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  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: the storefront of the New Hope ethnic tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, where ex-sex workers helped by nuns make make products with mainly African fabrics, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5565.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: Handmade products are displayed inside the Bottega Fantasia (Fantasy store), next to the New Hope tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, where ex-sex workers helped by nuns make make products with mainly  African fabrics, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5558.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: Handmade products are displayed inside the Bottega Fantasia (Fantasy store), next to the New Hope tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, where ex-sex workers helped by nuns make make products with mainly  African fabrics, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5555.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: Handmade products are displayed inside the Bottega Fantasia (Fantasy store), next to the New Hope tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, where ex-sex workers helped by nuns make make products with mainly  African fabrics, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5508.jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081105_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081105_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081105_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081105_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081105_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY.<br />
<br />
Residents celebrate Presidential elect Senator Barack Obama`s win in the historic African American district of Harlem November 4, 2008 in New York City. Obama defeated Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) by a wide margin in the election to become the first African-American U.S. President elect.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, poses for a portrait in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0149.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Rosemari Mealy's book "Fidel & Malcolm X. Memories of a meeting", featuring pictures of the two leaders with Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, is here in Mr Hakeem's home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0086.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Ali Abdul-Hakeem (32), the son of Luqman Abdul-Hakeem - a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960 - serves tea as his brother Ahmed (28) listens to his father during an interview in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0074.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Ahmed Abdul-Hakeem (28), the son of Luqman Abdul-Hakeem - a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960 - listens to his father during an interview in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0066.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, is here during an interview in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0036.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: A Nigerian immigrant woman and ex-sex worker sews fabrics for an arm chair caddy at the New Hope tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5434.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: A Nigerian immigrant woman and ex-sex worker irons fabrics for an arm chair caddy before being sewed at the New Hope tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5271.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: (L-R) Ahmed Abdul Hakeem (28) teaches aikido to a class of students in the dojo his father Luqman founded after moving to Morocco in 1985, in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
The Hakeem brothers are the sons of Luqman Abdul-Hakeem, a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0471.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: (L-R) Brothers Ahmed (28) and Ali (32) Abdul Hakeem teach aikido to a class of students in the dojo their father Luqman founded after moving to Morocco in 1985, in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
The Hakeem brothers are the sons of Luqman Abdul-Hakeem, a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0445.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: (R-L) Brothers Ali (32) and Ahmed (28) Abdul Hakeem teach aikido to a class of students in the dojo their father Luqman founded after moving to Morocco in 1985, in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
The Hakeem brothers are the sons of Luqman Abdul-Hakeem, a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0348.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: (L-R) Brothers Ali (32) and Ahmed (28) Abdul Hakeem teach aikido to a class of students in the dojo their father Luqman founded after moving to Morocco in 1985, in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
The Hakeem brothers are the sons of Luqman Abdul-Hakeem, a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0333.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, poses for a portrait in one of his two dojos where he has taught aikido up until his surgery two years ago, in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0270.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, poses for a portrait in one of his two dojos where he has taught aikido up until his surgery two years ago, in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0238.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82, center), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, is here with his two sons Ali (32, left) and Ahmed (28, right)  in the dojo they teach aikido, in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0212.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Rosemari Mealy's book "Fidel & Malcolm X. Memories of a meeting" features a photograph of the two leaders with Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (left), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, is here on a sofa of Mr Hakeem's home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0179.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, poses for a portrait in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0164.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, poses for a portrait in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0160.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, poses for a portrait in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0140.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, poses for a portrait in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0133.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, is here during an interview in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0125.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, is here during an interview in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0115.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, is here during an interview in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0105.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, is here in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0090.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, is here during an interview in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0044.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, is here during an interview in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0033.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, shows pictures of the meeting of the two leaders published in Rosemari Mealy's book "Fidel & Malcolm X. Memories of a meeting", in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0026.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, shows a picture of him (on the left) with the two leaders published in Rosemari Mealy's book "Fidel & Malcolm X. Memories of a meeting", in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0024.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Ahmed Abdul-Hakeem (28), the son of Luqman Abdul-Hakeem - a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960 - listens to his father during an interview in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0015.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: Luqman Abdul-Hakeem (82), a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960, is here during an interview in his home in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0007.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: Miniatures of the African continent and of the Holy Mary are here in Sister Rita Giaretta's office at Casa Rut, a shelter for abused young immigrant women in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
Casa Rut was founded in 1995 and it is promoted and managed by the Ursuline Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Mary of Breganze (Vicenza, Italy).  Casa Rut's goal is to provide young immigrant women a familiar environment where  they are helped to protect and free themselves, and to undertake a common path aiming to the integration in Italy's society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5674.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: Sister Rita Giaretta (center), founder of Casa Rut and of the New Hope tailor's shop, listens to a young immigrant woman at the tailoring studio in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5537.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: Sister Rita Giaretta, founder of Casa Rut and of the New Hope tailor's shop, listens to a young immigrant woman at the tailoring studio in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5518.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: A Holy Mary medallion and a cross are worn by a Nigerian immigrant woman and ex-sex worker that is now working at the New Hope tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5472.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: A Nigerian immigrant woman and ex-sex worker sews fabrics for an arm chair caddy, as Sister Giaretta checks a handmade scarf at the New Hope tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5463.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: Sewing workspaces at the New Hope tailor's shop, where ex-sex workers work in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5441.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: A Nigerian immigrant woman and ex-sex worker sews fabrics for an arm chair caddy at the New Hope tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5359.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: A Nigerian immigrant woman and ex-sex worker irons fabrics for an arm chair caddy before being sewed at the New Hope tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5188.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: Sister Rita Giaretta (center), founder of Casa Rut and of the New Hope tailor's shop, talks to volunteers at the tailoring studio in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5150.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: Sister Rita Giaretta (center), founder of Casa Rut and of the New Hope tailor's shop, listens to a young immigrant woman at the tailoring studio in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5084.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: A Nigerian immigrant woman and ex-sex worker sews fabrics for an arm chair caddy at the New Hope tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5073.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: Sister Rita Giaretta, founder of Casa Rut and of the New Hope ethnic tailor's shop, is here at the Bottega Fantasia (Fantasy Store), where handmade products made by ex-sex workers are sold in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5045.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: A Nigerian immigrant woman and ex-sex worker sews fabrics for an arm chair caddy at the New Hope tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5033.jpg
  • CASABLANCA, MOROCCO - 14 MAY 2016: (L-R) Brothers Ahmed (28) and Ali (32) Abdul Hakeem teach aikido to a class of students in the dojo their father Luqman founded after moving to Morocco in 1985, in Sidi Maarouf, a district of Casablanca, Morocco, on May 14th 2016.<br />
<br />
The Hakeem brothers are the sons of Luqman Abdul-Hakeem, a close follower of Malcolm X that chauffeured the African American activist around and introduced him to Cuban leader  Fidel Castro in September 1960.<br />
<br />
Born in Cleveland, OH, in 1934, Luqman Abdul-Hakeem was raised in Flushing, Queens, and then moved to Bayside, where he graduated in 1952. He attended the New York Technical University for a few months before enrolling in the Navy, where he stayed for two years. Though he had asked for ship duty, he ended up in Springfield, Mass., and Glennclose, Ill. He moved to Brooklyn when his hitch was done and by 1966 was studying jujitsu and aikido. He met Malcolm X during one of his sermons on 116th street in Harlem, New York, in the late 50’s. In 1985, Mr. Hakeem decided to move to Marocco because America wasn't a country where he wanted to raise hois children. He has been teaching aikido in the two dojos he owns in Casablanca until 2014, when he underwent a surgery.
    CIPG_20160514_NYT-MalcolmX_M3_0482.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: A Holy Mary medallion and a cross are worn by a Nigerian immigrant woman and ex-sex worker that is now working at the New Hope tailor's shop in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
New Hope is an ethnic tailor's shop that makes a variety of colourful products working mainly african fabrics. The New Hope social cooperative, founded in 2014, promotes a training workshop for your immigrant women, many of which have children, that want to integrate in Italian society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5488.jpg
  • 13 November, 2008. New York, NY. Senator Malcolm Smith is here in his New York office. Sen. Malcolm Smith will be the Senate Majority leader when the Senate changes hands in January. Malcolm Smith is an African-American member of the New York State Senate representing the 14th Senate district in Southeast Queens. First elected in 2000, Smith is a Democrat and was elected Minority Leader in January 2007.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081113_NYT_SMITH_MG_8210.jpg
  • 13 November, 2008. New York, NY. Senator Malcolm Smith is here in his New York office. Sen. Malcolm Smith will be the Senate Majority leader when the Senate changes hands in January. Malcolm Smith is an African-American member of the New York State Senate representing the 14th Senate district in Southeast Queens. First elected in 2000, Smith is a Democrat and was elected Minority Leader in January 2007.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081113_NYT_SMITH_MG_8157.jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081104_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081104_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 13 November, 2008. New York, NY. Senator Malcolm Smith is here in his New York office. Sen. Malcolm Smith will be the Senate Majority leader when the Senate changes hands in January. Malcolm Smith is an African-American member of the New York State Senate representing the 14th Senate district in Southeast Queens. First elected in 2000, Smith is a Democrat and was elected Minority Leader in January 2007.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081113_NYT_SMITH_MG_8235.jpg
  • 13 November, 2008. New York, NY. Senator Malcolm Smith is here in his New York office. Sen. Malcolm Smith will be the Senate Majority leader when the Senate changes hands in January. Malcolm Smith is an African-American member of the New York State Senate representing the 14th Senate district in Southeast Queens. First elected in 2000, Smith is a Democrat and was elected Minority Leader in January 2007.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081113_NYT_SMITH_MG_8219.jpg
  • 13 November, 2008. New York, NY. Senator Malcolm Smith is here in his New York office. Sen. Malcolm Smith will be the Senate Majority leader when the Senate changes hands in January. Malcolm Smith is an African-American member of the New York State Senate representing the 14th Senate district in Southeast Queens. First elected in 2000, Smith is a Democrat and was elected Minority Leader in January 2007.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081113_NYT_SMITH_MG_8166.jpg
  • 13 November, 2008. New York, NY. Senator Malcolm Smith is here in his New York office. Sen. Malcolm Smith will be the Senate Majority leader when the Senate changes hands in January. Malcolm Smith is an African-American member of the New York State Senate representing the 14th Senate district in Southeast Queens. First elected in 2000, Smith is a Democrat and was elected Minority Leader in January 2007.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081113_NYT_SMITH_MG_8083.jpg
  • 13 November, 2008. New York, NY. Senator Malcolm Smith is here in his New York office. Sen. Malcolm Smith will be the Senate Majority leader when the Senate changes hands in January. Malcolm Smith is an African-American member of the New York State Senate representing the 14th Senate district in Southeast Queens. First elected in 2000, Smith is a Democrat and was elected Minority Leader in January 2007.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081113_NYT_SMITH_MG_7996.jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081104_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 13 November, 2008. New York, NY. Senator Malcolm Smith is here in his New York office. Sen. Malcolm Smith will be the Senate Majority leader when the Senate changes hands in January. Malcolm Smith is an African-American member of the New York State Senate representing the 14th Senate district in Southeast Queens. First elected in 2000, Smith is a Democrat and was elected Minority Leader in January 2007.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081113_NYT_SMITH_MG_7998.jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Residents of the historically African-American neighborhood of Harlem watch live coverage of the election results at a Democratic rally on Election Day on November 4, 2008 in New York City. After months of sometimes heated campaigning between Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), Americans are finally voting today for the president of the United States.<br />
<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • 4 November, 2008. Harlem, New York, NY. Harlem residents cast their vote at the Public School 175. After nearly two years of presidential campaigning, U.S. citizens go to the polls today to vote in the election between Democratic presidential nominee U.S. Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) and Republican nominee U.S. Sen. John McCain (R-AZ).<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20080724_ELECTIONS-2008_MG...jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: A woman walks up the stairs of the apartment building leading to Casa Ruta, a shelter for abused young immigrant women in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
Casa Rut was founded in 1995 and it is promoted and managed by the Ursuline Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Mary of Breganze (Vicenza, Italy).  Casa Rut's goal is to provide young immigrant women a familiar environment where  they are helped to protect and free themselves, and to undertake a common path aiming to the integration in Italy's society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5882.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: A teady bear and the suitcases belonging to a departing Nigerian immigrant woman and ex-sex worker are here in her room at Casa Rut, a shelter for abused young immigrant women, with a stuffed given  in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015. The Ursuline Sisters of Casa Rut give the young abused women a teady bear upong their arrival at the shelter.<br />
<br />
Casa Rut was founded in 1995 and it is promoted and managed by the Ursuline Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Mary of Breganze (Vicenza, Italy).  Casa Rut's goal is to provide young immigrant women a familiar environment where  they are helped to protect and free themselves, and to undertake a common path aiming to the integration in Italy's society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5866.jpg
  • CASERTA, ITALY - 25 FEBRUARY 2015: A Nigerian immigrant and ex-sex worker poses for a portrait in the chappel of Casa Rut, a shelter for abused young immigrant women where she is hosted in Caserta, Italy, on February 25th 2015.<br />
<br />
Casa Rut was founded in 1995 and it is promoted and managed by the Ursuline Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Mary of Breganze (Vicenza, Italy).  Casa Rut's goal is to provide young immigrant women a familiar environment where  they are helped to protect and free themselves, and to undertake a common path aiming to the integration in Italy's society.
    CIPG_20150225_INYT_CasaRut__M3_5823.jpg
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