The Builder (for Bob)...
Another great Mural of the german artist duo Herakut. Created with and dedicated to the children in the refugee Camp of Za'atari, Jordan...
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The Builder (for Bob)...
Another great Mural of the german artist duo Herakut. Created with and dedicated to the children in the refugee Camp of Za'atari, Jordan...

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The families living in Za’atari refugee camp in Jordan are just a few of the 60 million people desperately trying to escape conflict, disaster and poverty worldwide. Ordinary people who have been forced to leave their lives behind by circumstances beyond their control. See people, not refugees – SHARE this to remind world leaders at the World Humanitarian Summit that we #standasone Photo credit: Sam Tarling/Oxfam
Late last year, Nina Berman and three other photographers from the NOOR agency travelled to Jordan to set up a photo booth in the middle of the Za’atari refugee camp. To counter the frightening impression of the camp’s entrance, they made outdoor prints of the portraits, some as large as three metres wide: http://nyr.kr/1j1RxIp
Top: Four-day-old triplets in their family’s rented caravan. Their mother, Zainab, left her village in rural Syria seven months ago. Photograph by Alixandra Fazzina. Bottom: Photographs inside the main camp.
Photograph by James Nachtwey for TIME
Refugee status is temporary, in theory, but without a place to go back to, limbo begins to look permanent. James Nachtwey explores the refugee crisis sparked by the war in Syria.
Iman, a sixteen-year-old refugee wanted to have a career as a schoolteacher but is now settling for a husband. In Za’atari, Iman and her husband Ihab met at the refugee camps—now home to more than a 100,000 people making it Jordon’s fourth largest city.“I lost hope of returning to Syria,” Iman said, explaining her reason for marrying.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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The Za'atari refugee camp in Jordan was opened a little more than a year ago to accommodate the Syrian refugees who have fled their country's civil war. My friend Shelby lives close enough to see it from her part of 'Amman (in Sweileh, top left of this here map), so she showed it to me one day,
But it's not just a camp; it's so big that it's a little city just by itself. Unfortunately it continues to grow.
Ground Zero: Za'atari Refugee Camp
If the severity of a conflict can, at least in part, be measured by the number of refugees it creates, the Za'atari camp in Jordan is a disturbing reflection of just how bad the civil war in Syria has gotten: when it opened, Za'atari had just 100 families. Today, it has about 120,000 residents. Located 18 miles south of the Syrian border, it's the fourth largest city in Jordan and the second largest refugee camp in the world.
Since July 2012, when the camp was opened by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and the Jordanian government, Za'atari has become home for the huge numbers of Syrians who’ve fled the violence and trauma of their country’s civil war since it began in March 2011.
Watch the documentary
Into Za'atari: French Streets in Jordan's Largest Refugee Camp
10AM, Saturday, September 14 The shops are opening on Les Champs Élysées. The street full of shops and fruits stalls is named after France's Champs Élysées, one of the world's busiest avenue. About 3000 businesses have opened in Za'atari, according UNHCR. Almost all of them are run by men.
We're spending all the daylight hours this weekend in Za'atari, now the 5th largest city in Jordan with over 140 000 people living inside. The conditions of life are tough, especially for women, children and elders. Together our team are meeting with families and officials of the NGOs to gather more information, video-report, photograph, and collect oral histories for its multi-media product.