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Ami Vitale

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  • Monks eat breakfast and perform morning chores in a monastery near Trashi Yengtse October 14, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    Bhutan038.jpg
  • Monks eat breakfast and perform morning chores in a monastery near Trashi Yengtse October 14, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    Bhutan094.jpg
  • Monks eat breakfast and perform morning chores in a monastery near Trashi Yengtse October 14, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    Bhutan047.jpg
  • Monks eat breakfast and perform morning chores in a monastery near Trashi Yengtse October 14, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    Bhutan041.jpg
  • Monks eat breakfast and perform morning chores in a monastery near Trashi Yengtse October 14, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    Bhutan032.jpg
  • Monks eat breakfast and perform morning chores in a monastery near Trashi Yengtse October 14, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    Bhutan030.jpg
  • Monks eat breakfast and perform morning chores in a monastery near Trashi Yengtse October 14, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    Bhutan029.jpg
  • A Monk tries to get the last pears out of a tree in Bhumthang, Bhutan October 18, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    Bhutan088.jpg
  • First year monks learn to play religious music on flutes and drums before they have to give musical exams to the Lama of Punakh Dzong October 11, 2005 in Punakha, central Bhutan. Before 1995, Punakha was the capital of Bhutan. Bhutan is a Kingdom of 753,000 people and is about 80 percent Buddhist, 15 percent Hindu.
    Bhutan031.jpg
  • A Monk tries to get the last pears out of a tree in Bhumthang, Bhutan October 18, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    Bhutan089.jpg
  • Abdilahi Musa Manga, 54, poses in the brush near Hingawali village outside Lindi, Tanzania April 28, 2006. Manga killed a female lion and also shot and injured another male lion during an outbreak of man eating. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
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  • Abdilahi Musa Manga, 54, poses in the brush near Hingawali village outside Lindi, Tanzania April 28, 2006. Manga killed a female lion and also shot and injured another male lion during an outbreak of man eating. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    DSC0195.jpg
  • Ahmad Msham, 39, a bush doctor from Chidodo settlement in Lindi, Tanzania holds a lions claw and tree roots that he uses for "white magic" when spirit lions are thought to be eating villagers. (Photo by Ami Vitale).
    _DSC0161.jpg
  • Abdilahi Musa Manga, 54, poses in the brush near Hingawali village outside Lindi, Tanzania April 28, 2006. Manga killed a female lion and also shot and injured another male lion during an outbreak of man eating. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    DSC0197b.jpg
  • Ahmad Msham, 39, a bush doctor from Chidodo settlement in Lindi, Tanzania holds a lions claw and tree roots that he uses for "white magic" when spirit lions are thought to be eating villagers. (Photo by Ami Vitale).
    _DSC0170.jpg
  • Ahmad Msham, 39, a bush doctor from Chidodo settlement in Lindi, Tanzania holds a gourd with lion's hair that he uses for "white magic" when spirit lions are thought to be eating villagers. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    _DSC0153.jpg
  • Ahmad Msham, 39, a bush doctor from Chidodo settlement in Lindi, Tanzania prepares a mix using maize flour and tree roots next to a kibuyu vessel that holds lion's hair that he uses for "white magic" when spirit lions are thought to be eating villagers. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    _DSC0133.jpg
  • Ahmad Msham, 39, a bush doctor from Chidodo settlement in Lindi, Tanzania holds a lions claw and tree roots that he uses for "white magic" when spirit lions are thought to be eating villagers. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    _DSC0109b.jpg
  • Children pretend they are lions waiting to eat a villager in the village of Simana, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
    DSC0054.jpg
  • A Tanzanian walks from his field near sunset in the village of Simana. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0337.jpg
  • A Tanzanian rides their bike home near sunset in the village of Mnolela. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0117.jpg
  • A Tanzanian woman walks through the tall grass near sunset in the village of Simana. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking fo prey.  Ami Vitale
    DSC_0120.jpg
  • A Tanzanian woman walks through the tall grass with her child near sunset in the village of Simana. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking fo prey.  Ami Vitale
    DSC_0103.jpg
  • A Tanzanian woman walks through the tall grass with her child near sunset in the village of Simana. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking fo prey.  Ami Vitale
    DSC_0101.jpg
  • A Tanzanian villager watches as lion researchers examine lion prints near the village of Navanga, Tanzania. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking fo prey.  Ami Vitale
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  • A Tanzanian woman walks through the rains near sunset in the village of Simana. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking fo prey.  Ami Vitale
    DSC_0069b.jpg
  • A Tanzanian woman walks through the tall grass near sunset in the village of Simana. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking fo prey.  Ami Vitale
    DSC_0041.jpg
  • A child sits next to a field with a tool that women use to pound maize into flour  near sunset in the village of Navanga. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    DSC_0014b.jpg
  • A Tanzanian childwalks home near sunset in the village of Usuru. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
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  • A Tanzanian woman walks home near sunset in the village of Usuru. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    DSC0101.jpg
  • A Tanzanian woman walks home near sunset in the village of Usuru. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    DSC0066.jpg
  • A Tanzanian woman walks from her field near sunset. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    DSC0032.jpg
  • A Tanzanian woman walks from her field near sunset. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    DSC0026.jpg
  • A Tanzanian walks from his field near sunset in the village of Simana. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0336.jpg
  • Villagers watch as lion researcher Dennis Ikanda and trapper Dairen Simpson look for lion prints in Navanga, Tanzania. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0112.jpg
  • A Tanzanian walks from her field near sunset in the village of Mnolela. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0101b.jpg
  • Dairen Simpson examines a lion print outside a hut in the village of Navanga, Tanzania. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0080.jpg
  • Dairen Simpson examines a lion print outside a hut in the village of Navanga, Tanzania. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0078.jpg
  • Tanzanianleave their field near sunset in the village of Usuru. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _SC0037.jpg
  • A Tanzanian woman carries firewood home near sunset in the village of Mnolela. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0271.jpg
  • Villagers watch as lion researcher Dennis Ikanda and trapper Dairen Simpson look for lion prints in Navanga, Tanzania. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0109.jpg
  • A Tanzanian woman walks from her field near sunset in the village of Mnolela. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0097.jpg
  • A Tanzanian walks from his field near sunset in the village of Mnolela. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0092.jpg
  • Mwanahamisi Hatibu works in her rice field near sunset in the village of Usuru near Lindi, Tanzania. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0041.jpg
  • A Tanzanian woman walks from her field near sunset. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    _DSC0029.jpg
  • Tanzanianleave their field near sunset in the village of Usuru. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey.  Ami Vitale
    \DSC0109.jpg
  • A Tanzanian woman carries a huge pot to make rice for her village. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking fo prey.  Ami Vitale
    SC0029.jpg
  • A Tanzanian rides their bike home near sunset in the village of Mnolela. The dense forest and tall grasses make villagers vulnerable to lion attacks. They have to stay late in the evening in their fields to protect their crops from rampaging monkeys who like to eat the rice and corn, forcing them to walk at sunset, the time of day when lions are out looking for prey. Ami Vitale
    2006_Tanzania_Lion_014.jpg
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  • Ahmad Libanda talks about his son Hasan Ahmad who was killed by a lion in their corn field in Nkung'uni village. Ami Vitale
    2006_Tanzania_Lion_011.jpg
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  • An early morning scene in the village of Navanga, Tanzania where man eatign lions have terrorized the villagers. Ami Vitale
    2006_Tanzania_Lion_05.jpg
  • Dairen Simpson begins to set up traps near the village of Simana, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
    2006_Tanzania_Lion_03.jpg
  • Hassan Dadi, who lost his arm after a lion ripped it off plays with his friends near a swimming hole inthe village of Usuru, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
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  • Dairen Simpson prepares to check the traps at sunrise near the villae of Mnolela, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
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  • Dairen Simpson, also known as "Bwana Simba" or "Mr. Lion"drags a goat through the bush to attract lions  to his scent for his traps near Simana, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
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  • The village leader of Navunga watches as Dairen Simpson lays a trap near Baghdad, the place of Osama in Tanzania. Ami Vitale
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  • Villagers carry a goat that will be used as bait to try and trap a lion as Dairen Simpson walks behind them on the way to a place they call "Baghdad" because of the dangerous lions that are known to live there.
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  • Dairen Simpson talks to villagers about lions that were walking around the village the night before in the villages of Navanga and Simana in Tanzania. He must carry a gun while he checks traps he has layed for the lions but most villagers have never seen a gun even though they are quite vulnerable ot the frequent lion attacks. Ami Vitale
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  • Ahmad Libanda stands in the corn field where his son Hasan Ahmad was killed by a lion in Nkung'uni  village. Ami Vitale
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  • A fresh lion print outside the village of Simana. Ami Vitale
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  • Dairen Simpson begins to set up traps near the village of Simana, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
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  • Quss M. Bani talks about his sister Somoe Linyambe, 40 who was the last victim of a lion attack outbreak that occurred in Nachunyu village in May 2004. Ami Vitale
    _DSC0120.jpg
  • Cosmos Mbawala stands with his wife Halima Salumu inside their hut where they stood when they heard the screams of their son, Cosmos Chakoma, 12, after he was killed by a lion in Hingawali village near Lindi, Tanzania. Cosmos, 12,  had just gone to see a lion that was killed in a nearby village that villagers had thought was responsible for killing others earlier in the month when he was attacked by this lion.  (Ami Vitale)
    _DSC0063.jpg
  • Ahmad Libanda talks about his son Hasan Ahmad who was killed by a lion in their corn field in Nkung'uni  village. Ami Vitale
    _DSC0062.jpg
  • Cosmos Mbawala stands with his wife Halima inside their hut where they stood when they heard the screams of their son, Cosmos Chakoma, 12, after he was killed by a lion in Hingawali village near Lindi, Tanzania. Cosmos, 12,  had just gone to see a lion that was killed in a nearby village that villagers had thought was responsible for killing others earlier in the month when he was attacked by this lion.  (Ami Vitale)
    _DSC0042.jpg
  • Dairen Simpson is blessed by a local bush doctor as villagers look on in Simana, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
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  • A villager near Navanga describes seeing lions roaming around the area. Ami Vitale
    _DSC0197.jpg
  • Somoe Mohamed, left, the mother of Hassan Dadi, who lost his arm after a lion ripped it off, gathers water at sunset in the village of Usuru, Tanzania. Sunrise and sunset are very dangerous times for the women to be outside because of the lion attacks. Ami Vitale
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  • Hassan Dadi, who lost his arm after a lion ripped it off plays with his friends near a swimming hole inthe village of Usuru, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
    _DSC0095.jpg
  • Hassan Dadi, who lost his arm after a lion ripped it off plays with his friends near a swimming hole inthe village of Usuru, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
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  • Hassan Dadi, 10,  who lost his arm after a lion ripped it off goes fishing with his friends near a swimming hole in the village of Usuru, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
    _DSC0051.jpg
  • Dairen Simpson, also known as "Bwana Simba" or "Mr. Lion" prepares  to set up traps to catch lions in a village near Nangali, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
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  • Tanzania: A villager sits outside his hut in Simana village, close to Baghdad, where lions have terrorized the communities.
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  • 2006_Tanzania_Lion_018.jpg
  • 2006_Tanzania_Lion_015.jpg
  • 2006_Tanzania_Lion_012.jpg
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  • Margaret teaches class 3 at the Endulen Primary school in Ngornogoro District in Tanzania September 29, 2003. She is the only Masai teacher in the school. The Masai were thrown out of the Crater in 1972 and struggle to hang onto the lands they live on now because of increasing pressure from conservationists. (Ami Vitale)
    2006_Tanzania_Lion_02.jpg
  • Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania, September 29, 2003: Wildlife graze near the Ngorongoro Crater where tourists pay extraordinary prices  to view them in luxury. Meanwhile, the Masai have been driven out of the Crater since 1972 and are not the ones profiting from the revenue brought by tourism. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2006_Tanzania_Lion_01.jpg
  • Village children collect water near sunset in the village of Simana, leaving them extremely vulnerable to lion attacks who catch them in the thick grass. Ami vitale
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  • Quss M. Bani talks about his sister Somoe Linyambe, 40 who was the last victim of a lion attack outbreak that occurred in Nachunyu village in May 2004. Ami Vitale
    DSC0153.jpg
  • Ahmad Libanda talks about his son Hasan Ahmad who was killed by a lion in their corn field in Nkung'uni  village. Ami Vitale.
    DSC0081.jpg
  • The children of Cosmos Mbawala, 55, Jumada, 5, left, and Salama, 3, sit outside their hut as their father talks about the attack of their brother Cosmos Chakoma, 12, who was killed by a lion in the village of Hingawali, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
    DSC0078.jpg
  • Cosmos Mbawala stands with his wife Halima Salumu inside their hut where they stood when they heard the screams of their son, Cosmos Chakoma, 12, after he was killed by a lion in Hingawali village near Lindi, Tanzania. Cosmos, 12,  had just gone to see a lion that was killed in a nearby village that villagers had thought was responsible for killing others earlier in the month when he was attacked by this lion.  (Ami Vitale)
    DSC0043.jpg
  • Wildlife ranger Msese plays with children near Navanga village, Tanzania.
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  • Dairen Simpson prepares to check the traps at sunrise near the villae of Mnolela, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
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  • Quss M. Bani holds his niece Fatima Musa, 7, in their village of Mnolela, Tanzania. Fatima saw her mother Somoe Linyambe, 40, get killed and eaten by a lion when she was 5 years old in the village of Nachunyu and told her uncle that a cow had taken her because she had no idea what a lion was.
    _DSC0192.jpg
  • A stray dog that was road kill is used as bait to catch lions in the village of Simana, Tanzania. (ami Vitale)
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  • Ahmad Libanda talks about his son Hasan Ahmad who was killed by a lion in their corn field in Nkung'uni  village. Ami Vitale
    _DSC0127.jpg
  • Dairen Simpson checks his shotgun that he must use ofr protection when he checks the traps inside his room in Lindi, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
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  • Hassan Dadi, who lost his arm after a lion ripped it off plays with his friends near a swimming hole inthe village of Usuru, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
    _DSC0101.jpg
  • Hassan Dadi, who lost his arm after a lion ripped it off plays with his friends near a swimming hole inthe village of Usuru, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
    _DSC0093.jpg
  • Dairen Simpson, also known as "Bwana Simba" or "Mr.  Lion" prepares to go into the field to set up traps to catch lions from the town of Linde, Tanzania. Ami Vitale
    _DSC0084.jpg
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