Albin Hillert Photography

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  • 26 March 2022,  Moshi, Tanzania: Crops grow at the Ushirika wa Neema, Lutheran Sisters’ (Deaconesses) Convent of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania. The convent accommodates 62 sisters vowed to lifelong service. At the convent, they take care of farming and livestock, and engage in a variety of diaconal activities in surrounding communities.
    Tanzania-2022-Hillert-20220326_AH1_6...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
  • 5 January 2018, Auguni, Morocco: The name of the village of Auguni, located in the Azzaden Valley in the Atlas Mountains in Morocco, means "warm hill". The village is named for its strategic location, offering ample warm light even in the coldest winter months. In what in the winter may appear a barren landscape, sunlit shelves on the mountainside provide pockets of warmth for plants and crops to grow.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180105_AH1_501...jpg
  • 12 September 2015: Mud road and old cottage barn in the UNESCO world heritage site of Vinales, Cuba.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20150912_DSC_475...jpg
  • 23 May 2022, Rostov, Russia: Field in the Rostov-Oblast region, Russia.
    Russia-2022-Hillert-20220523_AH2_827...jpg
  • 23 May 2022, Rostov, Russia: Field in the Rostov-Oblast region, Russia.
    Russia-2022-Hillert-20220523_AH2_826...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: 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: 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: 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
  • 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
  • 30 May 2019, Mokolo, Cameroon: 13-year-old Mairamou Zra and her family work their field, sowing groundnut near the Minawao camp for Nigerian refugees. From the village of Gadala, the family forms part of the host community in the area around the camp. The Minawao camp for Nigerian refugees, located in the Far North region of Cameroon, hosts some 58,000 refugees from North East Nigeria. The refugees are supported by the Lutheran World Federation, together with a range of partners.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190530_AH1_239...jpg
  • 30 May 2019, Mokolo, Cameroon: 13-year-old Mairamou Zra and her family work their field, sowing groundnut near the Minawao camp for Nigerian refugees. From the village of Gadala, the family forms part of the host community in the area around the camp. The Minawao camp for Nigerian refugees, located in the Far North region of Cameroon, hosts some 58,000 refugees from North East Nigeria. The refugees are supported by the Lutheran World Federation, together with a range of partners.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190530_AH2_253...jpg
  • 30 May 2019, Mokolo, Cameroon: 13-year-old Mairamou Zra and her family work their field, sowing groundnut near the Minawao camp for Nigerian refugees. From the village of Gadala, the family forms part of the host community in the area around the camp. The Minawao camp for Nigerian refugees, located in the Far North region of Cameroon, hosts some 58,000 refugees from North East Nigeria. The refugees are supported by the Lutheran World Federation, together with a range of partners.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190530_AH1_238...jpg
  • 17 September 2018, Kavre district, Nepal: Maiya Devi Tiwari (second from the right), chair of the collection centre in Maidan, receives Lutheran World Federation general secretary Rev. Dr Martin Junge. In the community of Maidan, villagers have started to practice semi-commercial vegetable farming, through support from the LWF World Service programme's Post-Earthquake Rehabilitation and Livelihood Recovery Project. Through a collection centre, villagers gather what surplus they have, and bring it collectively to the market in the nearby town of Kuntabesi.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180917_AH1_124...jpg
  • 17 September 2018, Kavre district, Nepal: In the community of Maidan, Kavre district, villagers have started to practice semi-commercial vegetable farming, through support from the LWF World Service programme's Post-Earthquake Rehabilitation and Livelihood Recovery Project. Through a collection centre, villagers gather what surplus they have, and bring it collectively to the market in the nearby town of Kuntabesi.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180917_AH1_119...jpg
  • 4 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_20180104_AH1_475...jpg
  • 4 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_20180104_AH1_474...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: 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: 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 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: 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
  • 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
  • 17 September 2018, Kavre district, Nepal: In the community of Maidan, Kavre district, villagers have started to practice semi-commercial vegetable farming, through support from the LWF World Service programme's Post-Earthquake Rehabilitation and Livelihood Recovery Project. Through a collection centre, villagers gather what surplus they have, and bring it collectively to the market in the nearby town of Kuntabesi.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180917_AH1_127...jpg
  • 17 September 2018, Kavre district, Nepal: In the community of Maidan, Kavre district, villagers have started to practice semi-commercial vegetable farming, through support from the LWF World Service programme's Post-Earthquake Rehabilitation and Livelihood Recovery Project. Through a collection centre, villagers gather what surplus they have, and bring it collectively to the market in the nearby town of Kuntabesi.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180917_AH1_128...jpg
  • 17 September 2018, Kavre district, Nepal: In the community of Maidan, Kavre district, villagers have started to practice semi-commercial vegetable farming, through support from the LWF World Service programme's Post-Earthquake Rehabilitation and Livelihood Recovery Project. Through a collection centre, villagers gather what surplus they have, and bring it collectively to the market in the nearby town of Kuntabesi.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180917_AH1_126...jpg
  • 17 September 2018, Kavre district, Nepal: In the community of Maidan, Kavre district, villagers have started to practice semi-commercial vegetable farming, through support from the LWF World Service programme's Post-Earthquake Rehabilitation and Livelihood Recovery Project. Through a collection centre, villagers gather what surplus they have, and bring it collectively to the market in the nearby town of Kuntabesi.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180917_AH1_119...jpg
  • 7 March 2018, Arusha, Tanzania: Elhadi prepares the field to grow onions, in Usa River. The Usa River 2 project is supported by the Meru Diocese of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania's Sustainable Livelihood programme, designed to support sustainable agriculture through biogas production and diverse practices, so as to keep the soil in good shape through many decades of work on the land.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180307_AH2_874...jpg
  • 7 March 2018, Arusha, Tanzania: Hussein prepares the field to grow onions, in Usa River. The Usa River 2 project is supported by the Meru Diocese of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania's Sustainable Livelihood programme, designed to support sustainable agriculture through biogas production and diverse practices, so as to keep the soil in good shape through many decades of work on the land.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180307_AH1_043...jpg
  • 4 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_20180104_AH1_471...jpg
  • 4 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_20180104_AH1_469...jpg
  • 7 March 2018, Arusha, Tanzania: Hussein prepares the field to grow onions, in Usa River. The Usa River 2 project is supported by the Meru Diocese of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania's Sustainable Livelihood programme, designed to support sustainable agriculture through biogas production and diverse practices, so as to keep the soil in good shape through many decades of work on the land.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180307_AH1_043...jpg
  • 5 June 2019, Gado, Cameroon: Victorine Issowe is part of the host community in Gado, which has received more than 25,000 refugees from nearby Central African Republic. Today she is part of a group of 10 women, five from the host community and five refugees, who run a grain store for women. At a storage building in central Gado, they sell grains and flour, and rent out space for farmers who need space to store their own crops before consumption. The grain store has grown out of a livelihood-supporting activity of the Lutheran World Federation's World Service programme, and the women make sure to save 2,000 CAF per person every month, so they can also help other people in the community, particularly people with special needs.  Supported by the Lutheran World Federation, the Gado refugee camp in he East region of Cameroon hosts more than 25,000 refugees from neighbouring Central African Republic.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190605_AH1_466...jpg
  • 31 January 2019, Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples' Region, Ethiopia: Through the Mekane Yesus Food Security Project for Lemo Community, the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus' development wing Development and Social Services Commission helps women raise their socio-economic status through community banking efforts and education, and helps improve communities' food security through training in agricultural methods suitable in a changing climate. Farmer Berkefet Desta Wodajo is one of the traditional community leaders. “Before, my wife and I would keep our money in different places. Now, we save it together. And we work more closely together. Today, we both go into the garden to prepare it for our crops. And we feel we have a better relationship too.”
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20190131_AH1_229...jpg