ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 7月10日 23時17分


In 2014, when the fish died off in #LakePoop in #Llapallapani, Bolivia, scores of the Uru-Murato people — the oldest indigenous group in the area — left to work in lead mines or salt flats up to 200 miles away. The @ニューヨーク・タイムズ staff photographer @joshhaner took this photo of 4 Uru working at the world’s largest salt flat, #Bolivia’s Salar de Uyuni. The work there is arduous. The men gather salt as the heat beats down on them from above and reflects up from the white expanse below. “The Uru people aren’t made for this,” said Pablo Flores, a 57-year-old Uru fisherman, who is among the workers pictured here. “I’m not made for this. We can’t do this kind of work.” In his village, Pablo was a respected elder and once its mayor. As a fisherman, he was always his own boss. But at the salt mine, he feels like a hired hand to exploit. Visit the link in our profile to see more photos and to read @caseysalbum’s article about how #climatechange is displacing the Uru-Murato people. #nytweekender


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