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  • East Berlin, capital of DDR (German Democratic Republic): a couple in a lunapark.
    em7700420.jpg
  • Otomì indian migrants, a couple living in a abandoned house of the historical centre. The man works only sometimes. More than 400.000 Indians live in the heart of the one of the largest megalopoli on earth — Mexico City. Tenaciously clinging to to ancient traditions, they continue to have ties to their homes so strong that some researchers define these urban groups as “embassies” for their distant villages.
    em0216363.jpg
  • East Berlin, capital of DDR (German Democratic Republic): a couple looking at West Berlin from Brandenburgh's Gate.
    em7700416.jpg
  • Atlantic Drive. Keem Strand, a beautiful small beach with Mediterraneran lights.
    em7210481.jpg
  • Atlantic Drive. Keem Strand, a beautiful small beach with Mediterraneran lights.
    em7210481.jpg
  • Outer Hebrides, Benbecula. Father Jain MacAskill of Free Church preaching in gaelic in a pub.
    em0760075.jpg
  • Mall of the Emirates, this enormous shopping centre is one of Dubai's busiest.
    em2801031.jpg
  • Occimiano (Alessandria), ballo a palchetto in piazza.
    em7128175.jpg
  • Occimiano (Alessandria), ballo a palchetto in piazza.
    em7128174.jpg
  • Occimiano (Alessandria), ballo a palchetto in piazza.
    em7128173.jpg
  • Occimiano (Alessandria), ballo a palchetto in piazza.
    em7128171.jpg
  • Occimiano (Alessandria), ballo a palchetto in piazza.
    em7128147.jpg
  • Occimiano (Alessandria), ballo a palchetto in piazza.
    em7128144.jpg
  • Abo-Atash park. On the back Tabiat bridge a pedestrian walkway 270m long designed by Iranian architect Leila Araghian.
    em2900330.jpg
  • Llyn peninsula. Porthdinllaen, the beach.
    em0771342.jpg
  • Daily life on the Nile's delta village.
    em2611431.jpg
  • Marriage along the banks of Yesilirmak river, on the back traditional houses.
    em2711952.jpg
  • Pontic tombs looming above the northern bank of Yesilirmak river. thereare 18 tombs in these valleys, all empty, cut in the rock in the 4th century BC and used for cult worship of the deified rulers.
    em2711865.jpg
  • The main street f Galway is Quay street
    em7211453.jpg
  • El Shems, a traditional tea and coffee house (ahwa) with his incredible kitsch furnishing. A waiter preparing shesha (water pipes). Cairo’s ahwa (the traditional coffeehouse) are for Cairo what the pub is to London or caffè to Rome. Once the ahwa was the main place for entairnement, a animated place where Cairo’s men socialised playing chess, backgammon or domino, reading newspapers or watching TV, drinking Turkish coffee and shai (tea) with mint or smoking a sheesha, the tradional waterpipe. Some ahwa are meeting places for people loving chess or remembering famous Egyptian singer Oum Kalthoum. Today Cairo is changed and everybody is just too busy to drink coffee in a ahwa, so western style coffee shops are much more than traditional ahwa.
    em2611132.jpg
  • Nile river. A boat for Qanater dams where Nile River Delta begins.
    em2611401.jpg
  • Tela, main square.
    em0410098.jpg
  • Tela: “Fiesta popular” after a meeting of workers of banana industry.
    em0410041.jpg
  • Friday at new Al-Azhar park. Located in the heart of old historic Cairo with stunning panoramic views, offers  landscaped gardens. Born in a a municipal rubbish dump is now a popular for the Cairo's holiday days.
    em2610805.jpg
  • Traditional house. Various symbols adorn the immenses wooden gates of many homes.
    em0831027.jpg
  • Holy Week. Good Friday. The most spectacular Holy Week throughout Latin America, a sort of time machine to find an ancient Spain, where roman soldiers with the faces of Maya peasants interpret for days a choral rite alive in the collective memory as a matter of chronicle. In theatrical scenery of Antigua, between colonial palaces and Baroque churches uncovered by frequent earthquakes and eruptions of nearby volcanoes, processions come one after the other in an increasingly spasmodic crescendo until Holy Friday. From dawn to sunset for thousands of penitents, curucuchos rigorously dressed in purple, is a privilege, often passed down from father to son, to load on the shoulders heavy groups of statues with Jesus Christ, God, the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary.
    em0110254.jpg
  • La Merced church, marriage
    em0110067.jpg
  • During the Tango Dance World Championship Buenos Aires is alive with Tango concerts and milongas. The city is covered in posters announcing concerts and diverse Tango-related activities. Harrod's historic hall becomes once again a multitidinous dance floor where the milongueros are the stars. European immigrants, mainly Italian and Spanish, freed African slaves and gauchos created the dance and music that would become the tango in Buenos Aires around the 1880s.
    em1411249.jpg
  • During the Tango Dance World Championship Buenos Aires is alive with Tango concerts and milongas. The city is covered in posters announcing concerts and diverse Tango-related activities. Harrod's historic hall becomes once again a multitidinous dance floor where the milongueros are the stars. European immigrants, mainly Italian and Spanish, freed African slaves and gauchos created the dance and music that would become the tango in Buenos Aires around the 1880s.
    em1411243.jpg
  • Audace pier, in the heart of the city, named by the first Italian ship arriving in the harbour in 1918, at the end of the WWI.
    em7124854.jpg
  • Outer Hebrides, Griamsaigh Island: Free Church Sunday  service, the most traditional of the Hebrides.
    em0760070.jpg
  • Amman, the ruins of Roman theatre.
    em2310169.jpg
  • Puerto Montt, the gate to Chile’s Patagonia.
    em1310125-2.jpg
  • Occimiano (Alessandria), ballo a palchetto in piazza.
    em7128182.jpg
  • Occimiano (Alessandria), ballo a palchetto in piazza.
    em7128135.jpg
  • Occimiano (Alessandria), ballo a palchetto in piazza.
    em7128129.jpg
  • Ateshkadeh. Often referred to as the Zoroastrian Fire Temple, this elegant neoclassical building, reflected in an oval pool in the garden courtyard, houses a flame that is said to have been burning since about AD 470. Visible through a window from the entrance hall, the flame was transferred to Ardakan in 1174, to Yazd in 1474 and to its present site in 1940. It is cherished (not worshipped) by the followers of the Zoroastrian faith – the oldest of the world's monotheistic religions.
    em2902139.jpg
  • The famous tea and coffee house (ahwa) Al-Fischawi, in the hearth of one of largest Middle East bazaars, Khan el Khalili Cairo’s ahwa (the traditional coffeehouse) are for Cairo what the pub is to London or caffè to Rome. Once the ahwa was the main place for entairnement, a animated place where Cairo’s men socialised playing chess, backgammon or domino, reading newspapers or watching TV, drinking Turkish coffee and shai (tea) with mint or smoking a sheesha, the tradional waterpipe. Some ahwa are meeting places for people loving chess or remembering famous Egyptian singer Oum Kalthoum. Today Cairo is changed and everybody is just too busy to drink coffee in a ahwa, so western style coffee shops are much more than traditional ahwa.
    em2611061.jpg
  • Plaza de Armas (main square), traditional danzçn, is a sort of tropical waltzer very popular in the old generations.
    em0214712.jpg
  • Plaza de Armas (main square), traditional danzçn, is a sort of tropical waltzer very popular in the old generations.
    em0214680-2.jpg
  • Plaza de Armas (main square), traditional danzçn, is a sort of tropical waltzer very popular in the old generations.
    carreteras de papel-4.jpg
  • Friday at new Al-Azhar park. Located in the heart of old historic Cairo with stunning panoramic views, offers  landscaped gardens. Born in a a municipal rubbish dump is now a popular for the Cairo's holiday days.
    em2610584.jpg
  • Nile river. On friday many boats transport people for holiday sightseeing to Qanater dam where Nile River Delta begins.
    em2610452.jpg
  • El Shems, a traditional tea and coffee house (ahwa) with his incredible kitsch furnishing. Cairo’s ahwa (the traditional coffeehouse) are for Cairo what the pub is to London or caffè to Rome. Once the ahwa was the main place for entairnement, a animated place where Cairo’s men socialised playing chess, backgammon or domino, reading newspapers or watching TV, drinking Turkish coffee and shai (tea) with mint or smoking a sheesha, the tradional waterpipe. Some ahwa are meeting places for people loving chess or remembering famous Egyptian singer Oum Kalthoum. Today Cairo is changed and everybody is just too busy to drink coffee in a ahwa, so western style coffee shops are much more than traditional ahwa.
    em2611130.jpg
  • Friday at new Al-Azhar park. Located in the heart of old historic Cairo with stunning panoramic views, offers  landscaped gardens. Born in a a municipal rubbish dump is now a popular for the Cairo's holiday days.
    em2610587.jpg
  • The famous tea and coffee house (ahwa) Al-Fischawi, in the hearth of one of largest Middle East bazaars, Khan el Khalili. Seller of animals stuffed with straw. Cairo’s ahwa (the traditional coffeehouse) are for Cairo what the pub is to London or caffè to Rome. Once the ahwa was the main place for entairnement, a animated place where Cairo’s men socialised playing chess, backgammon or domino, reading newspapers or watching TV, drinking Turkish coffee and shai (tea) with mint or smoking a sheesha, the tradional waterpipe. Some ahwa are meeting places for people loving chess or remembering famous Egyptian singer Oum Kalthoum. Today Cairo is changed and everybody is just too busy to drink coffee in a ahwa, so western style coffee shops are much more than traditional ahwa.
    em2611099.jpg
  • Arrajal de Ajuda, the beach.
    em0910730.jpg
  • Val Badia. Pieve di Marebbe graveyard.
    em7124081.jpg
  • hotel Monasterio, a high class marriage in the colonial chapel of the old spanish monastery.
    em1010738.jpg
  • Music hall teenagers near av 9 de Julio.
    em1412082.jpg
  • Nicole Nau, a German born famous tango dancer, and Luis Pereyra, dancer and choreographer, are partners in the dance and in the life. Their stile, very personal, is elegant and very temperamental allowed them to reach the greatest theatres of the world. As German woman she earns a unic fame and honor: she is published on a Argentine's stamp. At the moment Nicole and Luis are working as Artistic Directors in the famous theatre "Cafe de los Angelitos", a historical place in the heart of Buenos Aires.
    em1411291.jpg
  • Confitería Ideal, an old-fashioned milonga where dances are held almost every day of the week, was the setting for films like The Tango Lesson and Evita. Milonga is a term for a musical genre or a place where tango is danced and people who frequently go to milongas are called milongueros. The music played is mainly tango, vals, and milonga, with usually, three to five songs of a kind played in a dancefloorw  ("tanda"), followed by a musical break ("cortina") to facilitate partner changes. Since the beginning of the 1990s, the tango culture in Buenos Aires has undergone dynamic development, and today one can choose from between fifteen and thirty different milongas every day.
    em1411214.jpg
  • Tango school during the Tango Dance World Championship when Buenos Aires is alive with Tango concerts and milongas. Harrod's historic hall becomes once again a multitidinous dance floor where the milongueros are the stars. European immigrants, mainly Italian and Spanish, freed African slaves and gauchos created the dance and music that would become the tango in Buenos Aires around the 1880s.
    em1411103.jpg
  • Chioggia: Sottomarina, dancing traditional "ballo liscio" on the main square.
    em7113355.jpg
  • Outer Hebrides, Benbecula. Father Jain MacAskill of Free Church preaching in gaelic in a pub.
    em0760077.jpg
  • Dumbreveni village, Ui Rekecsin in Hungarian, a man plays violin in the kitchen of his house. For the csango people music is literally part of the life.
    em0831467.jpg
  • Traditional Bedouin marriage for affluent people at Mowenpick hotel.
    em2310693.jpg
  • Haji Alì mosque, the most popular moslim pilgrimage of Mumbai, on a small island connected to the city by a walkway only with low tide.
    em3500491.jpg
  • Puerto Montt, the gate to Chile's Patagonia.
    em1310125-2.jpg
  • Sampeyre. Val Varaita. The baìo (also known as "Baìo di Sampeyre") is a traditional festival that takes place every five years in the municipality of Sampeyre, in the Valle Varaita in the province of Cuneo. Espous – pairs of young married couples. The Baìo was one of the most important and ancient traditional festivals in the Italian Alps. Traditionally, only men participated in the parades, while the complicated costumes were woven by the women. The men traditionally interpreted the roles of women: a custom which led to the event being accused of machismo . The tradition's origins date back to between 975 and 980, when teams of Saracens who had penetrated the valley to control the alpine passes, were driven away by the local population. The festival commemorates the expulsion of these invaders. The Baìo is composed of four parades (or "armies"), coming from the provincial capital Sampeyre (Piasso) and its three hamlets: Rore (Rure), Calchesio (Chucheis), and Villar (Vilà).
    em7110693.jpg
  • Sampeyre. Val Varaita. The baìo (also known as "Baìo di Sampeyre") is a traditional festival that takes place every five years in the municipality of Sampeyre, in the Valle Varaita in the province of Cuneo. Espous – pairs of young married couples. The Baìo was one of the most important and ancient traditional festivals in the Italian Alps. Traditionally, only men participated in the parades, while the complicated costumes were woven by the women. The men traditionally interpreted the roles of women: a custom which led to the event being accused of machismo . The tradition's origins date back to between 975 and 980, when teams of Saracens who had penetrated the valley to control the alpine passes, were driven away by the local population. The festival commemorates the expulsion of these invaders. The Baìo is composed of four parades (or "armies"), coming from the provincial capital Sampeyre (Piasso) and its three hamlets: Rore (Rure), Calchesio (Chucheis), and Villar (Vilà).
    em7110690.jpg
  • Sampeyre. Val Varaita. The baìo (also known as "Baìo di Sampeyre") is a traditional festival that takes place every five years in the municipality of Sampeyre, in the Valle Varaita in the province of Cuneo. Espous – pairs of young married couples. The Baìo was one of the most important and ancient traditional festivals in the Italian Alps. Traditionally, only men participated in the parades, while the complicated costumes were woven by the women. The men traditionally interpreted the roles of women: a custom which led to the event being accused of machismo . The tradition's origins date back to between 975 and 980, when teams of Saracens who had penetrated the valley to control the alpine passes, were driven away by the local population. The festival commemorates the expulsion of these invaders. The Baìo is composed of four parades (or "armies"), coming from the provincial capital Sampeyre (Piasso) and its three hamlets: Rore (Rure), Calchesio (Chucheis), and Villar (Vilà).
    em7110691.jpg
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