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  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons". "Peace is more than absence of war," said Oslo governing mayor Raymond Johansen. "We need to look at peace also in a positive way, and governments cannot do this alone. For this, we need also civil society."
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_344...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons". Masakazu Saito is a 94 year-old survivor of an atomic bombing. "I was told by the doctors 27 seven times that I will not survive," he says, bearing a crack in his skull from the time the bomb fell. Since then, he has started an organization called "Iwato Prefectural A-bomb Sufferers Association". "In a world where with today's technology, two bombs can kill the entire population of the Earth, killing women and men, adults and children: we cannot have this. Peace. No war." he says.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_192...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons".
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_184...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons".
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_181...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons".
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_168...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons".
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_343...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons". Masakazu Saito is a 94 year-old survivor of an atomic bombing. "I was told by the doctors 27 seven times that I will not survive," he says, bearing a crack in his skull from the time the bomb fell. Since then, he has started an organization called "Iwato Prefectural A-bomb Sufferers Association". "In a world where with today's technology, two bombs can kill the entire population of the Earth, killing women and men, adults and children: we cannot have this. Peace. No war." he says.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_198...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons". Masakazu Saito is a 94 year-old survivor of an atomic bombing. "I was told by the doctors 27 seven times that I will not survive," he says, bearing a crack in his skull from the time the bomb fell. Since then, he has started an organization called "Iwato Prefectural A-bomb Sufferers Association". "In a world where with today's technology, two bombs can kill the entire population of the Earth, killing women and men, adults and children: we cannot have this. Peace. No war." he says.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_197...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons".
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_185...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons". Here, Nagasaki survivor Terumi Tanaka, who serves as general secretary of the Japan Confederation of A and H Bomb Sufferers Organizations.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_178...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons".
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_169...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons". Yoshiko Tanaka survived the bombing of Hiroshima, as the only one among her friends at school. Scars running deep, it’s only for a few years that she has spoken publicly about her experience. "When I was a first-grader in elementary school, I was 2.3 kilometers from the hypocenter of the Hiroshima blast, in an area called Ushita, where I was burned and exposed to radiation. Amidst the destruction, as people wandered and cried out in pain, when the unchanged blue sky showed itself, in my child's mind, for some reason, a hope sprung forth that 'there will be a tomorrow.' We citizens of Hiroshima recovered and have overcome many challenges since then," wrote Tanaka in an open letter in The Mainichi in May 2016.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_159...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons".
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_157...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons".
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_156...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons".
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_334...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons".
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_202...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons". Yamada Kazumi survived the atomic bombing of Nagasaki. Born in Manchuria near Harbin, he moved to Nagasaki to live with his grandmother upon starting primary school. He was 2.3 kilometers from the hypocenter as the bomb hit Nagasaki.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_200...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons". Masakazu Saito is a 94 year-old survivor of an atomic bombing. "I was told by the doctors 27 seven times that I will not survive," he says, bearing a crack in his skull from the time the bomb fell. Since then, he has started an organization called "Iwato Prefectural A-bomb Sufferers Association". "In a world where with today's technology, two bombs can kill the entire population of the Earth, killing women and men, adults and children: we cannot have this. Peace. No war." he says.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_197...jpg
  • 9 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Some 22 "Hibakusha", survivors from the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, joined Norwegian representatives the mayor of Oslo, principal of Oslo University, and the head of the Oslo Museum of National History for an event themed "Seeds for Peace" in the Oslo Botanical Garden. As a token of hope, together they planted seeds, as part of the Nobel Peace Prize celebrations in Oslo on 9-10 December. Oslo hosts the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony on 9-10 December 2017. The prize in 2017 goes to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), for "its work to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for its ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons". Yoshiko Tanaka survived the bombing of Hiroshima, as the only one among her friends at school. Scars running deep, it’s only for a few years that she has spoken publicly about her experience. "When I was a first-grader in elementary school, I was 2.3 kilometers from the hypocenter of the Hiroshima blast, in an area called Ushita, where I was burned and exposed to radiation. Amidst the destruction, as people wandered and cried out in pain, when the unchanged blue sky showed itself, in my child's mind, for some reason, a hope sprung forth that 'there will be a tomorrow.' We citizens of Hiroshima recovered and have overcome many challenges since then," wrote Tanaka in an open letter in The Mainichi in May 2016.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171209_AHP_330...jpg
  • 8 October 2022, Kraków, Poland: A young girl and her mother hold out open hands full of seeds, which they are offering to a flock of pigeons in the square outside the Cloth Hall -- a markethall and home to a Polish art museum -- in Kraków Old City.
    Poland-2022-Hillert-20221008_AH1_019...jpg
  • 8 October 2022, Kraków, Poland: A young girl holds out an open hand full of seeds, which she is offering to a flock of pigeons in the square outside the Cloth Hall -- a markethall and home to a Polish art museum -- in Kraków Old City.
    Poland-2022-Hillert-20221008_AH1_019...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: Climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa brings onto the plenary hall stage a giant puppet named Little Amal on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_187...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Mahmoud Al-Omari works in his garden in Al-Mazar. He is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH1_142...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Fatima Al-Omari looks out over  her garden in Al-Mazar. She is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH1_138...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: Issa Hawaou is one of a group of CAR refugees trained by the Lutheran World Federation in modern farming techniques. By keeping a strict ratio of how many seeds to sow per hectare, and by sowing Cassava and Groundnut together, they are able to both increase harvests and retain soil fertility over a longer time. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Ngam refugee camp, located in the Meiganga municipality, Adamaoua region of Cameroon, hosts 7,228 refugees from the Central African Republic, across 2,088 households.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190604_AH1_442...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: Issa Hawaou is one of a group of CAR refugees trained by the Lutheran World Federation in modern farming techniques. By keeping a strict ratio of how many seeds to sow per hectare, and by sowing Cassava and Groundnut together, they are able to both increase harvests and retain soil fertility over a longer time. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Ngam refugee camp, located in the Meiganga municipality, Adamaoua region of Cameroon, hosts 7,228 refugees from the Central African Republic, across 2,088 households.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190604_AH1_439...jpg
  • 14 June 2023, Tallinn, Estonia: CEC Youth advisor and Governing Board Member Lea Schlenker hands out packets of mustard seeds as young people from across Europe gather for an outdoor evening prayer along the way, as they undertake a hike through the Pääsküla Bog Trail, a hiking area near Tallinn,  as part of their participation in the 2023 CEC General Assembly, which takes place in Tallinn, Estonia on 14-20 June under the theme of: 'Under God's blessing – shaping the future'.
    Estonia-2023-Hillert-20230614_AH2_97...jpg
  • 1 April 2022, Nyumanzi refugee settlement, Adjumani district, Uganda: Nursery worker Makel Chol Deng undertakes weeding in a bed of teak seeds sown at a tree nursery in the Nyumanzi refugee settlement. A 43-year-old farmer from Jonglei, South Sudanese refugee Makel Chol Deng supports an LWF project producing more than 150,000 tree seedlings on an annual basis. “When I arrived here, the environment here was nothing like this. Now we are planting trees, and it shows the importance of taking care of our environment,” he says. The Nyumanzi refugee settlement, in Adjumani district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 50,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda.
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220401_AH2_371...jpg
  • 1 April 2022, Nyumanzi refugee settlement, Adjumani district, Uganda: Nursery worker Makel Chol Deng undertakes weeding in a bed of teak seeds sown at a tree nursery in the Nyumanzi refugee settlement. A 43-year-old farmer from Jonglei, South Sudanese refugee Makel Chol Deng supports an LWF project producing more than 150,000 tree seedlings on an annual basis. “When I arrived here, the environment here was nothing like this. Now we are planting trees, and it shows the importance of taking care of our environment,” he says. The Nyumanzi refugee settlement, in Adjumani district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 50,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda.
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220401_AH2_369...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: A giant puppet named Little Amal, brought onto the COP26 plenary hall stage by climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_192...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: Climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa brings onto the plenary hall stage a giant puppet named Little Amal on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_188...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: Climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa brings onto the plenary hall stage a giant puppet named Little Amal on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_191...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: Climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa brings onto the plenary hall stage a giant puppet named Little Amal on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_188...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: Climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa brings onto the plenary hall stage a giant puppet named Little Amal on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_186...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: Climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa brings onto the plenary hall stage a giant puppet named Little Amal on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow.  The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_185...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: Climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa brings onto the plenary hall stage a giant puppet named Little Amal on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_183...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: Climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa brings onto the plenary hall stage a giant puppet named Little Amal on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_190...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Fatima Al-Omari is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH2_304...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Mahmoud Al-Omari works in his garden in Al-Mazar. He is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH2_299...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Fatima Al-Omari works in her garden in Al-Mazar. She is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH2_298...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Fatima Al-Omari shows her garden to Mohammad Salem, Lutheran World Federation area manager, Irbid. Fatima's family is one of many who have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH2_295...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Fatima Al-Omari (left) and her husband Mahmoud Al-Omari (right) work in their garden in Al-Mazar. They are among many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH2_297...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Mahmoud Al-Omari opens a barrel in his garden in Al-Mazar. The barrels are used to keep rain water collected via drain pipes in times of the year when there is no water in the houses taps. Mahmoud is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH1_140...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Fatima Al-Omari works in her garden in Al-Mazar. She is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH1_141...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Mahmoud Al-Omari oversees a water cistern in Al-Mazar, used to salvage rainwater from a drain pipe in a time of the year when there is no water in the houses taps. Mahmoud is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH1_137...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: 26-year-old CAR refugee Bahene Felix (right) acts as community mobilizer in the Ngam refugee camp, here working a field alongside Sali Farimatou Bouda (left). In collaboration with the LWF, Felix oversees and guides the work of a group of CAR refugees trained by the Lutheran World Federation in modern farming techniques. By keeping a strict ratio of how many seeds to sow per hectare, and by sowing Cassava and Groundnut together, they are able to both increase harvests and retain soil fertility over a longer time. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Ngam refugee camp, located in the Meiganga municipality, Adamaoua region of Cameroon, hosts 7,228 refugees from the Central African Republic, across 2,088 households.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190604_AH2_327...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: Issa Hawaou is one of a group of CAR refugees trained by the Lutheran World Federation in modern farming techniques. By keeping a strict ratio of how many seeds to sow per hectare, and by sowing Cassava and Groundnut together, they are able to both increase harvests and retain soil fertility over a longer time. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Ngam refugee camp, located in the Meiganga municipality, Adamaoua region of Cameroon, hosts 7,228 refugees from the Central African Republic, across 2,088 households.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190604_AH1_440...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: Nouhou Rafiatou and her son Hamadou work a field near the Ngam refugee camp. Rafiatou is part of a group of CAR refugees trained by the Lutheran World Federation in modern farming techniques. By keeping a strict ratio of how many seeds to sow per hectare, and by sowing Cassava and Groundnut together, they are able to both increase harvests and retain soil fertility over a longer time. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Ngam refugee camp, located in the Meiganga municipality, Adamaoua region of Cameroon, hosts 7,228 refugees from the Central African Republic, across 2,088 households.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190604_AH1_434...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: A group of CAR refugees of the Ngam refugee camp, trained by the Lutheran World Federation in modern farming techniques, work their fields. By keeping a strict ratio of how many seeds to sow per hectare, and by sowing Cassava and Groundnut together, they are able to both increase harvests and retain soil fertility over a longer time. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Ngam refugee camp, located in the Meiganga municipality, Adamaoua region of Cameroon, hosts 7,228 refugees from the Central African Republic, across 2,088 households.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190604_AH1_436...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: Nouhou Rafiatou and her son Hamadou work a field near the Ngam refugee camp. Rafiatou is part of a group of CAR refugees trained by the Lutheran World Federation in modern farming techniques. By keeping a strict ratio of how many seeds to sow per hectare, and by sowing Cassava and Groundnut together, they are able to both increase harvests and retain soil fertility over a longer time. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Ngam refugee camp, located in the Meiganga municipality, Adamaoua region of Cameroon, hosts 7,228 refugees from the Central African Republic, across 2,088 households.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190604_AH1_433...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: Sali Farimatou Bouda shows a basket full of 'Bolo leaf' (Sesame) which she has picked to add flavour as she cooks meat and fish. Farimatou is one of a group of CAR refugees trained by the Lutheran World Federation in modern farming techniques. By keeping a strict ratio of how many seeds to sow per hectare, and by sowing Cassava and Groundnut together, they are able to both increase harvests and retain soil fertility over a longer time. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Ngam refugee camp, located in the Meiganga municipality, Adamaoua region of Cameroon, hosts 7,228 refugees from the Central African Republic, across 2,088 households.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190604_AH1_431...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: 26-year-old CAR refugee Bahene Felix acts as community mobilizer in the Ngam refugee camp. In collaboration with the LWF, he oversees and guides the work of a group of CAR refugees trained by the Lutheran World Federation in modern farming techniques. By keeping a strict ratio of how many seeds to sow per hectare, and by sowing Cassava and Groundnut together, they are able to both increase harvests and retain soil fertility over a longer time. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Ngam refugee camp, located in the Meiganga municipality, Adamaoua region of Cameroon, hosts 7,228 refugees from the Central African Republic, across 2,088 households.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190604_AH1_430...jpg
  • 1 April 2022, Nyumanzi refugee settlement, Adjumani district, Uganda: Nursery worker Makel Chol Deng undertakes weeding in a bed of teak seeds sown at a tree nursery in the Nyumanzi refugee settlement. A 43-year-old farmer from Jonglei, South Sudanese refugee Makel Chol Deng supports an LWF project producing more than 150,000 tree seedlings on an annual basis. “When I arrived here, the environment here was nothing like this. Now we are planting trees, and it shows the importance of taking care of our environment,” he says. The Nyumanzi refugee settlement, in Adjumani district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 50,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda.
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220401_AH2_371...jpg
  • 1 April 2022, Nyumanzi refugee settlement, Adjumani district, Uganda: Nursery worker Makel Chol Deng undertakes weeding in a bed of teak seeds sown at a tree nursery in the Nyumanzi refugee settlement. A 43-year-old farmer from Jonglei, South Sudanese refugee Makel Chol Deng supports an LWF project producing more than 150,000 tree seedlings on an annual basis. “When I arrived here, the environment here was nothing like this. Now we are planting trees, and it shows the importance of taking care of our environment,” he says. The Nyumanzi refugee settlement, in Adjumani district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 50,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda.
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220401_AH2_370...jpg
  • 1 April 2022, Nyumanzi refugee settlement, Adjumani district, Uganda: Nursery worker Makel Chol Deng undertakes weeding in a bed of teak seeds sown at a tree nursery in the Nyumanzi refugee settlement. A 43-year-old farmer from Jonglei, South Sudanese refugee Makel Chol Deng supports an LWF project producing more than 150,000 tree seedlings on an annual basis. “When I arrived here, the environment here was nothing like this. Now we are planting trees, and it shows the importance of taking care of our environment,” he says. The Nyumanzi refugee settlement, in Adjumani district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 50,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda.
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220401_AH2_369...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: A giant puppet named Little Amal, brought onto the COP26 plenary hall stage by climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_191...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: Climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa brings onto the plenary hall stage a giant puppet named Little Amal on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_188...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: Climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa brings onto the plenary hall stage a giant puppet named Little Amal on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_187...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: Climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa brings onto the plenary hall stage a giant puppet named Little Amal on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_186...jpg
  • 9 November 2021, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: Climate activist Brianna Fruean from Samoa brings onto the plenary hall stage a giant puppet named Little Amal on Gender Day at COP26 in Glasgow. The 3.5 meter puppet, called 'Little Amal', represents a ten-year-old Syrian refugee girl, and has travelled 8,000 kilometreson foot from the Syrian border to Machester over a period of four months in the lead-up to COP26. Little Amal brings to the conference, a bag full of 'seeds of hope', seeking to raise awareness of the plight of refugee children, especially girls, in view of the climate crisis. Glasgow hosts the United Nations climate change conference COP26, where world leaders gather to negotiate a response to the ongoing climate crisis and emergency.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20211109_AH1_191...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Mahmoud Al-Omari (right), his wife Fatima (centre) and son Hassan (left) are among families to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH2_307...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Mahmoud Al-Omari carries a hatchet through his garden in Al-Mazar. He is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH2_305...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Crops grow in a garden in Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, a Lutheran World Federation project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH2_301...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Crops grow in a garden in Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, a Lutheran World Federation project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH2_301...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Fatima Al-Omari walks in her garden in Al-Mazar. She is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH2_301...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Mahmoud Al-Omari fetches tools from a shed in his garden in Al-Mazar. He is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH1_143...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Fatima Al-Omari works in her garden in Al-Mazar. She is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH1_140...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: A man cuts up wood at a farm near the Ngam refugee camp. A group of CAR refugees have been trained by the Lutheran World Federation in modern farming techniques. By keeping a strict ratio of how many seeds to sow per hectare, and by sowing Cassava and Groundnut together, they are able to both increase harvests and retain soil fertility over a longer time. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Ngam refugee camp, located in the Meiganga municipality, Adamaoua region of Cameroon, hosts 7,228 refugees from the Central African Republic, across 2,088 households.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190604_AH1_436...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: 26-year-old CAR refugee Bahene Felix acts as community mobilizer in the Ngam refugee camp. In collaboration with the LWF, he oversees and guides the work of a group of CAR refugees trained by the Lutheran World Federation in modern farming techniques. By keeping a strict ratio of how many seeds to sow per hectare, and by sowing Cassava and Groundnut together, they are able to both increase harvests and retain soil fertility over a longer time. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Ngam refugee camp, located in the Meiganga municipality, Adamaoua region of Cameroon, hosts 7,228 refugees from the Central African Republic, across 2,088 households.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190604_AH1_430...jpg
  • 16 February 2020, Irbid, Jordan: Fatima Al-Omari works in her garden in Al-Mazar. She is one of many beneficiaries to recently have received support from the LWF in setting up home-based farming in the area of Al-Mazar. By providing tools and seeds, the project has helped 150 families grow food for themselves and, in some cases, also earn an income from selling their surplus at local markets.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200216_AH1_137...jpg