Jay Dunn » Galleries »
next
Display Options
Niger "Nomads of Tidene" Jay Dunn(29 images)
"Nomads of Tidene"

For centuries, nomadic Tuareg and Fulani herdsmen have made the Tidene Valley in Niger one of their homes. Living in low domed structures indistinguishable from nearby natural materials, these resilient and welcoming people face the daily hardship of life in an inhospitable desert with grace and equanimity. Thorn bushes, brush and heavy knotted...
more »
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. The whole family participates in watering the herd. The Tuareg care for donkeys, goats, camel and zebu. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Donkeys are used at this well for pulling power to raise water. Watering a herd can take four to five hours every day. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Grandmother maintains a strict order for the animals to drink. Everyone in the family will have a role in the watering.. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Lowering the buckets into this Tuareg well  is done by hand, as they are raised when full by donkeys. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Containers of every sort are used to collect and transport water. Tuareg from twenty miles around must share this single well. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Goats will drink first in the heirarchy of animals the Tuareg will water from their well. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Commonly used as fences, these useful but deadly thorn bushes are omnipresent in the Sahel and Sahara environments. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. This Tuareg woman has spent four hours at the well already, and there is still  a lot of work to be done. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. For the youngest Tuareg children, there is little to do all day. The governnment has not engaged the community with meaningful education programs. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. The underside of a Tuareg nomad shelter. Beds are raised off the ground, and the entire structure can be made ready to move in one day. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. For this young Tuareg girl, there are few opportunities to change her lifestyle or receive meaningful education from the government. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Already a mother at 19, a Tuareg woman cares for her child in the cool of early morning. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. In a Tuareg settlement, young and old share their lives in public.  Rissa Ixa's family lives in a group of three camps. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. In the soft light of early morning, a Tuareg boy waits for his sister to finish milking. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. A nomad herder will have a spare meal like this one, and will carry little on a day's work. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Rissa Ixa at home after a long day's drive in from Agadez, three hours away and an hour from the nearest road By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Tuareg nomads load up donkeys in preparation for transporting grain to a faraway settlement. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. A Tuareg will wear a turban up to four meters long in order to protect him against the Sahara's harsh conditions. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Parts of Niger left to Tuareg hands by the government are simply barren, untenable for farming or grazing. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Rissa Ixa consults with his neighbors. A four-wheel drive is a necessity in the Tidene Valley, which is more than an hour from the nearest road. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Handmade stockades keep goats and donkeys close by at night. The survival of every animal is crucial to the nomads. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Goat milk is an essential part of the Tuareg nomad's diet. The children are responsible for the morning's chores. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. At twilight, a Tuareg nomad's camp is barely distinguishable from the natural materials from which it is made. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Rissa Ixa's wife and a neighbor's little girl relax in the early morning at their camp. She has many duties which will take up most of the day. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg
  • Niger, Agadez, Tidene, 2007. Heishi Ali enjoys the morning cool around 6 AM at Rissa Ixa's camp. March temperatures regularly break 40 centigrade. By photographer Jay Dunn
    Niger.JDUNN...jpg


next