The Books
- The Photographer
- Rethink: Cause and Consequences of September 11
- Private: Humanity
- Somerset Stories: Fivepenny Dreams
- One Hundred Years of Darkness
- Blood and Honey: A Balkan War Journal
- Persona, Portraits
- Albanians
- Incognito
- Behind the Curtains of 21st Century Communism
- Rethink: Cause and Consequences of September 11
- The Family
- Questions Without Answers
- Curse of the Black Gold: 50 Years of Oil in the Niger Delta
- Madagascar: A Land Out of Balance
- Denied: The Crisis of America's Uninsured
- The Protestants: No Surrender
- Aging in America: The Years Ahead
- Three
- Witness Number Eight: Photojournalisms
- When the Borders Bleed: The Struggle of the Kurds
- Bastard Eden, Our Chernobyl
- Eight Days
- Glastonbury: Another Stage
- Islands Of The Spirits
- Interrogations
- Laos Open Secret
- Moscow Nights
- Blanco
- Haiti: 12 january 2010
- Evidence
- Dispatches Endgame
- Dispatches on Russia
- Dispatches Beyond Iraq
- Dispatches Out of Poverty
- Dispatches In America
- A Darkness Visible
- The Rape of a Nation
- Rebuild: Kosovo Six Years Later
- Argentina: From the Ruins of a Dirty War
- The House of Wisdom
- Tsunami: A Document of Devastation
- Broken Dream
- Vanishing
- Antonin Kratochvil
- Mirror
- Inferno
- My America
- Afghanistan: The Road to Kabul
- Forgotten War: Democratic Republic of Congo
- War
- Whiskey Tango Foxtrot
When the Borders Bleed: The Struggle of the Kurds
This stunning visual essay - one hundred photographs taken in locales ranging from Turkey, Iraq, and Israel to Britain and Germany - brings the Kurdish struggle for survival into sharp, powerfully affecting focus.
Throughout their history, the Kurdish people have been the victims of geopolitics. Caught in the middle of wars and conflicts in the oil-rich territory where the borders of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey converge, exploited and betrayed first by colonial nations and then by Cold War superpowers, they have most recently endured genocidal campaigns waged against them by Saddam Hussein. This stunning visual essay - one hundred photographs taken in locales ranging from Turkey, Iraq, and Israel to Britain and Germany - brings the Kurdish struggle for survival into sharp, powerfully affecting focus. We see the guerrillas training for war, mothers and children living in the bombed-out rubble of their homes, victims of chemical warfare, expatriates in Europe preserving their culture in the face of sometimes violent xenophobia. And in a cogent introduction, Christopher Hitchens traces the little-known history of the Kurds - a narrative filled with oppression, exploitation, and betrayal - helping us understand the legacy that has given rise to the Kurds' desperate self-reliance that finds expression in the adage: "The Kurds have no friends - no friends but the mountains."




