Young boy riding with his father. In Vietnam, preventable road accidents are the cause of more than 10,000 deaths every year. Saigon, Vietnam, 2008
Drunk Haredim youths celebrating the festival of Purim along the streets of Mea Shearim. For more on Purim please visit "the people of Mea Shaerim" under the "meet the people" gallery. Mea Shearim, Jerusalem, Israel, 2012.
Because most varieties of secular education are frowned upon, few haredim hold professional degrees. Most adult men devote themselves to full-time Torah study, and their wives commonly assume the role of breadwinner. Because most haredim live in single-earner households with large numbers of children, haredi communities are generally characterized by extreme poverty, requiring subsidies from charities and governments in order to subsist. However, in recent years, a new haredi upper-class has emerged, Children of the haredi upper-class attend the same yeshivot as their less-privileged peers, while their parents direct a very large portion of their income to communal charities and funds that support major rabbinic figures and their projects.