ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 4月14日 23時51分
They were teenagers when Boko Haram abducted them on the night of April 14, 2014. Suddenly, the girls from Chibok were the unwitting representatives of all the dead and missing victims of a crisis that has upended Nigeria. They became the daughters of the world, embraced and fretted over as though they belonged to everyone. “They became a rallying point,” said Saudatu Mahdi, a co-founder of the #BringBackOurGirls movement. 4 years later, more than 100 of the students have been freed. Now they're women — and they’re trying to rebuild their lives. But more than 100 of their former classmates are still missing, held by Boko Haram. About a dozen are thought to be dead. Many of them women our journalists @dionnesearcy and @adamfergusonphoto met consider themselves the lucky ones. @adamfergusonphoto took portraits of 83 of them in one day — including this portrait of Rifkatu Solomon. “Our hope was to portray them through a series of portraits in a dignified manner, as the young women they had become,” @dionnesearcey writes. Swipe left to see 5 more of the women: Aisha Ezekiel, Maimuna Usman, Maryamu Bulama, Glory Dama and Rahila Bitrus. Visit the link in our profile to see the full story.
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