Saturday, October 8, 2016

In Sight: Heartbreaking images of the pets left behind during Hurricane Katrina

These Indonesians unearth their deceased loved ones every few years; Haunting traces left behind by ISIS in Libya; These portraits reveal the ‘anonymous phantoms’ of Colombia’s FARC; Stunning photos that tell the story of the Panama Canal expansion; In case you missed it: Heartbreaking photos show what it’s like living in a walled city of a brothel; The brilliant photos of the first American female war photographer killed in action;
 
In Sight
A curated view of your world in photographs
 
 
Heartbreaking images of the pets left behind during Hurricane Katrina
In 2005, Hurricane Katrina forced residents from their homes. Here are the pets they had to leave behind.
These Indonesians unearth their deceased loved ones every few years
The Torajans observe some of the most complex funerary traditions in the world.
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Haunting traces left behind by ISIS in Libya
Photographer Lorenzo Tugnoli and writer Sudarsan Rhagavan go on a a journey through the topography of war and ambition
 
These portraits reveal the ‘anonymous phantoms’ of Colombia’s FARC
The Post's Nick Miroff and photographer Joao Pina travel to a remote camp along the Amazonian savannas of eastern Colombia for the FARC's final assembly as an armed insurgency.
 
Stunning photos that tell the story of the Panama Canal expansion
Photographer Andrew Kaufman's book, "The Isthmus," looks at the Panama Canal expansion project and life in Panama.
 
In Case You Missed It
Heartbreaking photos show what it’s like living in a walled city of a brothel
Photographer Sandra Hoyn visits the 200-year-old Kandapara brothel in Bangladesh.
 
The brilliant photos of the first American female war photographer killed in action
Dickey Chapelle, one of the first female war photographers, risked her life to capture history on world stages from Iwo Jima to the Vietnam War. 
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