Jay Dunn: Journalism for Social Justice

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  • Travel Essays
    • Nomads of Tidene, Niger
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    • The Singers of Bani, Burkina Faso
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    • Saints in Pakistan
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  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Traffic nightmares in Karachi, Pakistan's commercial capital, main port, and busiest city.
    JDUNN-folio-52.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. River dwellers manage to eke out a living out near Karachi's toxic and often dry waterways.
    JDUNN-folio-35.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Advice and counsel about birth control is central to the public services provided at an Edhi dispensary in Karachi.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.09.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. The Tower Center on Jinnah Road in Karachi houses administrative offices and an all-important dispatch center for Edhi ambulances.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.19.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Led by a mullah, men and women pray together at Abdullah Shah Ghazi Shrine, an unusual practice at this beautiful Sufi shrine overlooking the Arabian Sea.
    JDUNN-folio-54.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Evening prayer at the Shrine of Abdullah Shah Ghazi, a Sufi saint renowned for the fervor of his disciples.
    JDUNN-folio-07.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. These girls at the Clifton Female Child Home receive first-rate instruction, while mothers are taught survival skills to help them become independent.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.11.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. A project that is the first of its kind in Pakistan, this clinic is the future site for a free diagnostic center and one hundred bed hospital.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.10.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. These three girls are daughters of women who broke away from harmful influences to find help at the Edhi Foundation.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.14.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. At home in their original Mithadar office in the Saddar Bazaar, a portrait of a remarkable humanitarian team.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.20.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Bilquis Edhi helps manage some of the many abandoned children the Edhi Foundation raises.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.15.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Support through education and shelter at this Edhi Home for Boys helps strong young souls develop.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.05.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. A driver waits for coordination with a local hospital. The Edhi Foundation maintains the largest ambulance service in the country.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.02.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. At an Edhi Home for Boys, the lost and the forsaken find a life away from the street.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.06.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Volunteers keep records of each new arrival's health and history. Every year, the Edhi Foundation gives a second chance to hundreds of children.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.01.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Every day the Edhi Foundation takes in people with nowhere else to turn. This young girl's record is a reminder that society still cares.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.04.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Humanitarian outreach on a nationwide scale is made possible only by the unstinting public service of hundreds of volunteers.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.18.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Pakistani citizens give their time to the many ordinary tasks that keep the Edhi Foundation going.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.17.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Through Edhi Foundation training, a young man learns the trade that will sustain him the rest of his life. .
    Pakistan.JDUNN.13.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Women's education is crucial to the Edhi Foundation?s self-help philosophy.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.12.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Children's kites hang beside the orderly beds at an Edhi Home for Boys.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.07.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Edhi ambulances are dispatched to the scene of every tragedy, from road accidents to natural disasters.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.03.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Babies that are unwanted can be left in these cradles, which are placed outside every Edhi Welfare Center.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.16.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. A man waits for test results outside an Edhi Center family planning clinic.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.08.saints.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. River dwellers manage to eke out a living out near Karachi?s toxic and often dry waterways.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.04.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Two young students take a break after school along one of Karachi's many bridges.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.03.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. At central Karachi's beautiful domed Defense mosque, a Muslim man concentrates during Friday prayers.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.10.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. A moment of peace during Thursday's weekly Sufi celebrations at Abdullah Shah Ghazi's shrine near Clifton Beach in Karachi.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.06.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Traffic nightmares in Karachi, Pakistan?s commercial capital, main port, and busiest city.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.02.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Urdu script becomes part of a wall in the dilapidated center of Karachi's famous Sadaar Bazaar.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.01.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Led by a mullah, men and women pray together, an unusual practice, at this Sufi shrine overlooking the Arabian Sea.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.25.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Evening prayer at the Shrine of Abdullah Shah Ghazi, a Sufi saint renowned for the fervor of his disciples.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.09.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Karachi, 2004. Qawwal means ?utterance,? in Urdu. In this uniquely passionate form of religious music, it is believed that the singer can channel the words of God through his voice.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.12.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004. Traditional building structures in the Kalash village of Birir. Each level utilizes common walls, floors and roofs, minimizing the use of materials necessary.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.20.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004. A set of graves is brightened by April irises in a field north of Chitral in Pakistan's NWFP.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.08.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, North West Frontier Province, 2004. Visible support for Saudi Arabia's most elusive citizen finds a home along the Chitral highway in Pakistan's NWFP.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.05.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004. The NWFP is considered mountainous desert, and can be cultivated successfully only with the help of irrigation.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.24.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004. The forbidding foothills of the Hindu Kush lock in the three main Kalash villages for periods up to five months a year.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.22.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004. One teacher and the entire student body of Birir stand proudly in their brand-new school building, constructed with Kalash community development funds and local labor.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.21.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004. The matriarchal Kalash are one of the smallest remaining ethnic groups in Pakistan, numbering less than 5,000 in three main NWFP villages.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.18.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Sehwan Sharif, 2004. At the banks of the Indus River, a boy struggles to put the morning's load of firewood on the family donkey.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.07.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004. Three generations of the Lal family, based in Birir, one of the three main Kalash villages in Pakistan's NWFP.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.19.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004. Tirich Mir, at 7,705 meters, rises high above Chitral?s valley location in the NWFP. Locals braving the Hindu Kush cross into Afghanistan after a two-day hike from here.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.17.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004. Along the rough road outside Chitral, the rugged beginnings of the Hindu Kush can be seen in the early morning.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.14.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Sehwan Sharif, 2004. A young man?s deadly pride and joy in the Sindhi desert.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.15.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004. A waking dream, or only an expression. In a young Chitrali girl?s eyes, past and future side by side.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.16.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004.  As young Kalash women, Masran and Farida will have considerably more freedom that their Pakistani Muslim counterparts when they grow up.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.23.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004. On the hand of a child, wedding henna, and a welcome from Tahkt-e Bhai, a close-knit town outside Peshawar. Behind high walls, the women could be heard celebrating separately.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.13.truth.jpg
  • Pakistan, Northwest Frontier Province, 2004. Looking much like the heavy sack she is transporting, a woman waits for a ride. All-covering burqa are often seen in parts of Pakistan's NWFP.
    Pakistan.JDUNN.11.truth.jpg