Albin Hillert Photography

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  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Construction site at the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre, for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms. An institution of the ELCT closely linked with the Lutheran World Federation from the outset in the early 1960s, the hospital serves today some 800-1,000 outpatients on a daily basis.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH2_0...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Lutheran World Federation General Secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt and Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania Presiding Bishop Dr Fredrick Shoo together with hospital staff and other colleagues gather around a  foundational stone at a construction site for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH1_5...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Construction site at the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre, for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms. An institution of the ELCT closely linked with the Lutheran World Federation from the outset in the early 1960s, the hospital serves today some 800-1,000 outpatients on a daily basis.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH1_5...jpg
  • 16 November 2018, San José de León, Mutatá, Antioquia, Colombia: Construction work rarely stops in the village. Horses help move wooden logs from one site to another, to help construction of new houses and homes. Following the 2016 peace treaty between FARC and the Colombian government, a group of ex-combatant families have purchased and now cultivate 36 hectares of land in the territory of San José de León, municipality of Mutatá in Antioquia, Colombia. A group of 27 families first purchased the lot of land in San José de León, moving in from nearby Córdoba to settle alongside the 50-or-so families of farmers already living in the area. Today, 50 ex-combatant families live in the emerging community, which hosts a small restaurant, various committees for community organization and development, and which cultivates the land through agriculture, poultry and fish farming. Though the community has come a long way, many challenges remain on the way towards peace and reconciliation. The two-year-old community, which does not yet have a name of its own, is located in the territory of San José de León in Urabá, northwest Colombia, a strategically important corridor for trade into Central America, with resulting drug trafficking and arms trade still keeping armed groups active in the area. Many ex-combatants face trauma and insecurity, and a lack of fulfilment by the Colombian government in transition of land ownership to FARC members makes the situation delicate. Through the project De la Guerra a la Paz (‘From War to Peace’), the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Colombia accompanies three communities in the Antioquia region, offering support both to ex-combatants and to the communities they now live alongside, as they reintegrate into society. Supporting a total of more than 300 families, the project seeks to alleviate the risk of re-victimization, or relapse into violent conflict.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20181116_AH2_534...jpg
  • 17 December 2016, Cairo, Egypt: Construction workers repair the interior of the Coptic Orthodox Monastery of the Holy Virgin Mary, Elsourian.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20161217_AHP_899...jpg
  • 17 December 2016, Cairo, Egypt: Construction workers at the Coptic Orthodox Saint Bishoy Monastery.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20161217_AHP_893...jpg
  • 28 February 2020, Jerusalem: Construction site in preparation on the Augusta Victoria Hospital campus on the Mount of Olives.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200228_AH2_671...jpg
  • 28 February 2020, Jerusalem: Construction site in preparation on the Augusta Victoria Hospital campus on the Mount of Olives.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200228_AH1_488...jpg
  • 11 January 2018, Marrakesh, Morocco: Construction workers repairing a road in the Marrakesh Medina. The Marrakesh Medina, listed as a UNESCO World Heritate site, forms an old fortified city centre of narrow streets, shops and vendor stalls. The city of Marrakesh was founded in 1070-1072, and has long been a political, economic and cultural centre.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180111_AH1_551...jpg
  • 28 February 2020, Jerusalem: Construction site in preparation on the Augusta Victoria Hospital campus on the Mount of Olives.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200228_AH2_672...jpg
  • 28 February 2020, Jerusalem: Construction site in preparation on the Augusta Victoria Hospital campus on the Mount of Olives.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200228_AH1_488...jpg
  • 16 November 2018, San José de León, Mutatá, Antioquia, Colombia: Manuel and his friends have spent three days mounting a new wooden house construction in the community of San José de León. The wooden parts of the house are expected to be finalized within a period of two weeks. Following the 2016 peace treaty between FARC and the Colombian government, a group of ex-combatant families have purchased and now cultivate 36 hectares of land in the territory of San José de León, municipality of Mutatá in Antioquia, Colombia. A group of 27 families first purchased the lot of land in San José de León, moving in from nearby Córdoba to settle alongside the 50-or-so families of farmers already living in the area. Today, 50 ex-combatant families live in the emerging community, which hosts a small restaurant, various committees for community organization and development, and which cultivates the land through agriculture, poultry and fish farming. Though the community has come a long way, many challenges remain on the way towards peace and reconciliation. The two-year-old community, which does not yet have a name of its own, is located in the territory of San José de León in Urabá, northwest Colombia, a strategically important corridor for trade into Central America, with resulting drug trafficking and arms trade still keeping armed groups active in the area. Many ex-combatants face trauma and insecurity, and a lack of fulfilment by the Colombian government in transition of land ownership to FARC members makes the situation delicate. Through the project De la Guerra a la Paz (‘From War to Peace’), the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Colombia accompanies three communities in the Antioquia region, offering support both to ex-combatants and to the communities they now live alongside, as they reintegrate into society. Supporting a total of more than 300 families, the project seeks to alleviate the risk of re-victimization, or relapse into violent conflict.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20181116_AH2_541...jpg
  • 16 November 2018, San José de León, Mutatá, Antioquia, Colombia: Manuel and his friends have spent three days mounting a new wooden house construction in the community of San José de León. The wooden parts of the house are expected to be finalized within a period of two weeks. Following the 2016 peace treaty between FARC and the Colombian government, a group of ex-combatant families have purchased and now cultivate 36 hectares of land in the territory of San José de León, municipality of Mutatá in Antioquia, Colombia. A group of 27 families first purchased the lot of land in San José de León, moving in from nearby Córdoba to settle alongside the 50-or-so families of farmers already living in the area. Today, 50 ex-combatant families live in the emerging community, which hosts a small restaurant, various committees for community organization and development, and which cultivates the land through agriculture, poultry and fish farming. Though the community has come a long way, many challenges remain on the way towards peace and reconciliation. The two-year-old community, which does not yet have a name of its own, is located in the territory of San José de León in Urabá, northwest Colombia, a strategically important corridor for trade into Central America, with resulting drug trafficking and arms trade still keeping armed groups active in the area. Many ex-combatants face trauma and insecurity, and a lack of fulfilment by the Colombian government in transition of land ownership to FARC members makes the situation delicate. Through the project De la Guerra a la Paz (‘From War to Peace’), the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Colombia accompanies three communities in the Antioquia region, offering support both to ex-combatants and to the communities they now live alongside, as they reintegrate into society. Supporting a total of more than 300 families, the project seeks to alleviate the risk of re-victimization, or relapse into violent conflict.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20181116_AH1_897...jpg
  • 5 January 2018, Azzaden Valley, Morocco: Villagers in the Azaden valley in Morocco are building a concrete water conduit, to lead part of the water from the valley’s central river down to the village of Azrafsan. The construction is undertaken with support from the Moroccan government, in an effort to support life in the countryside and make sure more people can stay in their home villages, rather than to move to the country’s urban areas.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180105_AH1_496...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Teacher Gabi Kamel (left) leads students Mohammad, Mohammad and Abdel in constructing a window frame, during class in Aluminium work at the vocational training centre in Beit Hanina. The Lutheran World Federation's vocational training centre in Beit Hanina offers vocational training for Palestinian youth across a range of different professions, providing them with the tools needed to improve their chances of finding work.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH2_600...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Students Sami (left) and Mohammad (right) work on constructing a window frame, during class in Aluminium work at the vocational training centre in Beit Hanina. The Lutheran World Federation's vocational training centre in Beit Hanina offers vocational training for Palestinian youth across a range of different professions, providing them with the tools needed to improve their chances of finding work.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH1_413...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Students Sami (left) and Mohammad (right) work on constructing a window frame, during class in Aluminium work at the vocational training centre in Beit Hanina. The Lutheran World Federation's vocational training centre in Beit Hanina offers vocational training for Palestinian youth across a range of different professions, providing them with the tools needed to improve their chances of finding work.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH1_413...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Students work on constructing a window frame, during class in Aluminium work at the vocational training centre in Beit Hanina. The Lutheran World Federation's vocational training centre in Beit Hanina offers vocational training for Palestinian youth across a range of different professions, providing them with the tools needed to improve their chances of finding work.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH1_412...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal: A young man works on constructing a house in the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal, which hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees. On 12-19 September 2018, the Lutheran World Federation General Secretary Rev. Dr Martin Junge visits Nepal. He will participate in the 75th anniversary celebrations of the Nepal Evangelical Lutheran Church, an LWF member church, and visit development projects run by the church. He will also visit the LWF country program, which is involved in humanitarian relief and development work in a range of areas, supporting refugees, offering relief work to those most affected by the 2015 earthquake, flood victims, among other projects.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH2_409...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal: Two young men work on constructing a house in the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal, which hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees. On 12-19 September 2018, the Lutheran World Federation General Secretary Rev. Dr Martin Junge visits Nepal. He will participate in the 75th anniversary celebrations of the Nepal Evangelical Lutheran Church, an LWF member church, and visit development projects run by the church. He will also visit the LWF country program, which is involved in humanitarian relief and development work in a range of areas, supporting refugees, offering relief work to those most affected by the 2015 earthquake, flood victims, among other projects.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH2_410...jpg
  • 2 April 2022, Palorinya settlement, Obongi district, Uganda: Houses in the Palorinya refugee settlement in the West Nile area of northern Uganda. The Palorinya refugee settlement, in Obongi district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 128,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. Palorinya is the second largest refugee settlement in Uganda. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda.
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220402_AH2_419...jpg
  • 23 May 2022, Taganrog, Russia: Children walk through the Romashka sports and recreation complex in Zolotaya Kosa, southwest Russia near the border to Ukraine. Romashka hosts several hundred refugees from the Donbas region in Ukraine, most of them children from orphanages formerly in the Donbas region of Ukraine, evacuated as military tensions grew in eastern Ukraine and along the border between Ukraine and Russia in mid-February 2022. While the refugees receive Russian state support for accommodation and meals, the Russian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) also accompany them, providing spiritual and psychosocial support, as well as processing and responding to individual or more specific requests or needs expressed by the refugees.
    Russia-2022-Hillert-20220523_AH2_841...jpg
  • 2 April 2022, Palorinya settlement, Obongi district, Uganda: A man drives a nail as he works on building a roof on top of a house in the Orinya village of the Palorinya refugee settlement in Obongi district, northern Uganda. The Palorinya refugee settlement, in Obongi district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 128,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. Palorinya is the second largest refugee settlement in Uganda. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda.
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220402_AH2_454...jpg
  • 2 April 2022, Palorinya settlement, Obongi district, Uganda: A man drives a nail as he works on building a roof on top of a house in the Orinya village of the Palorinya refugee settlement in Obongi district, northern Uganda. The Palorinya refugee settlement, in Obongi district, West Nile area of northern Uganda, hosts more than 128,000 refugees, the majority of which arrived following the eruption of war in South Sudan in 2013. Palorinya is the second largest refugee settlement in Uganda. The refugees and host communities in the area receive support from the Lutheran World Federation World Service program in Uganda.
    Uganda-2022-Hillert-20220402_AH2_454...jpg
  • 1 April 2022, Nyumanzi refugee settlement, Adjumani district, Uganda: 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_398...jpg
  • 1 April 2022, Nyumanzi refugee settlement, Adjumani district, Uganda: 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_397...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: The letters 'LWF' followed by children and other community members' handmarks decorate a wall of the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_377...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A girl plays in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_353...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A boy plays while his mother waits for him to finish, in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_353...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A girl touches her forehead after having a small star attached there by her nanny at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_350...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A boy plays in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_352...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A boy plays in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_350...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A girl plays in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_347...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A bot plays in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_346...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: Children play in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_345...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: The Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH1_212...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A mother joins to see children play in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH1_167...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Class in Aluminium work is underway at the vocational training centre in Beit Hanina. The Lutheran World Federation's vocational training centre in Beit Hanina offers vocational training for Palestinian youth across a range of different professions, providing them with the tools needed to improve their chances of finding work.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH2_602...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Students (left to right) Mohammad, Mohammad, Majd and Sami work on building a window frame, during class in Aluminium work at the vocational training centre in Beit Hanina. The Lutheran World Federation's vocational training centre in Beit Hanina offers vocational training for Palestinian youth across a range of different professions, providing them with the tools needed to improve their chances of finding work.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH2_600...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Students in Aluminium work at the vocational training centre in Beit Hanina. The Lutheran World Federation's vocational training centre in Beit Hanina offers vocational training for Palestinian youth across a range of different professions, providing them with the tools needed to improve their chances of finding work.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH1_415...jpg
  • 24 February 2020, Jerusalem: Palestinian child Murad is five years old. At the age of one, he was diagnosed and treated for Hepatoblastoma,  a rare malignant liver cancer occurring in infants and children. Today, he is at the Augusta Victoria Hospital in Jerusalem for a CT Scan and follow up.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200224_AH2_541...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: The Lutheran World Federation's vocational training centre in Beit Hanina offers vocational training for Palestinian youth across a range of different professions, providing them with the tools needed to improve their chances of finding work.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH1_411...jpg
  • 24 February 2020, Jerusalem: Palestinian child Murad is five years old. At the age of one, he was diagnosed and treated for Hepatoblastoma, a rare malignant liver cancer occurring in infants and children. Today, he is at the Augusta Victoria Hospital in Jerusalem for a CT Scan and follow up. Here, playing with Sarah Faroun from Bethany, one of the hospital nurses.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200224_AH1_352...jpg
  • 24 February 2020, Jerusalem: Palestinian child Murad is five years old. At the age of one, he was diagnosed and treated for Hepatoblastoma, a rare malignant liver cancer occurring in infants and children. Today, he is at the Augusta Victoria Hospital in Jerusalem for a CT Scan and follow up. Here, playing with Sarah Faroun from Bethany, one of the hospital nurses.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200224_AH1_350...jpg
  • 24 February 2020, Jerusalem: Palestinian child Murad is five years old. At the age of one, he was diagnosed and treated for Hepatoblastoma, a rare malignant liver cancer occurring in infants and children. Today, he is at the Augusta Victoria Hospital in Jerusalem for a CT Scan and follow up. Here, playing with Sarah Faroun from Bethany, one of the hospital nurses.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200224_AH1_350...jpg
  • 24 February 2020, Jerusalem: Palestinian child Murad is five years old. At the age of one, he was diagnosed and treated for Hepatoblastoma,  a rare malignant liver cancer occurring in infants and children. Today, he is at the Augusta Victoria Hospital in Jerusalem for a CT Scan and follow up.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200224_AH1_350...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: CAR refugee Moussa Inoussa mounts a steel plate as roof of a latrine in the Ngam refugee camp. 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_337...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: CAR refugee Moussa Inoussa (right) and Dengui Amadou (left) mount a steel plate as roof of a latrine in the Ngam refugee camp. 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_460...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: CAR refugee Mbele Felixe helps dismantle a building in the Ngam refugee camp. Deemed unsafe for use after days of strong wind, the building must be torn down and rebuilt in order to serve again as a distribution for food and other materials to the refugees. 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_422...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: CAR refugee Mbele Felixe helps dismantle a building in the Ngam refugee camp. Deemed unsafe for use after days of strong wind, the building must be torn down and rebuilt in order to serve again as a distribution for food and other materials to the refugees. 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_420...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal:  Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH2_409...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal:  Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH2_402...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal:  Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH1_756...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal:  Laundry hangs to dry outside a home in the Beldangi refugee camp. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH1_757...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal:  A disabled man rests by the door to his home in the Beldangi refugee camp. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH1_755...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal:  Lutheran World Federation general secretary Rev. Dr Martin Junge visits a home in the Beldangi refugee camp. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH1_752...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal:  Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees. Here, inside one of the camp's many homes.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH1_755...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal:  Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH1_752...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal:  Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH1_752...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal:  A man and a woman carve sticks by their home in the Beldangi refugee camp. Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH1_750...jpg
  • 12 January 2018, Marrakesh, Morocco: The Marrakesh Medina, listed as a UNESCO World Heritate site, forms an old fortified city centre of narrow streets, shops and vendor stalls. The city of Marrakesh was founded in 1070-1072, and has long been a political, economic and cultural centre.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180112_AH1_561...jpg
  • 6 January 2018, Imlil, Morocco: Although heavy snowfall means heavy work for the villagers in cleaning up rooftops and roads, it is also a welcome contribution, as the snow helps attract tourists to the area, as well as secure water supplies to local agriculture.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180106_AH1_510...jpg
  • 5 January 2018, Azzaden Valley, Morocco: The village of Azrafsan.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180105_AH1_493...jpg
  • 8 December 2017, Oslo, Norway: Oslo City Hall 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_20171208_AHP_138...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: The Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_377...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A boy plays in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_352...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A girl plays in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_347...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A bot plays in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH2_346...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A girl plays in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH1_168...jpg
  • 17 February 2020, Zarqa, Jordan: A boy plays while his mother waits for him to finish, in 'the nanny room' at the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa. Through a variety of activities, the Lutheran World Federation community centre in Zarqa serves to offer psychosocial support and strengthen social cohesion between Syrian, Iraqi and other refugees in Jordan and their host communities.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200217_AH1_167...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Teacher Gabi Kamel leads class in Aluminium work at the vocational training centre in Beit Hanina. The Lutheran World Federation's vocational training centre in Beit Hanina offers vocational training for Palestinian youth across a range of different professions, providing them with the tools needed to improve their chances of finding work.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH2_599...jpg
  • 24 February 2020, Jerusalem: Palestinian child Murad is five years old. At the age of one, he was diagnosed and treated for Hepatoblastoma, a rare malignant liver cancer occurring in infants and children. Today, he is at the Augusta Victoria Hospital in Jerusalem for a CT Scan and follow up. Here, playing with Sarah Faroun from Bethany, one of the hospital nurses.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200224_AH2_542...jpg
  • 24 February 2020, Jerusalem: Palestinian child Murad is five years old. At the age of one, he was diagnosed and treated for Hepatoblastoma, a rare malignant liver cancer occurring in infants and children. Today, he is at the Augusta Victoria Hospital in Jerusalem for a CT Scan and follow up. Here, playing with Sarah Faroun from Bethany, one of the hospital nurses.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200224_AH1_353...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Empty plot in Beit Hanina.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH1_424...jpg
  • 24 February 2020, Jerusalem: Palestinian child Murad is five years old. At the age of one, he was diagnosed and treated for Hepatoblastoma,  a rare malignant liver cancer occurring in infants and children. Today, he is at the Augusta Victoria Hospital in Jerusalem for a CT Scan and follow up.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200224_AH1_349...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: CAR refugee Moussa Inoussa (left) and Dengui Amadou (right) make the hole for a ventilation pipe in a steel plate to be mounted as roof of a latrine in the Ngam refugee camp. 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_336...jpg
  • 4 June 2019, Meiganga, Cameroon: CAR refugee Moussa Inoussa (centre) helps dismantle a building in the Ngam refugee camp. Deemed unsafe for use after days of strong wind, the building must be torn down and rebuilt in order to serve again as a distribution for food and other materials to the refugees. 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_423...jpg
  • 14 September 2018, Damak, Nepal:  Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Beldangi refugee camp in the Jhapa district of Nepal hosts more than 5,000 Bhutanese refugees.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180914_AH1_752...jpg
  • 5 January 2018, Tinzert, Morocco: The village of Tinzert is at least 600 years old. Built on the mountainside at 1600 meters, the village was originally used only in the summers, when warm weather made life too hot in the valley below. Inhabited mostly by farmers, the village has grown to become the full-year residence of a couple of hundred Moroccan Berbers.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180105_AH1_485...jpg
  • 14 December 2016, Cairo, Egypt: A broken vase on the ground at night in the halls of the Anaphora Institute, a Coptic Orthodox retreat and educational centre located north-west of Cairo.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20161214_AHP_452...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Lutheran World Federation general secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt dresses up to enter a construction site of the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre where she is to join Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania Presiding Bishop Dr Fredrick Shoo in unveiling a foundational stone for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms. An institution of the ELCT closely linked with the Lutheran World Federation from the outset in the early 1960s, the hospital serves today some 800-1,000 outpatients on a daily basis.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH2_0...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Lutheran World Federation general secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt dresses up to enter a construction site of the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre where she is to join Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania Presiding Bishop Dr Fredrick Shoo in unveiling a foundational stone for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms. An institution of the ELCT closely linked with the Lutheran World Federation from the outset in the early 1960s, the hospital serves today some 800-1,000 outpatients on a daily basis.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH2_0...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Lutheran World Federation General Secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt and Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania Presiding Bishop Dr Fredrick Shoo together with hospital staff and other colleagues gather around a  foundational stone at a construction site for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH1_5...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania Presiding Bishop Dr Fredrick Shoo (left) and Lutheran World Federation General Secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt (right) unveil a foundational stone at a construction site for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH1_5...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Accompanied by Lutheran World Federation Vice-President for the Africa region Rev. Dr Jeannette Ada Maina (left) and Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre executive director Prof. Dr Gileard Masenga (right), Lutheran World Federation general secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt (mid-left) enters a construction site at the KCMC together with Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania Presiding Bishop Dr Fredrick Shoo (mid-right) where they are to unveil a foundational stone for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms. An institution of the ELCT closely linked with the Lutheran World Federation from the outset in the early 1960s, the hospital serves today some 800-1,000 outpatients on a daily basis.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH1_5...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Foundational stone at a construction site for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH2_0...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania Presiding Bishop Dr Fredrick Shoo (right) shares a word of prayer before a ribbon is cut by Lutheran World Federation General Secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt (left) at a construction site for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH2_0...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania Presiding Bishop Dr Fredrick Shoo dresses up to enter a construction site of the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre where he is to join Lutheran World Federation general secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt in unveiling a foundational stone for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms. An institution of the ELCT closely linked with the Lutheran World Federation from the outset in the early 1960s, the hospital serves today some 800-1,000 outpatients on a daily basis.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH2_0...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Lutheran World Federation general secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt dresses up to enter a construction site of the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre where she is to join Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania Presiding Bishop Dr Fredrick Shoo in unveiling a foundational stone for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms. An institution of the ELCT closely linked with the Lutheran World Federation from the outset in the early 1960s, the hospital serves today some 800-1,000 outpatients on a daily basis.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH2_0...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Lutheran World Federation general secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt (centre) and Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania Presiding Bishop Dr Fredrick Shoo (left) are invited to fill out a form at a construction site for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms. An institution of the ELCT closely linked with the Lutheran World Federation from the outset in the early 1960s, the hospital serves today some 800-1,000 outpatients on a daily basis.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH1_5...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Lutheran World Federation General Secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt cuts a ribbon before unveiling a foundational stone at a construction site for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH1_5...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Lutheran World Federation General Secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt cuts a ribbon before unveiling a foundational stone at a construction site for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH1_5...jpg
  • 26 March 2022, Moshi, Tanzania: Lutheran World Federation general secretary Rev. Anne Burghardt (centre) dresses up to enter a construction site of the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre where she is to join Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania Presiding Bishop Dr Fredrick Shoo (left) in unveiling a foundational stone for what is to become a hostel for cancer patients to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre of the ELCT. Having to undergo medical treatment for a long time, many cancer patients of the KCMC are known to struggle with accommodation during the period of their treatment. Particularly for children, even if the treatment itself is offered for free, offering accommodation is necessary to enable them to complete their treatment. To remedy this, the KCMC is undertaking the construction of a hostel for cancer patients, planned to offer a total of 60 rooms. An institution of the ELCT closely linked with the Lutheran World Federation from the outset in the early 1960s, the hospital serves today some 800-1,000 outpatients on a daily basis.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH1_5...jpg
  • 28 January 2019, Wada IDP site, near Micha kebele, Seweyna woreda, Bale Zone, Oromia, Ethiopia: After training in Water, Sanitaion and Hygiene (WASH) by the LWF, and construction of a number of emergency latrines in the area, a group of internally displaced people have constructed their own latrine in the Wada IDP site. The Lutheran World Federation supports internally displaced people in several regions of Ethiopia, through emergency response on water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) as well as long-term development and empowerment projects, to help build resilience and adapt communities’ lifestyles to a changing climate.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190128_AH1_206...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Dahiet Al-Salam, in the Shufat Camp area of Jerusalem, has been closed off by the Israeli authorities' construction of the separation wall that runs through Jerusalem.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH2_611...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Dahiet Al-Salam, in the Shufat Camp area of Jerusalem, has been closed off by the Israeli authorities' construction of the separation wall that runs through Jerusalem.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH1_426...jpg
  • 26 February 2020, Abu Dis, Palestine: 43-year-old construction worker Ziad Halabeye from Abu Dis visits the Augusta Victoria Hospital's Mobile Diabetes Clinic. In an effort to make Diabetes services more accessible to people in the West Bank, the Augusta Victoria Hospital offers a Mobile Diabetes Clinic, which moves around to various locations in the West Bank, offering screening and routine testing for Diabietes and the symptoms it causes.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200226_AH2_614...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Dahiet Al-Salam, in the Shufat Camp area of Jerusalem, has been closed off by the Israeli authorities' construction of the separation wall that runs through Jerusalem.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH2_611...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Dahiet Al-Salam, in the Shufat Camp area of Jerusalem, has been closed off by the Israeli authorities' construction of the separation wall that runs through Jerusalem.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH2_611...jpg
  • 25 February 2020, Jerusalem: Dahiet Al-Salam, in the Shufat Camp area of Jerusalem, has been closed off by the Israeli authorities' construction of the separation wall that runs through Jerusalem.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20200225_AH1_426...jpg
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