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  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  Jacklyn Abalo holds the head of nodding disease victim Joyce Alanyo, 18, at the Okidi Central Village Health Centre near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27. Alanyo has had the disease since 2002, and can no longer speak. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease011.JPG
  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  Bedridden nodding disease victim Vicky Aciro, 14, in her mother's hut near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27.  While the Ugandan Government has opened nodding disease treatment centres at major northern hospitals, many in villages are unable to access the services due to transport costs and the limited mobility of the patient.  Aciro lives across the road from the Okidi Central Village Health Centre and is able to access services, but nurse Agnes Oroma says travelling doctors would be able to assist those living further away.  Some can't afford to go to the main hospital and some are stuck in villages which are not near transport. It's really difficult, says Oroma.   Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease012.JPG
  • 12-03-21   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  A young girl stands in the Acholi Quarter slum on March 21, 2012. Fleeing rebel violence in Northern Uganda, thousands of Acholi settled in a rock quarry, where -- to make a living -- they have been mining by hand for over 20 years. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-portrait02-14-003.jpg
  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  Bedridden nodding disease victim Vicky Aciro, 14, in her mother's hut near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27.  While the Ugandan Government has opened nodding disease treatment centres at major northern hospitals, many in villages are unable to access the services due to transport costs and the limited mobility of the patient.  Aciro lives across the road from the Okidi Central Village Health Centre and is able to access services, but nurse Agnes Oroma says travelling doctors would be able to assist those living further away.  "Some can't afford to go to the main hospital and some are stuck in villages which are not near transport. It's really difficult," says Oroma.   Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease013.JPG
  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  Three-year-old nodding disease victim Michael Ojok is held by his mother Evelyn Abalo as he 'nods' at the Okidi Central Village Health Centre near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27. When Ojok nods, his eyes roll back and he claws at his face with his hands. In addition to nodding when presented with food, symptoms for victims of the disease vary from seizures, uncontrollable screaming and the urge to run.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease010.JPG
  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  Three-year-old nodding disease victim Michael Ojok is held by his mother Evelyn Abalo as he 'nods' at the Okidi Central Village Health Centre near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27. When Ojok nods, his eyes roll back and he claws at his face with his hands. In addition to nodding when presented with food, symptoms for victims of the disease vary from seizures, uncontrollable screaming and the urge to run.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease009.JPG
  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  Three-year-old nodding disease victim Michael Ojok is held by his mother Evelyn Abalo as he 'nods' at the Okidi Central Village Health Centre near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27. When Ojok nods, his eyes roll back and he claws at his face with his hands. In addition to nodding when presented with food, symptoms for victims of the disease vary from seizures, uncontrollable screaming and the urge to run.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease006.JPG
  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  Three-year-old nodding disease victim Michael Ojok is held by his mother Evelyn Abalo as he 'nods' at the Okidi Central Village Health Centre near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27. When Ojok nods, his eyes roll back and he claws at his face with his hands. In addition to nodding when presented with food, symptoms for victims of the disease vary from seizures, uncontrollable screaming and the urge to run.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease008.JPG
  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  Unconscious nodding disease victim Monica Auma, 16, at the Okidi Central Village Health Centre near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27. When the disease presents itself, Auma hallucinates that she is being surrounded by people who then drag her to water and submerge her.  After running and screaming I don't want to go, Jesus save me, Auma collapses unconscious. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease004.JPG
  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  Three-year-old nodding disease victim Michael Ojok is held by his mother Evelyn Abalo as he 'nods' at the Okidi Central Village Health Centre near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27. When Ojok nods, his eyes roll back and he claws at his face with his hands. In addition to nodding when presented with food, symptoms for victims of the disease vary from seizures, uncontrollable screaming and the urge to run.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease007.JPG
  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  Nodding disease victim Monica Auma, 16, at the Okidi Central Village Health Centre near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27. When the disease presents itself, Auma hallucinates that she is being surrounded by people who then drag her to water and submerge her.  After running and screaming I don't want to go, Jesus save me, Auma collapses unconscious. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease005.JPG
  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  Nodding disease victim Michael Abola, 14, stands at the Okidi Central Village Health Centre near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27. Abola fell into a fire while having a seizure, a symptom of the disease. Many victims of the disease are injured when having a seizure, prompting some parents to tie their children up.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease001.JPG
  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  A woman soothes nodding disease victim Monica Auma, 16, at the Okidi Central Village Health Centre near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27. When the disease presents itself, Auma hallucinates that she is being surrounded by people who then drag her to water and submerge her.  After running and screaming I don't want to go, Jesus save me, Auma collapses unconscious. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease003.JPG
  • 12-03-27   -- KITGUM, UGANDA --  Nodding disease victim Monica Auma, 16, at the Okidi Central Village Health Centre near Kitgum, Uganda on Tuesday, March 27. When the disease presents itself, Auma hallucinates that she is being surrounded by people who then drag her to water and submerge her.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-noddingdisease002.JPG
  • 12-03-29   -- LIRA, UGANDA --  A drunk man in Barlonyo, Uganda offers passersby a sip of local gin on March 29, 2012. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    uganda-alcohol-001.jpg
  • Students at a school in Kampala, Uganda. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    Uganda-school0002.JPG
  • Students studying at a school in Kampala, Uganda. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    Uganda-school0001.JPG
  • 12-03-21   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA -- Overview of the Acholi Quarter in Kampala, Uganda. Those residing here fled to escape the brutal massacres being carried out by the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) and settled on the outskirts of Kampala, Uganda's capital city where they began to sell aggregate, which they crush by hand. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ002.JPG
  • 12-03-21   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  Fiona Makumungu, 12, bathes brother Silas, 3, as Maxson, 3, waits his turn in the Acholi Quarter on March 21, 2012. Mother Pricilla Akumu says she would go back to northern Uganda if she had the means. "God, if you help me, I will go back."  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-single-019.JPG
  • 12-03-22   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --   James Omejja, from Dokolo in northern Uganda, drinks kwete, a millet based local brew, at a bar in the Acholi Quarter on March 22. Omejja says he, like many others, drinks to forget the past. "In 2003, our school was invaded so we had to take off, but 12 students were killed by that time.  You have to rescue your life." In the Acholi Quarter, life is also difficult he says. " It is tremendously difficult. We can't get good jobs to support ourselves. Here they say we northerners are bad people, so we segregate ourselves. So long as your name begins with 'o' , it is cursed." Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ003.JPG
  • 12-03-22   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  Charles Okongo, from Kitgum, stands in the street in a drunken stupor. Alcoholism is prevalent in the Acholi Quarter, as many try to forget their traumatic past. Since the early 1990's, people from the Acholi tribe (and from other northern tribes) migrated to a plot of land in a suburb of Kampala to escape the violence in the north. Now, rather than returning to their ancestral lands, some are calling the Acholi Quarter home. Many residents, unable to find well-paying employment, make a living mining and crushing rocks by hand.. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ011.JPG
  • 12-03-22   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  Steven Akena, 8, plays on a structure in the Acholi Quarter on March 22. Since the early 1990's, people from the Acholi tribe (and from other northern tribes) migrated to a plot of land in a suburb of Kampala to escape the violence in the north. Now, rather than returning to their ancestral lands, some are calling the Acholi Quarter home. Many residents, unable to find well-paying employment, make a living mining and crushing rocks by hand..  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ008.JPG
  • 12-03-20   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  Charles Otiyasu uses a sledgehammer to break stones in a quarry at the Acholi Quarter on March 20.  Since the early 1990's, people from the Acholi tribe (and from other northern tribes) migrated to a plot of land in a suburb of Kampala to escape the violence in the north. Now, rather than returning to their ancestral lands, some are calling the Acholi Quarter home. Many residents, unable to find well-paying employment, make a living mining and crushing rocks by hand.. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ006.JPG
  • 12-03-31   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA  -- Alcohol is often seen as the only way out of the depression faced by most residents of the Acholi Quarter. Margret Abilo, seen roasting millet in preparation for making a local brew, says she does brisk business.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ007.JPG
  • 12-04-03   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA  -- The product of two cultures, Gloria Aforwot, 18, at her home in the Acholi Quarter on April 3, 2012. Her parents are northerners, from Moyo district, but fled the violence and moved to the Acholi Quarter when Aforwot was a young child.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ004.JPG
  • 12-03-19   -- UGANDA --   l-r Viko Dodo, 6, and Ronny Komakech, 5, sift aggregate at a rock quarry in the Acholi Quarter on March 19. Since the early 1990's, people from the Acholi tribe (and from other northern tribes) migrated to a plot of land in a suburb of Kampala to escape the violence in the north. Now, rather than returning to their ancestral lands, some are calling the Acholi Quarter home. Many residents, unable to find well-paying employment, make a living mining and crushing rocks by hand. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ001.JPG
  • 12-03-29   -- LIRA, UGANDA -- Often the only remaining visible indicator of a former IDP site is the presence of public toilets, such as these at the Cultural Centre IDP camp, once home to approximately 1,000 people.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-IDP009.JPG
  • 12-03-29   -- BARLONYO, UGANDA --  The setting sun projects shadows against a newly constructed brick wall in the Barlonyo trading centre on March 29. Barlonyo Camp is known primarily as the site of the 'Barlonyo Massacre' of February 21, 2004 when approximately 300 residents were killed when rebels torched the camp. Approximately 11,000 people lived in the camp, which is now a thriving trading centre and tourist attraction due to the mass grave memorial.   Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-IDP002.JPG
  • Gathering water at a borehole in Nampunge, Uganda on May 5, 2008. Photo by Daniel Hayduk.
    africa-water-well.JPG
  • 12-03-21   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA -- Josephine Amala, 6, plays amidst piles of aggregate in the Acholi Quarter on March 21, 2012. Since the early 1990's, people from the Acholi tribe (and from other northern tribes) migrated to a plot of land in a suburb of Kampala to escape the violence in the north. Now, rather than returning to their ancestral lands, some are calling the Acholi Quarter home. Many residents, unable to find well-paying employment, make a living mining and crushing rocks by hand.. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ012.JPG
  • 12-03-20   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  Pedestrians walk on a narrow strip of land next to a stone quarry in the Acholi Quarter on March 20. Since the early 1990's, people from the Acholi tribe (and from other northern tribes) migrated to a plot of land in a suburb of Kampala to escape the violence in the north. Now, rather than returning to their ancestral lands, some are calling the Acholi Quarter home. Many residents, unable to find well-paying employment, make a living mining and crushing rocks by hand..  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ013.JPG
  • 12-03-20   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  Immanuel Otim, 3, rests as Lilliann Okelo reads the Bible in her home in the Acholi Quarter on March 20.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ010.JPG
  • 12-03-22   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  A woman walks through the Acholi Quarter's narrow pathways. As residents in the Acholi Quarter settle permanently, traditional northern mud dwellings are being replaced by brick homes complete with windows and doors.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ005.JPG
  • 12-03-29   -- BARLONYO, UGANDA --A market vendor at Barlonyo trading centre on March 29. Barlonyo Camp is known primarily as the site of the 'Barlonyo Massacre' of February 21, 2004 when approximately 300 residents were killed when rebels torched the camp. Approximately 11,000 people lived in the camp, which is now a thriving trading centre and tourist attraction due to the mass grave memorial.   Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-IDP010.JPG
  • 12-03-25   -- LIRA, UGANDA --  Lucia Akoro, 78, prays at the Church of God in Lira on Sunday, March 25. The church housed 800 IDP's, who -- along with others -- were later moved to the Anai Church of God IDP camp.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-IDP011.JPG
  • 12-03-29   -- LIRA, UGANDA -- A class at Saint Phillips Nursery and Primary School in Erute, the site of the Erute IDP camp, home to 13,000 people.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-IDP008.JPG
  • 12-03-29   -- LIRA, UGANDA --  An ankole cow grazes on the site of the Erute IDP camp, once home to approximately 14,000 people.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-IDP005.JPG
  • 12-03-28   -- LIRA, UGANDA --  Tony Akwem plays football with a classmate at the Upendo Church of God Technical School, formerly the Anai Church of God IDP camp on March 28. Approximately 1,000 people lived at the camp.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-IDP006.JPG
  • 12-03-29   -- LIRA, UGANDA -- Former resident at the Cultural Centre IDP camp Hellen Akech sifts maize on March 29.  All of the approximately 1,000 others who lived in the camp have returned home but Akech has returned to squat on the land. "There was nowhere for me to stay, my land was grabbed so I came back here." Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-IDP004.JPG
  • 12-03-29   -- LIRA, UGANDA --  A flame tree blooms at the Lango Quran Primary School in Lira on March 29.  The grounds were home to approximately 500 IDP's, of which 200 still remain.   Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-IDP003.JPG
  • 12-04-02   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA  -- His parents are northerners, yet they have been living in the south for the past nine years -- most of Deo Chanogura's life. His parents dream of leaving the Acholi Quarter and returning to their homeland, a culture which Chanogura barely remembers.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ009.JPG
  • 12-03-29   -- BARLONYO, UGANDA --  A woman walks through the rapidly expanding Barlonyo trading centre on March 29. Barlonyo Camp is known primarily as the site of the 'Barlonyo Massacre' of February 21, 2004 when approximately 300 residents were killed when rebels torched the camp. Approximately 11,000 people lived in the camp, which is now a thriving trading centre and tourist attraction due to the mass grave memorial.   Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-IDP007.JPG
  • 12-03-26   -- LIRA, UGANDA -- Worker Geoffry Odongo clears the site of the Bala Stock Farm IDP camp, making way for the new Gulu University satellite campus near Lira, on March 26.  Locals say nearly 40,000 people stayed on the hilltop property. Currently, ten still remain and will be evicted as others have, say university officials.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-IDP001.JPG
  • Children sponsored by Canadians, Americans and Germans release helium filled balloons as a symbolic thanks to their sponsors thousands of kilometres away.  The children are sponsored through programs run by the Church of God and Kinderhilfswerk.
    hayduk-single-013.JPG
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Humanitarian Photographer Daniel Hayduk

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