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  • Two cousins dressed up as princes and their attendants leave the house of a relative during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4006.jpg
  • Saguaro cactuses on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA.
    4637.jpg
  • An Uru Murato fisherman returns from a fishing trip with the catch in a wooden box strapped to his back at Lago Poopo, the Altiplano, Bolivia. He walks over the dry bed of the partially dried up lake.
    3667.jpg
  • Attendants dance with boys dressed up as princes on their shoulders on their way to the house of some relatives during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. One of the relatives throws rice on them as a blessing.
    4333.jpg
  • Attendants dance and carry boys dressed up as princes on their shoulders at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3988.jpg
  • A Saguaro cactus on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4631.jpg
  • A monk shaves the head of a Shan boy during Poy Sang Long, a yearly ceremony at which boys are ordained as novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. The shaving takes place inside the Buddhist temple Wat Hua Wiang. Practically every Shan boy goes through this three-day ceremony sometime between the age of eight and fourteen. After the ordination, the boy spends about one month in a Buddhist monastery and then usually returns to normal life again.
    3975.jpg
  • A man gives rice to novice monks who walk the streets with their food bowls early in the morning, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4078.jpg
  • Young Buddhist monks wear their new robes at Wat Hua Wiang in Mae Hong Son, Thailand, following the annual Poy Sang Long festival. Poy Sang Long is a lavish three-day festival where young and adolescent Shan boys are treated as royalty before being ordained as novice monks.
    3841.jpg
  • An attendant carries a boy dressed up as a prince down the stairs of his home after a break in the ordination ceremonies, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. The boy takes part in the Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks.
    4015.jpg
  • Two cousins about to become novice monks pose for a photograph with their families during Poy Sang Long, the ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4009.jpg
  • Procession with young boys dressed up as princes during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003. On the horse in front rides the invisible guardian spirit of the town.
    3990.jpg
  • Attendant dances with a boy on his shoulders during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003. The boy is dressed up as a prince in rememberance of the Buddha.
    3989.jpg
  • A small Shan orchestra plays in a temple at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3986.jpg
  • Boys pose for photgraphs after they have been dressed up as princes at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks in Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3978.jpg
  • In rememberance of the Buddha, family members dress a boy in princely clothes inside a temple during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3985.jpg
  • An Apache girl plays basketball in the back yard of her home in Bylas, on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4583.jpg
  • An Apache girl puts on her camp dress and moccasins in her home on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4576.jpg
  • An Apache girl learns how to make corn bread as part of the preparation for her Sunrise Dance, a first menstruation rite, on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004. Her mother looks out through the kitchen door. The Sunrise Dance is the most important ceremony of the Apache Indians. It is held during the summer, within one year after the girl has had her first menstruation, and lasts for four days. The ceremony is an enactment of the Apache creation myth and during the rites the girl ’becomes‘ Changing Woman, a mythical female figure, and comes into possession of her healing powers. The rites are also supposed to prepare the girl for adulthood and to give her a long and healthy life without material wants.
    4579.jpg
  • A sign when entering the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4587.jpg
  • A novice monk carries a food bowl during a morning alms walk in the streets of Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003. People will put food into the bowl as an offering, thereby gaining religious merit.
    4027.jpg
  • Novice monks walk the streets with their food bowls early in the morning, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003. People will stop them on the way to put food into their bowls as an offering.
    4026.jpg
  • Novice monks walk the streets with their food bowls early in the morning, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. People will stop them on the way to put food into their bowls as an offering.
    4025.jpg
  • On the final day of the Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, a monk passes the orange shirt over the head of a boy, a signal that he has become a novice monk and may now put on the rest of his orange robes, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003.
    4028.jpg
  • Boys dressed in princely clothes prostrate themselves and show respect to monks inside Wat  Hua Wiang at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. The monks are holding the orange robes that the boys will wear when they have become novice monks. The princely clothing is worn in memory of the Buddha who was a prince before becoming a monk. Practically every Shan boy goes through this ceremony sometime between the age of eight and fourteen. After the ordination, the boy spends about one month in a Buddhist monastery and then usually returns to normal life again.
    4019.jpg
  • An actress and singer performs in a temple yard during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. She belongs to a traditional Shan theatre group.
    4017.jpg
  • Attendants dance with boys dressed up as princes on their shoulders at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4327.jpg
  • An Apache girl dressed in camp dress on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4577.jpg
  • Hon-Dah Casino sign on the Fort Apache Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004. The Hon-Dah Casino is owned by the local Apache tribe.
    5041.jpg
  • Musicians play their instruments during a traditional Shan theatre performance at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks in Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4334.jpg
  • Shan women wears traditional bamboo hats at a procession during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4329.jpg
  • A boy puts on his princely clothes after a break in the ceremonies at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3996.jpg
  • Point of Pines Lake, the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation, Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4632.jpg
  • An Apache ranger working for the San Carlos Wildlife and Recreation Department, the San Carlos Indian Reservation, Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4593.jpg
  • An Apache woman decorates a traditional baby cradle with beads on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    5042.jpg
  • Mount Triplet on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4630.jpg
  • Wickiups, traditional Apache dwellings, set up outside the White Mountain Apache Cultural Center, Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4598.jpg
  • Two women greet novice monks with reverence when offering them food early in the morning, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3839.jpg
  • Novice monks walk the streets with their food bowls early in the morning, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003. People will stop them on the way to put food into their bowls as an offering.
    4024.jpg
  • Two cousins get dressed up as princes in their home after a break in the ordination ceremonies, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. The boys take part in the Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks.
    4014.jpg
  • An old woman throws rice at one of her great grandsons while he dances on the shoulders of a relative during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4012.jpg
  • Relatives dance with  boys dressed up as princes on their shoulders at  Poy Sang Long,  a yearly ceremony at which boys are ordained as novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. The princely clothing is worn in memory of the Buddha who was a prince before becoming a monk. Practically every Shan boy goes through this three-day ceremony sometime between the age of eight and fourteen. After the ordination, the boy spends about one month in a Buddhist monastery and then usually returns to normal life again.
    4011.jpg
  • Mother feeds her son with twelve different dishes in the temple as part of the Poy Sang Long, the ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4008.jpg
  • An overloaded pickup transports the family and attendants of two cousins who go on a trip to visit their older relatives during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4003.jpg
  • An overloaded pickup during the Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, in Mae Hong Son, Thailand. Before the boys become novice monks they are dressed like princes and treated like royalty for three days, in honor of the Buddha. Their feet may not touch the ground, so they are carried by attendants, but when it is too far to walk, they may take a car.
    4068.jpg
  • Women carry the robes of the novice monks during a procession at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4002.jpg
  • A young man, about to become a monk, during a procession at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4332.jpg
  • A young man, about to become a monk, holds a lotus flower between his hands during a procession at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4000.jpg
  • Shan woman wears a traditional bamboo hat at a procession during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3998.jpg
  • A boy who is dressed up as a prince sits on the shoulders of a man with tattooed arms at a procession during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3991.jpg
  • Attendants dance with boys dressed up as princes on their shoulders at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3987.jpg
  • Attendants carry boys dressed up as princes on their shoulders at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks in Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3980.jpg
  • Shan boy gets his head shaved during Poy Sang Long, a ceremony att which boys are ordained as novice monks in Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3840.jpg
  • A Shan boy gets his head shaved during Poy Sang Long, a yearly ceremony at which boys are ordained as novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. The shaving takes place inside the Buddhist temple Wat Hua Wiang. Practically every Shan boy goes through this three-day ceremony sometime between the age of eight and fourteen. After the ordination, the boy spends about one month in a Buddhist monastery and then usually returns to normal life again.
    4324.jpg
  • An Apache drum and drumstick  on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA.
    4551.jpg
  • An Apache woman decorates a traditional baby cradle with beads on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4636.jpg
  • An Apache mother and daguhter in intimate conversation at a meal break during a Sunrise Dance, the first menstruation rite of an Apache girl, on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. They are both dressed in camp dresses.
    4542.jpg
  • An Apache girl plays basketball in the back yard of her home in Bylas, on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4582.jpg
  • An Apache girl dressed in  camp dress and moccasins on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4543.jpg
  • An Apache girl puts on her camp dress and moccasins in her home on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004. Her sister helps her with the moccasins.
    4575.jpg
  • An Apache girl learns how to make corn bread as part of the preparation for her Sunrise Dance, a first menstruation rite, on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004. The Sunrise Dance is the most important ceremony of the Apache Indians. It is held during the summer, within one year after the girl has had her first menstruation, and lasts for four days. The ceremony is an enactment of the Apache creation myth and during the rites the girl ’becomes‘ Changing Woman, a mythical female figure, and comes into possession of her healing powers. The rites are also supposed to prepare the girl for adulthood and to give her a long and healthy life without material wants.
    4580.jpg
  • As part of the preparation for her Sunrise Dance, an Apache girl learns how to make bread from her mother, on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004. The Sunrise Dance, a first menstruation rite, is the most important ceremony of the Apache Indians. It is held during the summer, within one year after the girl has had her first menstruation, and lasts for four days. The ceremony is an enactment of the Apache creation myth and during the rites the girl ’becomes‘ Changing Woman, a mythical female figure, and comes into possession of her healing powers. The rites are also supposed to prepare the girl for adulthood and to give her a long and healthy life without material wants.
    4544.jpg
  • An Apache girl sits together with her sister in the sister's bedroom on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA.
    4574.jpg
  • Cars parked outside a family home on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4572.jpg
  • A maid makes up a room in the Best Western Motel attached to the Apache Gold Casino on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4639.jpg
  • Guests check in at the Best Western Motel, the Apache Gold Casino, on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4634.jpg
  • The small town of Peridot on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4627.jpg
  • An Apache policeman beside his car on the Fort Apache Reservation, Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4595.jpg
  • A sign at Geronimo Pass, the Fort Apache Indian Reservation, Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4592.jpg
  • Two Apache children on horseback at a rodeo on The Fort Apache Indian Reservation, Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4596.jpg
  • Buildings of Fort Apache, the old cavalry fort on the Fort Apache Indian Reservation, Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4633.jpg
  • Bread figurines representing dead family members for sale at Todos Santos in Oruro, Bolivia. In the Altiplano of Bolivia, it is customary that a family, in which there has been a death within the last three years, build a shrine at home at Todos Santos, decorating it with religious symbols as well as a picture of the deceased and food and drink that he or she liked, and then call down the spirit for a three day visit. The bread is particularly important. There are pieces of bread shaped like human beings, representing the dead, and there are also pieces with the shape of various old Inca symbols such as the sun and the moon.
    4088.jpg
  • A novice monk just after he has been ordained at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination ceremonies in Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003.
    4023.jpg
  • Relatives dance in the family yard together with boys dressed up as princes during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003.
    4016.jpg
  • A boy dressed up as a prince rides on the shoulders of an attendant at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003.
    3994.jpg
  • Procession with young boys dressed up as princes during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003. The invisible guardian spirit of the town rides on the horse in front.
    4326.jpg
  • Attendants carry boys dressed up as princes on their shoulders at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks in Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003.
    3979.jpg
  • Three boys dressed up as princes in remembrance of the Buddha stand inside a temple during Poy Sang Long, the ordination of novice monks in Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003.
    3977.jpg
  • A boy with palliative cream applied to his head after it has been shaved at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003.
    3982.jpg
  • Attendants carry boys dressed up as princes on their shoulders at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks in Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4322.jpg
  • A boy dressed up as a prince rides on the shoulders of an attendant at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4323.jpg
  • A  young novice monk shortly after he has gone through the Poy Sang Long, the ordination of novice monks, in Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003.
    4072.jpg
  • On the final day of the Poy Sang Long, the ordination of novice monks, family members help the boys put on their orange robes, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4020.jpg
  • An aunt helps a boy with his makeup after a rest at home during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4013.jpg
  • Realtives dance with boys dressed up as princes on their shoulders at Poy Sang Long, the ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4010.jpg
  • Two boys dressed up as princes visit relatives during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4438.jpg
  • Attendants dance with boys dressed up as princes on their shoulders while they approach the house of some relatives during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4004.jpg
  • A young man, about to become a monk, during a procession at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4331.jpg
  • A tapesa, a mound of plates, given as an offering to the temple during Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3999.jpg
  • A monk receives a group of boys dressed up as princes inside a temple at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    3995.jpg
  • Attendant dances with a boy on his shoulders at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. The boy is dressed up as prince in rememberance of the Buddha.
    3993.jpg
  • Attendants carry boys dressed up as princes on their shoulders at Poy Sang Long, the yearly ordination of novice monks in Mae Hong Son, Thailand.
    4325.jpg
  • Boy gets water poured over him after he has been shaved at Poy Sang Long, the ordination of novice monks, Mae Hong Son, Thailand
    3976.jpg
  • Old cliff dwelling on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation, Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4597.jpg
  • A portrait from behind of an Apache girl with long hair on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004. The girl is dressed in camp dress and moccasins.
    4578.jpg
  • An Apache girl sits together with her grandmother in their livingroom on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4573.jpg
  • A statue of an Apache warrior on a hill overlooking the greens of the Apache Stronghold Golf Club on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004.
    4591.jpg
  • A statue of an Apache Indian in front of the Apache Gold Casino on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona, USA. June 2004. In his hands he holds a staff and a ring used in the traditional hoop game.
    4590.jpg
  • A street sign at Fort Apache on the Fort Apache Indian Reservation, Arizona, USA, commemorating General Crook, the famous general who employed the Apache Indians as scouts in the cavalry. June 2004.
    4635.jpg
  • On the final day of the Poy Sang Long, the ordination of novice monks, family members help the boys put on their orange robes, Mae Hong Son, Thailand. April 2003.
    4021.jpg
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Anders Ryman

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