Show All Mixed Success for Tajik Gypsy School Male followers of the Qadriya sect engage in traditional acts of worship in Barzinja, a small mountainous village, east of Sulaimaniyah city in Iraqi Kurdistan. Sheikh Abdul-Qadir Gilani founded the sect in Baghdad in the late 11th century. Photo by Kamaran Najm/Metrography. Sufi Gather in Iraqi Kurdistan Russian Emigration Up Since April Unrest Dwindling Memories of WW2 in Tajikistan Tajik Legislators Go Green Central Asia: Calls for Equal Access to Schooling With Every Kyrgyz Revolution, a Land Grab Victims of Alleged Market Scam Seek Justice Tigranui Kostanyan’s passport in her married name, showing her birth 100 years ago. She recounted her experience as a child in Ottoman Turkey when thousands of Armenians were massacred. (Picture: Nazik Armenakyan) Armenian Survivor of Ottoman Killings Urges Peace Show moreGALLERIES All regions, Any media All regions Africa Asia Europe & Eurasia Latin America & the Caribbean Middle East & North Africa Media Any media Photos Videos AudioMultimedia
Male followers of the Qadriya sect engage in traditional acts of worship in Barzinja, a small mountainous village, east of Sulaimaniyah city in Iraqi Kurdistan. Sheikh Abdul-Qadir Gilani founded the sect in Baghdad in the late 11th century. Photo by Kamaran Najm/Metrography. Sufi Gather in Iraqi Kurdistan
Tigranui Kostanyan’s passport in her married name, showing her birth 100 years ago. She recounted her experience as a child in Ottoman Turkey when thousands of Armenians were massacred. (Picture: Nazik Armenakyan) Armenian Survivor of Ottoman Killings Urges Peace