Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 23 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Detail of the bark of a 100-year-old Agathis tree (Agathis borneensis), the biggest in Indonesia, at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0084.jpg
  • Detail of wild mushrooms, lichen and moss growing on the bark of a tree at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0087.jpg
  • Clockwise from left: Sahara Mahama, 40. Her daughter Mariama, 4. A bucket of millet at Sahara's home in Saran Maradi, Niger. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez/CARE)..Sahara Mahama has seven sons and a daughter. She lost four other children; one of them was only 14 days old. "I lost the youngest one during the rains, in the lean season. I didn't have enough to eat." .Eating has become increasingly harder through the years, recalls Sahara. "When I was a kid, we used to have three meals: in the morning, at noon, and in the evening.? However, one meal a day has now become the norm. "It's never guaranteed, but we try." .Sahara participates in CARE's cash-for-work project. With the money she receives, she buys cereal and gives her children two meals per day.
    Slide4-RO.NER.2012.05.0080.triptych....jpg
  • A boy piles up color blocks to form a tower. <br />
Save the Children set up tents to serve as temporary classrooms in the school grounds of the Catholic Mission displacement camp in Duékoué, western Côte d'Ivoire. In these spaces, Save the Children is providing education to children under five.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0336.jpg
  • Maimouna, 11, poses for a photograph in Man, western Côte d'Ivoire, the morning before being reunited with her family. <br />
Maimouna had been separated from her family for three months, since the moment armed conflict broke out in her hometown, Duékoué, and she had to flee to Man. Save the Children facilitated the reunion with her parents and her return home.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0204.jpg
  • Clockwise from left: Sakina Moudi (left), 30, and Halima Abdou, 25. Their children Kassoumou (right), 4, and Massaoudou, 10 months. Sakina takes sorghum out of a sack at her home in Saran Maradi, Niger. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez/CARE)..Halima Abdou has five children. Sakina Moudi has six children and suffered the loss of one..Last year they harvested 40kg of cereal. "It only lasted for five days," says Sakina. This year they didn't get any crops. .In the periods without food, their husband collects and sells wood to buy yam flour. Now their husband participates in CARE's cash-for-work project and continues to sell firewood to get additional income. "With this support, we get to eat abundantly," explains Halima. "We buy millet, sorghum, and corn." They serve their children two meals per day, one in the morning and one in the evening.
    Slide2-RO.NER.2012.05.0096.triptych....jpg
  • Clockwise from left: Delou Ibrahim, 70. Her granddaughter Latifa, 8. Delou's hands hold sorrel leaves, used as a condiment, and grains of sorghum at her home in Saran Maradi, Niger. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez/CARE)<br />
<br />
Delou Ibrahim has four children and suffered the loss of nine. She has about 40 grandchildren, 16 of which live with her. <br />
"I've seen several crises. The famine in 1984 was the hardest. Rains were very weak. The stems of millet came out but the spikes gave no grain - nothing," she recalls. "Two years ago at least there were people who harvested millet, but this year the crops have been worse because of the drought and the leaf miners." Delou's last crop was 30kg, which only provided food for about two days.<br />
Delou and her family receive cash from CARE. "I get to buy cereal to feed my family, particularly my grandchildren." They have two daily meals, porridge in the morning and sorghum paste in the evening.
    Slide1-RO.NER.2012.05.0059.triptych....jpg
  • Emma, 13, poses for a photograph. In December 2010, she fled post-election violence in her home village, in western Côte d'Ivoire. She has been separated from her family for more than four months. She is temporarily living with a host family in Danané until her parents are found.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0147.jpg
  • A girl closes the backpack with school materials she just received. <br />
Save the Children distributed education kits to students at Groupe Scolaire Quartier Lycée in Man, western Côte d'Ivoire. Children received a backpack with school supplies such as pens, pencils, sharpeners, notebooks, rulers, a pair of compasses and a portable chalkboard.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0287.jpg
  • Clockwise from left: Mariama Oumarou, 55. Her granddaughter Rakia, 4. A hand holds grains of corn in Mariama's home in Saran Maradi, Niger. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez/CARE)..Mariama Oumarou has ten children and three grandchildren. Through the years she has lost four children and two grandchildren. She participates in CARE's cash-for-work project. "Not only can we buy millet and sorghum now, but also corn and condiments."
    Slide5-RO.NER.2012.05.0035.triptych....jpg
  • Clockwise from left: Maka Ali, 80. Her granddaughter Maria, 10. Maka's hands hold sorghum at her home in Saran Maradi, Niger. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez/CARE)..Maka Ali has been a widow for twenty years. She has eight children and about twenty grandchildren. She has experienced the loss of six children, four of them at an early age. "I was alone taking care of them, so I cannot say their deaths weren't related to lack of food," Maka recalls..Nobody in her family can work, so she receives a cash transfer from CARE. "When I receive the payment, I buy sorghum and maize," Maka explains. "Before this support, I couldn't; I was eating leaves."
    Slide3-RO.NER.2012.05.0048.triptych....jpg
  • Delou Ibrahim, 70, poses for a photograph at her home in Saran Maradi, Niger. <br />
Delou Ibrahim has four children and suffered the loss of nine. She has about 40 grandchildren, 16 of which live with her. <br />
"I've seen several crises. The famine in 1984 was the hardest. Rains were very weak. The stems of millet came out but the spikes gave no grain - nothing," she recalls. "Two years ago at least there were people who harvested millet, but this year the crops have been worse because of the drought and the leaf miners." Delou's last crop was 30kg, which only provided food for about two days.<br />
Delou and her family receive cash from CARE. "I get to buy cereal to feed my family, particularly my grandchildren." They have two daily meals, porridge in the morning and sorghum paste in the evening.
    RO.NER.2012.05.0059.jpg
  • Latifa, 8, poses for a photograph at her home in Saran Maradi, Niger.<br />
Her grandmother Delou Ibrahim, 70, has four children and suffered the loss of nine. She has about 40 grandchildren, 16 of which live with her. <br />
"I've seen several crises. The famine in 1984 was the hardest. Rains were very weak. The stems of millet came out but the spikes gave no grain - nothing," she recalls. "Two years ago at least there were people who harvested millet, but this year the crops have been worse because of the drought and the leaf miners." Delou's last crop was 30kg, which only provided food for about two days.<br />
Delou and her family receive cash from CARE. "I get to buy cereal to feed my family, particularly my grandchildren." They have two daily meals, porridge in the morning and sorghum paste in the evening.
    RO.NER.2012.05.0064.jpg
  • An employee draws details on a piece of stained glass using ink in the design studio of the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015. Indonesia is the country with the world's largest Muslim population, of about 205 million people. Roughly 88% of Indonesia's population is Muslim, and the nation is home to about 13% of the world's Muslims.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0093.jpg
  • An employee draws details on a piece of stained glass using ink in the design studio of the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015. Indonesia is the country with the world's largest Muslim population, of about 205 million people. Roughly 88% of Indonesia's population is Muslim, and the nation is home to about 13% of the world's Muslims.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0091.jpg
  • An employee draws details on a piece of stained glass using ink in the design studio of the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015. Indonesia is the country with the world's largest Muslim population, of about 205 million people. Roughly 88% of Indonesia's population is Muslim, and the nation is home to about 13% of the world's Muslims.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0098.jpg
  • (From left to right) Actor and environmental activist Harrison Ford, Co-Executive Producer Solly Granatstein, and Greenpeace Indonesia's forest campaigner Bustar Maitar discuss interview details in Jakarta, Indonesia. <br />
Harrison Ford visited Indonesia to learn more about deforestation, as one of the correspondents for Showtime's new documentary series about climate change Years of Living Dangerously.
    RO.IDN.2013.09.0077.jpg
  • An employee draws details on a piece of stained glass using ink in the design studio of the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015. Indonesia is the country with the world's largest Muslim population, of about 205 million people. Roughly 88% of Indonesia's population is Muslim, and the nation is home to about 13% of the world's Muslims.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0101.jpg
  • Detail of the polluted water on a rice paddy in Padamulya, Majalaya district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0032.jpg
  • Detail of the darker color of toxic waste dumped by a textile factory into the Citarum river in Majalaya district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. People living across the factory explained the color of the waste changes frequently, ranging from light blue and green to dark brown and black, depending on the dye the factory is using.  ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0018.jpg
  • Detail of a stained glass window design at the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0013.jpg
  • Detail of a wall and a door in Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0248.jpg
  • Detail of a fried grasshopper on the palm of a hand. Grasshoppers are considered a delicacy and regularly eaten in certain parts of Java, Indonesia.
    RO.OXFAM.IDN.2013.03.1162.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Rodrigo Ordóñez Photography

  • VIDEO
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • NEWSLETTER
  • BLOG
  • ARCHIVE
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area