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  • American family farms are closing or consolidating at an alarming rate. The second-generation Vollmer family farm in Boonville, Missouri, run by the Lutz family is barely surviving. "As long as we're all together, it doesn't matter where we are," says Amanda Lutz. They worry how long they can continue like this.
    Farming_13.jpg
  • PHILADELPHIA, USA - AUGUST 22: Mohammad Sadeed talks to the Khalil family in his home in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on Sunday, August 22, 2021. Sadeed is hosting the Khalil family who recently arrived from Afghanistan.
    Afghanistan_06.jpg
  • Photograph of Sierra family in Bergen County, NJ in article on food banks and food insecurity during the pandemic
    CNN Health
  • Aleandra Lara looks at her sister Julmeiris' phone in their bedroom, in Reading, Pennsylvania, on Thursday, July 15, 2021.
    Eviction_04.jpg
  • Migreldi Lara's daughter Aleandra's play area in their dining room, in Reading, Pennsylvania, on Thursday, July 15, 2021.
    Eviction_07.jpg
  • Julmauris and Julmeiris Lara run while pushing a grocery cart  down the sidewalk after shopping, in Reading, Pennsylvania, on Thursday, July 15, 2021.
    Eviction_05.jpg
  • Migreldi Lara's son Julmauris' bedroom  their apartment, in Reading, Pennsylvania, on Thursday, July 15, 2021.
    Eviction_03.jpg
  • Migreldi Lara, 37, washes her face after finishing her shift at Cobra Anchors, in Temple, Pennsylvania, on Thursday, July 15, 2021.
    Eviction_06.jpg
  • PHILADELPHIA, USA - AUGUST 22: Mohammad Sadeed talks on the phone while sitting with friends outside his home in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on Sunday, August 22, 2021.
    Afghanistan_01.jpg
  • PHILADELPHIA, USA - AUGUST 22: Fahim Sekandari helps Mohammad Sadeed use a garden stake as a flag carrier, outside Sadeed's home in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on Sunday, August 22, 2021. The Afghan flag was displayed at the Stand with Philly's Afghan Community
    Afghanistan_04.jpg
  • PHILADELPHIA, USA - AUGUST 22:<br />
(Photo by Caroline Gutman for The Washington Post)
    Afghanistan_03.jpg
  • Migreldi Lara, rests her hand on her daughter Julmeiris' shoulder while watching baseball practice at the park in Reading, Pennsylvania, on Thursday, July 15, 2021.
    Eviction_08.jpg
  • Migreldi Lara, 37, fistbumps her daughter Aleandra Lara, 6, while preparing dinner as her son Julmauris Lara, 11, juggles in the kitchen in Reading, Pennsylvania, on Thursday, July 15, 2021.
    Eviction_02.jpg
  • PHILADELPHIA, USA - AUGUST 22: Light can be seen from Mohammad Sadeed's children's bedroom, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on Sunday, August 22, 2021.
    Afghanistan_08.jpg
  • PHILADELPHIA, USA - AUGUST 22: Mohammad Sadeed's youngest child's crib, in his bedroom in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on Sunday, August 22, 2021.
    Afghanistan_02.jpg
  • PHILADELPHIA, USA - AUGUST 22: Philadelphia Councilmember Helen Gym speaks at the Stand with Philly's Afghan Community rally in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on Sunday, August 22, 2021.
    Afghanistan_07.jpg
  • Julmauris, 11, Migreldi, 37, Julmeiri, 8, and Aleandra Lara, 6, sit for a portrait in their apartment in Reading, Pennsylvania, on Thursday, July 15, 2021.
    Eviction_01.jpg
  • Eighty miles south of Graceland and a step back in time, Shankerman’s Men’s Wear Store and its owner Floyd Shankerman, 79, are an inseparable part of Clarksdale, Mississippi’s history and a vestige of another era. Shankerman is known for his tuxedos as well as his tunes — a purveyor of fashions of the bygone Mad Men days and a talented singer of Elvis ballads. But he’s also a symbol of progress in Clarksdale, having long brought together people from different generations, religions and races at his store
    Haberdasher_L1002356.jpg
  • Mennonites_Shipyard018.jpg
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  • Haberdasher_L1002125.jpg
  • Gutman_Haberdasher_10.jpg
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  • Gutman_Haberdasher_07.jpg
  • Mennonites_Shipyard017.jpg
  • Taking_Sanctuary_01Taking_Sanctuary_...jpg
  • Eighty miles south of Graceland and a step back in time, Shankerman’s Men’s Wear Store and its owner Floyd Shankerman, 79, are an inseparable part of Clarksdale, Mississippi’s history and a vestige of another era. Shankerman is known for his tuxedos as well as his tunes — a purveyor of fashions of the bygone Mad Men days and a talented singer of Elvis ballads. But he’s also a symbol of progress in Clarksdale, having long brought together people from different generations, religions and races at his store
    Haberdasher_L1002666.jpg
  • Gutman_Haberdasher_01.jpg
  • Eighty miles south of Graceland and a step back in time, Shankerman’s Men’s Wear Store and its owner Floyd Shankerman, 79, are an inseparable part of Clarksdale, Mississippi’s history and a vestige of another era. Shankerman is known for his tuxedos as well as his tunes — a purveyor of fashions of the bygone Mad Men days and a talented singer of Elvis ballads. But he’s also a symbol of progress in Clarksdale, having long brought together people from different generations, religions and races at his store
    Gutman_Haberdasher_02.jpg
  • Gutman_Haberdasher_08.jpg
  • Eighty miles south of Graceland and a step back in time, Shankerman’s Men’s Wear Store and its owner Floyd Shankerman, 79, are an inseparable part of Clarksdale, Mississippi’s history and a vestige of another era. Shankerman is known for his tuxedos as well as his tunes — a purveyor of fashions of the bygone Mad Men days and a talented singer of Elvis ballads. But he’s also a symbol of progress in Clarksdale, having long brought together people from different generations, religions and races at his store
    Haberdasher_L1001831.jpg
  • Eighty miles south of Graceland and a step back in time, Shankerman’s Men’s Wear Store and its owner Floyd Shankerman, 79, are an inseparable part of Clarksdale, Mississippi’s history and a vestige of another era. Shankerman is known for his tuxedos as well as his tunes — a purveyor of fashions of the bygone Mad Men days and a talented singer of Elvis ballads. But he’s also a symbol of progress in Clarksdale, having long brought together people from different generations, religions and races at his store
    Haberdasher_L1001655.jpg
  • Haberdasher_L1001486.jpg
  • Eighty miles south of Graceland and a step back in time, Shankerman’s Men’s Wear Store and its owner Floyd Shankerman, 79, are an inseparable part of Clarksdale, Mississippi’s history and a vestige of another era. Shankerman is known for his tuxedos as well as his tunes — a purveyor of fashions of the bygone Mad Men days and a talented singer of Elvis ballads. But he’s also a symbol of progress in Clarksdale, having long brought together people from different generations, religions and races at his store
    Gutman_Haberdasher_05.jpg
  • Photos of a neighborhood pop-up started by Ryan and Daniella, two chefs who were laid off early in the pandemic. They have had tremendous success in the last year, with the entire neighborhood rallying around them (painting signs, installing a doorbell, buying them out of bread every day, etc.)
    SF_Bakery_02.jpg
  • Mennonites_Shipyard001.jpg
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  • Gutman_Haberdasher_06.jpg
  • Haberdasher_L1002405.jpg
  • Eighty miles south of Graceland and a step back in time, Shankerman’s Men’s Wear Store and its owner Floyd Shankerman, 79, are an inseparable part of Clarksdale, Mississippi’s history and a vestige of another era. Shankerman is known for his tuxedos as well as his tunes — a purveyor of fashions of the bygone Mad Men days and a talented singer of Elvis ballads. But he’s also a symbol of progress in Clarksdale, having long brought together people from different generations, religions and races at his store
    Gutman_Haberdasher_04.jpg
  • Haberdasher_L1001710.jpg
  • Eighty miles south of Graceland and a step back in time, Shankerman’s Men’s Wear Store and its owner Floyd Shankerman, 79, are an inseparable part of Clarksdale, Mississippi’s history and a vestige of another era. Shankerman is known for his tuxedos as well as his tunes — a purveyor of fashions of the bygone Mad Men days and a talented singer of Elvis ballads. But he’s also a symbol of progress in Clarksdale, having long brought together people from different generations, religions and races at his store
    Haberdasher_L1001527.jpg
  • Mennonites_Shipyard010.jpg
  • Mennonites_Shipyard006.jpg
  • Eighty miles south of Graceland and a step back in time, Shankerman’s Men’s Wear Store and its owner Floyd Shankerman, 79, are an inseparable part of Clarksdale, Mississippi’s history and a vestige of another era. Shankerman is known for his tuxedos as well as his tunes — a purveyor of fashions of the bygone Mad Men days and a talented singer of Elvis ballads. But he’s also a symbol of progress in Clarksdale, having long brought together people from different generations, religions and races at his store
    Gutman_Haberdasher_11.jpg
  • Photos of a neighborhood pop-up started by Ryan and Daniella, two chefs who were laid off early in the pandemic. They have had tremendous success in the last year, with the entire neighborhood rallying around them (painting signs, installing a doorbell, buying them out of bread every day, etc.)
    SF_Bakery_03.jpg
  • Photos of a neighborhood pop-up started by Ryan and Daniella, two chefs who were laid off early in the pandemic. They have had tremendous success in the last year, with the entire neighborhood rallying around them (painting signs, installing a doorbell, buying them out of bread every day, etc.)
    SF_Bakery_01.jpg
  • Mennonites_Shipyard011.jpg
  • Barry Lutz, 44, starts and ends his long days with a cigarette and quiet time overlooking the family farm near Boonville, Missouri. As American family farms close or consolidate, theirs has survived.
    Editorial_03.jpg
  • A family photo in the Fettermans' home in Braddock, PA, on February 26, 2021.
    Gutman_Fetterman_59.jpg
  • Gisele Fetterman and her son Karl, 12, pet Levi the family dog at their home in Braddock, PA, on February 26, 2021.
    Gutman_Fetterman_15.jpg
  • Family portraits on the Lieutenant Governor's desk  at the State Capitol in Harrisburg, PA, on March 3, 2021.
    Gutman_Fetterman_40.jpg
  • Lutz in-laws are frequent visitors. “We’re so much in love and have our family that it doesn’t matter where we live.”
    Farming_03.jpg
  • Amanda and Barry’s family have lived in the house for four years. They worry about the farm. “It’s a gamble. We take it one day at a time and do a lot of prayer. We can’t quit,” says Amanda.
    Farming_07.jpg
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Caroline Gutman

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