Jay Dunn: Journalism for Social Justice

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    • Nomads of Tidene, Niger
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  • Mexico, Yucatan Peninsula, October, 2010. Mexico's Yucatan peninsula holds treasures both above and below its verdant surface, with Mayan ruins, Christian churches, azure "cenotes" deep in limestone caverns, and pristine stretches of beach for spectacular coastal properties. Home to traditions both indigenous and colonial, this area of southern Mexico encompasses the states of Yucatan, Quintana Roo, Campeche and Tabasco. Photographs commissioned by SECTUR.
    JDunn yucatan_060.jpg
  • Mexico, Yucatan Peninsula, October, 2010. Mexico's Yucatan peninsula holds treasures both above and below its verdant surface, with Mayan ruins, Christian churches, azure "cenotes" deep in limestone caverns, and pristine stretches of beach for spectacular coastal properties. Home to traditions both indigenous and colonial, this area of southern Mexico encompasses the states of Yucatan, Quintana Roo, Campeche and Tabasco. Photographs commissioned by SECTUR.
    JDunn yucatan_069.jpg
  • Mexico, Yucatan Peninsula, October, 2010. Mexico's Yucatan peninsula holds treasures both above and below its verdant surface, with Mayan ruins, Christian churches, azure "cenotes" deep in limestone caverns, and pristine stretches of beach for spectacular coastal properties. Home to traditions both indigenous and colonial, this area of southern Mexico encompasses the states of Yucatan, Quintana Roo, Campeche and Tabasco. Photographs commissioned by SECTUR.
    JDunn yucatan_059.jpg
  • Mexico, Yucatan Peninsula, October, 2010. Mexico's Yucatan peninsula holds treasures both above and below its verdant surface, with Mayan ruins, Christian churches, azure "cenotes" deep in limestone caverns, and pristine stretches of beach for spectacular coastal properties. Home to traditions both indigenous and colonial, this area of southern Mexico encompasses the states of Yucatan, Quintana Roo, Campeche and Tabasco. Photographs commissioned by SECTUR.
    JDunn yucatan_030.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities.
    JDunn jalisco_002.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_008.JPG
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_007.JPG
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_002.jpg
  • Mexico, Yucatan Peninsula, October, 2010. Mexico's Yucatan peninsula holds treasures both above and below its verdant surface, with Mayan ruins, Christian churches, azure "cenotes" deep in limestone caverns, and pristine stretches of beach for spectacular coastal properties. Home to traditions both indigenous and colonial, this area of southern Mexico encompasses the states of Yucatan, Quintana Roo, Campeche and Tabasco. Photographs commissioned by SECTUR.
    JDunn yucatan_062.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_009.JPG
  • Josselyn Melanie Cuauhyolotzin, center, during her coming-of-age ceremony on February 9th. In a colorful indigenous ritual celebrated in Salinas, Aztec teachers, dancers, family and friends gathered together to perform an Aztec “xilonen” ritual for Cuauhyolotzin at the home of her parents. The elaborate ceremony marks the transition from childhood to maidenhood, and is the spiritual basis in Mexican tradition for the “quinceanera.”
    130827 JD eaglewarrior51.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities.
    JDunn jalisco_008.JPG
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_013.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities.
    JDunn jalisco_021.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_043.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_005.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities.
    JDunn jalisco_043.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities.
    JDunn jalisco_031.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_041.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_038.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_037.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_036.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_031.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_030.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_028.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_027.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_026.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_025.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_024.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_022.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_020.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_019.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_018.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_017.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_016.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_014.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_011.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_004.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_003.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_045.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_044.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_040.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_039.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_035.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_033.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_032.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_029.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_021.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_015.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_012.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_010.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_001.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_042.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_034.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_023.jpg
  • Mexico, Jalisco, Guadalajara, May 20-23, 2011. From museums to mariachi, three days based in Guadalajara, Mexico's second-largest city, allows a taste of Jalisco's many cultural offerings. Day trips from the city center include tequila distillery tours, relaxing in the shade of centuries-old haciendas, and the cool water of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest, with its indigenous towns, craft fairs and quiet lakeside communities. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JDunn jalisco_006.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
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  • China, Anye Machen, 2007. These hardy souls tend yak at 15,000 feet near Anye Machen, a mountain sacred to Buddhists. Subsisting almost entirely on their animals, they are self-sufficient in a forbidding place..
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  • 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
  • MEXICO, Veracruz, Tantoyuca, Oct 27- Nov 4, 2009. Costumed “xantolo” dancers perform at the Preparatorio Benito Juarez in Tantoyuca. “Xantolo,” the Nahuatl word for “Santos,” or holy, marks a week-long period during which the whole Huasteca region of northern Veracruz state prepares for “Dia de los Muertos,” the Day of the Dead. For children on the nights of October 31st and adults on November 1st, there is costumed dancing in the streets, and a carnival atmosphere, while Mexican families also honor the yearly return of the souls of their relatives at home and in the graveyards, with flower-bedecked altars and the foods their loved ones preferred in life. Photographs for HOY by Jay Dunn.
    JDunn xantolo_049.JPG
  • MEXICO, Veracruz, Tantoyuca, Oct 27- Nov 4, 2009. Dancers prepare to perform at the Preparatorio Benito Juarez in Tantoyuca. “Xantolo,” the Nahuatl word for “Santos,” or holy, marks a week-long period during which the whole Huasteca region of northern Veracruz state prepares for “Dia de los Muertos,” the Day of the Dead. For children on the nights of October 31st and adults on November 1st, there is costumed dancing in the streets, and a carnival atmosphere, while Mexican families also honor the yearly return of the souls of their relatives at home and in the graveyards, with flower-bedecked altars and the foods their loved ones preferred in life. Photographs for HOY by Jay Dunn.
    JDunn xantolo_045.JPG
  • MEXICO, Veracruz, Tantoyuca, Nov 1- Nov 4, 2009. Making the souls of the dead feel welcome as they return for a yearly visit, Mexicans in this tropical state offer not only elaborate feasts and flower-filled altars, but dancing as well. Masked bands of performers called “cuadrillos” rehearse for months their choreography, rich with symbolic roles for men, women, devils, and death itself, then over the course of two nights regale both graveyards and city streets with whoops of laughter, raise-the-roof dancing and music until dawn. Photographs for HOY by Jay Dunn.
    JDunn Santos_045.jpg
  • MEXICO, Veracruz, Tantoyuca, Nov 1- Nov 4, 2009. Making the souls of the dead feel welcome as they return for a yearly visit, Mexicans in this tropical state offer not only elaborate feasts and flower-filled altars, but dancing as well. Masked bands of performers called “cuadrillos” rehearse for months their choreography, rich with symbolic roles for men, women, devils, and death itself, then over the course of two nights regale both graveyards and city streets with whoops of laughter, raise-the-roof dancing and music until dawn. Photographs for HOY by Jay Dunn.
    JDunn Santos_008.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 21-22, 2011. True faith suffuses every aspect of Teotitlan del Valle's painstaking recreation of the last hours of Jesus, from Thursday's afternoon's Last Supper through to a night vigil at a jail cell after his arrest. Village elders play the parts of the twelve apostles, and the town's devout fill the church for mass and communion, for the ritual washing of the disciple's feet, and for multiple gatherings which mark the hours. Good Friday dawns with music, scripture, and a solemn procession of Christ, the Virgin Mary and the town's own radiant“Virgen Dolorosa” through the streets.
    JDunn OAX faith_004.jpg
  • Mexico, Yucatan, Mayapan, October 17, 2010. Mayan high priest Ildelfonso Ake Cocom conducts a "saka" purification ceremony on the grounds of Mayapan, a ruined Yucatecan capital city dating from the period between 1220 and 1240 AD. Photographs commissioned by SECTUR.
    JDunn mayapan_001.JPG
  • Mexico, Chihuahua, July 5-20, 2010. Undaunted by blistering desert temperatures, the 15th annnual "Cabalgata Villista," an epic horse trek from Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua to Hacienda Canutillo in Durango met with enthusiastic crowds on its route southward through Satevo and Valle de Zaragoza. Armed with fresh horses and a patriotic spirit, new "jinetes" (riders) join the cavalcade from small towns along the way, which welcome the participants of this long dusty journey. Started in 1996 by José Socorro Salcido Gómez, the "cabalgata" in memory of Mexican revolutionary general Pancho Villa has a particular poignancy this bicentennial year. Photographs commissioned by the Chihuahua Department of Tourism.
    JDunn cabal_043.jpg
  • Mexico, Chihuahua, July 5-20, 2010. Undaunted by blistering desert temperatures, the 15th annnual "Cabalgata Villista," an epic horse trek from Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua to Hacienda Canutillo in Durango met with enthusiastic crowds on its route southward through Satevo and Valle de Zaragoza. Armed with fresh horses and a patriotic spirit, new "jinetes" (riders) join the cavalcade from small towns along the way, which welcome the participants of this long dusty journey. Started in 1996 by José Socorro Salcido Gómez, the "cabalgata" in memory of Mexican revolutionary general Pancho Villa has a particular poignancy this bicentennial year. Photographs commissioned by the Chihuahua Department of Tourism.
    JDunn cabal_027.jpg
  • Mexico, Chihuahua, July 5-20, 2010. Undaunted by blistering desert temperatures, the 15th annnual "Cabalgata Villista," an epic horse trek from Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua to Hacienda Canutillo in Durango met with enthusiastic crowds on its route southward through Satevo and Valle de Zaragoza. Armed with fresh horses and a patriotic spirit, new "jinetes" (riders) join the cavalcade from small towns along the way, which welcome the participants of this long dusty journey. Started in 1996 by José Socorro Salcido Gómez, the "cabalgata" in memory of Mexican revolutionary general Pancho Villa has a particular poignancy this bicentennial year. Photographs commissioned by the Chihuahua Department of Tourism.
    JDunn cabal_008.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all.
    JD Teotitlan_Via_0039.jpg
  • Mexico, Federal District, Mexico City, September 15-16, 2010. The 200th anniversary of Mexico's independence from Spain was celebrated with a tremendous country-wide effort marked by careful planning and a generous spirit. Mexico City was host to the most spectacular events, assisted by thousands of organizers, officials, artists, soldiers and citizens.
    JD Mex bicent 01.JPG
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JD Teotitlan_Via_0045.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JD Teotitlan_Via_0033.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JD Teotitlan_Via_0023.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JD Teotitlan_Via_0022.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JD Teotitlan_Via_0021.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JD Teotitlan_Via_0018.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JD Teotitlan_Via_0017.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JD Teotitlan_Via_0016.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JD Teotitlan_Via_0010.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JD Teotitlan_Via_0006.jpg
  • Mexico, Oaxaca, Teotitlan del Valle, April 18, 2011. On a moody Monday in southern Mexico, the Zapotec townspeople of Oaxaca's Teotitlan del Valle reenact all fourteen Stations of the Cross through this mountain community's winding cobblestone streets. From the first station, where Jesus is condemned to die, to the last, where he is laid in his tomb, somber processions accompanied by flowers, singers and a brass band stop at each refuge, adorned with "tapetes" created by master carpet weavers and blessed with food and drink for all. Multimedia and more at www.mexicoculturalcalendar.com
    JD Teotitlan_Via_0002.jpg
  • Laos, Luang Nam Tha, 2003. Though this tiny Buddhist temple, or "wat," is far from town, it is home to two young brothers, who maintain it with care.
    JDUNN-folio-59.jpg
  • Laos, Luang Nam Tha, 2003. A backward glance, an afternoon forever recalled, of sunshine and quiet in rural Laos.
    JDUNN-folio-58.jpg
  • Sri Lanka, Kandy, 2006. A lesson in lamp lighting at Sri Dada Maligawa, the Temple of the Tooth. Spiritual center for the Sinhalese, Kandy was the last Sri Lankan city to fall to European colonizers.
    JDUNN-folio-55.jpg
  • Japan, Kyoto, 1999. Sensuous roof-lines are graced by autumn color at Kyoto's magnificent Ninna-ji Shinto shrine.
    JDUNN-folio-49.jpg
  • India, Maharashtra, Nasik, 2007. In the soft light of early morning, the hands of a "sadhu" or holy man, relax in meditation.
    JDUNN-folio-45.jpg
  • Laos, Vientiane, 2003. Lifeline for all, the Mekong River traverses Laos, enabling trade, communication and transport for thousands who depend on it.
    JDUNN-folio-44.jpg
  • Japan, Kanazawa, 1999. Old and young alike celebrate Hyakumangoku, marking one million "goku" of rice produced in the northern Honshu area.
    JDUNN-folio-41.jpg
  • Laos, Luang Nam Tha, 2003. Afternoon light in Luang Prabang reveals a sublime golden goddess rising skyward like a lotus.
    JDUNN-folio-37.jpg
  • India, Karnataka, Gokarna, 2006. A Keralan Hindu priest carries the symbolic birth fire backwards for over five miles to initiate the evening's prayers.
    JDUNN-folio-30.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.
    JDUNN-folio-23.jpg
  • BURMA (MYANMAR) Yangon Division, Thanlyin, 2003. These rock breakers paused for only a moment during their punishingly difficult work. It is common to find women  and young men like these on road crews.
    JDUNN-folio-22.jpg
  • BURMA (MYANMAR), Mandalay Division, Bagan, 2003. Four young monks return home, in a rhythm unchanged for centuries. Only a small percentage of the temples on the Bagan plain have active communities.
    JDUNN-folio-18.jpg
  • Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh City, 2002. The week-long Tet New Year festival is celebrated all over Vietnam. Near Cholon, Buddhists gather to burn heady clouds of incense.
    JDUNN-folio-12.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. 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. 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
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