a moved into this room in January of 2011 after a friend volunteered the space to him free of rent.<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.
    110816_Kelly_©BobMiller_169.jpg
  • A young girl playing outside swings on a tree branch.
    111211_Chancey_Family_227.jpg
  • TUSCALOOSA, AL – DECEMBER 10, 2015: Amanda K. Bennett, 21, walks to a meeting on the University of Alabama campus. Bennett, a senior English and African American studies major in the Honors College, organized the "We are Done" campaign in 2015. "I was motivated by years of letting systemic injustices and micro aggressions happen around me," Bennett said. "I realized that I could no longer be a passive bystander to inequality." CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times
    151209_NYTIMES_ACTIVIST-2_0261.jpg
  • TUSCALOOSA, AL – DECEMBER 10, 2015: Amanda K. Bennett, 21, poses for a portrait at the University of Alabama. Bennett, a senior English and African American studies major in the Honors College, organized the "We are Done" campaign in 2015. "I was motivated by years of letting systemic injustices and micro aggressions happen around me," Bennett said. "I realized that I could no longer be a passive bystander to inequality." CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times
    151209_NYTIMES_ACTIVIST-2_0169.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - MARCH 22, 2010: Young athletes of the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club train outside the Joseph Kengethe Social Hall on the outskirts of Kibera slum. 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.
    100322_Kibera-Olympic_003_17.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - MARCH 18, 2010: A winner is announced as young athletes compete in a boxing tournament featuring the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club, Kenya Prisons and the Kenya Police and Armed Forces (AFABA). 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_18.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - MARCH 18, 2010: Young athletes compete in a boxing tournament featuring the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club, Kenya Prisons and the Kenya Police and Armed Forces (AFABA). 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_06.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - MARCH 18, 2010: 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). 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_004_30.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - MARCH 18, 2010: 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). 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_004_27.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - MARCH 18, 2010: In Jericho, a district on the outskirts of Nairobi, Kenyans assemble to watch a boxing match featuring members of the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club.<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_002_22.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - MARCH 17, 2010: Volunteers with Usafi Youth Group demonstrate the use of pit latrines as a low cost waste management system. The grave-like pits are used to clear trash mounds and open plots for sustainable agriculture projects on top of the newly fertilized earth.<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.”
    100317_Youth-Reform_002_13.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - NOVEMBER 17, 2011: Kamau Ng'ang'a prepares mentally for an Olympic Qualifying boxing bout. As a Kikuyu, Ng'ang'a represents the tribe that was targeted most violently during the post-election violence of 2008. Despite his tribal affiliation, Ng'ang'a is the club favorite and hopes to represent the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club in the 2012 Olympics.<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.
    111117_Kenya_Open_094-Edit.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - NOVEMBER 14, 2011:  A member of the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club.<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.
    111114_Kibera_Olympic_Portraits_066-...jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - NOVEMBER 14, 2011: Members of the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club train for an upcoming bout at the Joseph Kangethe Social Hall in Kibera slum.<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.
    111114_Kibera_Olympic_080-Edit.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - NOVEMBER 14, 2011: Members of the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club train for an upcoming bout at the Joseph Kangethe Social Hall in Kibera slum.<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.
    111114_Kibera_Olympic_033-Edit.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - NOVEMBER 14, 2011: Members of the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club train for an upcoming bout at the Joseph Kangethe Social Hall in Kibera slum.<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.
    111114_Kibera_Olympic_022-Edit.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - NOVEMBER 10, 2011:  Hassan Abdulkadir Salim of the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club.<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.
    111110_Kibera_Olympic_Portraits_135-...jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - NOVEMBER 10, 2011:  Saul Otatwa of the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club.<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.
    111110_Kibera_Olympic_Portraits_041_...jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - NOVEMBER 10, 2011:  Saul Otatwa of the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club.<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.
    111110_Kibera_Olympic_Portraits_039_...jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - NOVEMBER 09, 2011: Volunteer boxing coach Hassan Abdulkadir Salim (left) trains with members of the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club at the Joseph Kangethe Social Hall in Kibera slum. <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.
    111109_Kibera_Olympic_009-Edit.jpg
  • 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
  • MERU, KENYA - AUGUST 22, 2011: Kamau "Kelly" Ng'ang'a, 22, plays badminton next to handmade cement weights in the yard of his childhood home. Ng'ang'a built his home training facility by hand in 2010, allowing him to continue training as a boxer while visiting family in Kenya's rural Eastern Province. "I'm young, but with boxing I'm going to succeed in life," Ng'ang'a said. "I need to struggle now when I'm strong so that later on, I'll have time to relax and have a family."<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.
    110822_Meru_©BobMiller_034.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 17, 2011: Members of Carrribean Youth Reform wash Matatus off the main road into Kibera. Formerly called Caribbean Youth Group, the organization changed its name to Caribbean Youth Reform after several violent youth in the neighborhood came under their ranks and were "reformed" under their leadership. Begun in 2008 as a result of the post-election violence, the group of youth operate with the goal of uniting the young people of differing tribes. With over 60 members, the group operates a car and carpet washing business as well as manages a weekly garbage collection project through which they clean up neighborhoods, gather manure for compost and sort plastics to sell for income. The group plans to soon build a community toilet and bathroom in the area where the work, and they are also organizing a conflict management and peacekeeping team. Income generated from their activities is consistent but minimal, says acting secretary Abdallah Juma, age 23. Juma says financial instability is the group’s primary hurdle to progress. "We are the founders of this country," he said. "Even without government intervention, we as youth can do it ourselves." The long term goal of the youth group is to see fewer youth unemployed.<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 nat
    110817_Kibera_©BobMiller_025.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 16, 2011: After an hour of excercise each morning, Kamau "Kelly" Ng'ang'a, 21, eats a regular a breakfast of red beans, chapati and chai tea at a local restaurant in Kibera.<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.
    110816_Kelly_©BobMiller_269.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 15, 2011: Members of the Gange Youth Self Help Group in Kibera gather trash and transport it to a local dump site four to five times a day to generate income. Gange, which means "hard working," was started in 1996, and was the first youth reform project to take root in Kibera. Rashid Seif, 28, is a member of Gange Youth. "We manage to go on with our life. For now, we can make peace. We want to be a peacemaker. We must come with our own vision. We have the idea to be stronger than last election. In the past election the money was the problem. When you show youth money, you encourage them to do whatever you want. We want the creation of jobs, not just to be given money. We say to the politician, 'We don't want your money, we want job opportunity, job creation.' But the government are not thinking about the youth and the community. They leave the youth struggling in their yards. We struggle with this work."<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
    110815_Kibera_Olympic_223.jpg
  • NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 15, 2011: Members of the Gange Youth Self Help Group in Kibera gather trash and transport it to a local dump site four to five times a day to generate income. Gange, which means "hard working," was started in 1996, and was the first youth reform project to take root in Kibera. Rashid Seif, 28, is a member of Gange Youth. "We manage to go on with our life. For now, we can make peace. We want to be a peacemaker. We must come with our own vision. We have the idea to be stronger than last election." <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.”
    110815_Kibera_Olympic_135.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0300.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0323.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0183.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0296.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0122.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0150.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0147.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0098.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0091.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0096.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0082.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0081.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0073.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0052.jpg
  • Children in the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province The Nyamagabe 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.
    130328_Rwanda_0040.jpg
  • Members of the Magnificent Cooperative in  the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province prepare bread for the day. The bread co-op provides vocational training in baking to students who are unable to continue their education in either high school or college, and is comprised of orphans and vulnerable children. The co-op is part of the Mudasomwa Area Development Program (ADP) and 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_1145.jpg
  • Members of the Magnificent Cooperative in  the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province prepare bread for the day. The bread co-op provides vocational training in baking to students who are unable to continue their education in either high school or college, and is comprised of orphans and vulnerable children. The co-op is part of the Mudasomwa Area Development Program (ADP) and 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_1169.jpg
  • Members of the Magnificent Cooperative in  the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province prepare bread for the day. The bread co-op provides vocational training in baking to students who are unable to continue their education in either high school or college, and is comprised of orphans and vulnerable children. The co-op is part of the Mudasomwa Area Development Program (ADP) and 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_1112.jpg
  • Members of the Magnificent Cooperative in  the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province prepare bread for the day. The bread co-op provides vocational training in baking to students who are unable to continue their education in either high school or college, and is comprised of orphans and vulnerable children. The co-op is part of the Mudasomwa Area Development Program (ADP) and 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_1016.jpg
  • Members of the Magnificent Cooperative in  the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province prepare bread for the day. The bread co-op provides vocational training in baking to students who are unable to continue their education in either high school or college, and is comprised of orphans and vulnerable children. The co-op is part of the Mudasomwa Area Development Program (ADP) and 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_1003.jpg
  • Members of the Magnificent Cooperative in  the Nyamagabe District of Rwanda's Southern Province prepare bread for the day. The bread co-op provides vocational training in baking to students who are unable to continue their education in either high school or college, and is comprised of orphans and vulnerable children. The co-op is part of the Mudasomwa Area Development Program (ADP) and 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_0971.jpg
  • Children play 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_0777.jpg
  • Children play 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_0640.jpg
  • Children play 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_0542.jpg
  • Children visit 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_0451.jpg
  • Children in Nyamagabe, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_1001.jpg
  • Children in Nyamagabe, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_1037.jpg
  • Children in Nyamagabe, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_1108.jpg
  • Children in Nyamagabe, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0958.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0865.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0773.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0817.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0510.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0661.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0433.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0326.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0421.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0331.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0321.jpg
  • A family in rural Butare, Rwanda, living in the Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) run by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs work within communities like Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0225.jpg
  • A family in rural Butare, Rwanda, living in the Simbi Area Development Program (ADP) run by the international nonprofit World Vision. Area Development Programs work within communities like Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0226.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0081.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0071.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0067.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0068.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0058.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0052.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0044.jpg
  • Children in Butare, Rwanda on March 26, 2013. The Simbi 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 Butare 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.
    130326_Rwanda_0015.jpg
  • A portrait of a woman and her 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_0107.jpg
  • BIRMINGHAM, AL – OCTOBER 5, 2013: Mariana Mendez, (left) and Dairi Hernandez (center) hold up flags while Gwendolyn Ferreti (right) addresses the crowd during a march organized by the Alabama Coalition for Immigrant Justice. The march was intended to draw attention to the need for immigration reform in Congress. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times
    131005_IMMIG-RALLY-1_5DII_0339.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: Bailey Little, 27, (left), Ryan Kendrick, 24, Jeremy Reyer, 26, and Baylen Clough, 26, (right) stand near the merchandise table after a service at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry in Alabama. The service was the first to be held since the ministry's founder Matt Pitt was arrested for impersonating a police officer on August 20, 2013. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_1080.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: Baylen Clough (left) and Chris Frias (right) worship at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry in Alabama that is widely known for its club atmosphere and large crowds. Clough and Frias are both Birmingham natives and have been attending The Basement for several years. The service was the first to be held since The Basement's founder Matt Pitt was arrested for impersonating a police officer on August 20, 2013. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_1004.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: A teenage girl stands near the merchandise table after a service at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry in Alabama that is widely known for its club atmosphere and large crowds. The service was the first to be held since the ministry's founder Matt Pitt was arrested for impersonating a police officer. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_1024.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: Baylen Clough, 26, (left) raises his hand in worship at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry in Alabama that is widely known for its club atmosphere and large crowds. Ubasineke helped lead the service in the absence of The Basement's founder, Matt Pitt, who was arrested for impersonating a police officer on August 20, 2013. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_0920.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: Ike Ubasineke (right) pumps up the crowd at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry in Alabama that is widely known for its club atmosphere and large crowds. Ubasineke helped lead the service in the absence of The Basement's founder, Matt Pitt, who was arrested for impersonating a police officer on August 20, 2013. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_0905.jpg
  • TRUSSVILLE, AL - AUGUST 27, 2013: A crowd of Christian youth raise their hands in worship during a service at The Basement, a Christian youth ministry in Alabama known for a club atmosphere and large crowds. The Basement was founded in 2004 by Matt Pitt, a former drug dealer turned evangelist who began organizing worship services in his basement after abandoning a life of drugs. Pitt was arrested on August 20, 2013 for impersonating a police officer. CREDIT: Bob Miller for The New York Times.
    130827_Evangelist_©BobMiller_0889.jpg
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