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Photography

Auschwitz survivor, Iudit Varadi, 87, poses for a portrait with her family photo album at her home in Oradea, Romania on August 18, 2013. “My brother and mother died in the camps. Altogether, I lost around eighty members of my extended family in the Holocaust, so when I returned home I was alone. I had to start my life all over.” Mrs. Varadi passed away shortly after her portrait. (Photo by Daniel Owen/GroundTruth)
A New Light

After the Holocaust, a Jewish community in Romania survives despite dwindling numbers

Marcos Espinoza, 17, goes for his daily ride on his favorite horse, Maximo, at the family ranch in Bowling Green, Kentucky. Marcos is the son of immigrant parents from Guatemala and Mexico, and he wants to carry on the legacy of his culture in the United States. (Photo by Betina Garcia/GroundTruth)
Photography | March 20, 2017July 30, 2019

A Guatemalan tradition lives on at a Kentucky ranch

2) Devio pins an opponent in the 2nd round of the Maine State Championship arm wrestling tournament in South Portland, Maine, on March 12, 2016.(Photo by Adam Glanzman/GroundTruth).
Photography | February 8, 2017July 30, 2019

The 75-year-old arm wrestling champion who still keeps winning

Glenn Scott, 60, a member of the Chippewa tribe and a Vietnam veteran, participates in a march of over 2,000 veterans from the Oceti Sakowin Camp to the police road block on Backwater Bridge on Monday, Dec. 5, 2016. Thousands of veterans deployed to Standing Rock to support the protest movement, offering to act as a human shield against police force. (Photo by Angus Mordant/GroundTruth)
A New Light | December 22, 2016August 1, 2019

Documenting conflict, solidarity and snow at Standing Rock

(Photo by Iaritza Menjivar/GroundTruth)
A New Light | November 23, 2016July 16, 2019

Documenting my family as a first-generation American

Derrick Green, from Gentlemen Sheet Metal, works at his welding station. A former IT worker, Derrick remembered the huge annual packets he had to fill out to prove to management his case for a raise. Today, he enjoys sitting back and letting his union, Local 28, fight for his prevailing wage. A makeshift memorial for Thomas R. Dolphin was put up near the intersection of Meeker Avenue and Gardner Avenue in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, N.Y. (Photo by Dakota Santiago/GroundTruth)
A New Light | November 1, 2016May 12, 2019

Portraits of working class New York

Willie Johnson poses for a portrait in East New York.
Photography | August 16, 2016August 5, 2019

Raising East New York: Portraits of black fatherhood

Sia Momoh's father, an artisanal miner named Aiah Momoh, was shot and killed by police in 2007 while protesting mining activity. Sia, now 15 years old, lives with her aunts and grandmother and spends her days selling produce and butterscotch around town.
A New Light | July 22, 2016July 16, 2019

In Sierra Leone, the search for diamonds overpowers a city

A few days after her sterilization operation, Sonia Devi, 35, recuperates at home with her newborn daughter, Lovely, her fourth child, in the Begusarai District in Bihar. After she gave birth, Sonia says an asha, an accredited social health activist, told her about the option of using sterilization to limit her family size. Sonia didn't appear to be aware of other methods of birth control. (Photo by Sarah Weiser/GroundTruth)
Health | July 13, 2016July 16, 2019

In India, sterilization is sometimes the only birth control available

SNIM employees, who travel on special reserved coaches, talk in Arabic dialect while they lunch on September 30, 2015. It is custom in the desert to share food and water with the other travelers. (George Popescu/GroundTruth)
A New Light | May 3, 2016July 16, 2019

A 20-hour train ride through the Sahara Desert

A New Light | April 21, 2016July 16, 2019

Documenting everyday life around the world, one Instagram post at a time

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