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EZRA MILLSTEIN PHOTOGRAPHY

Nepal Earthquake

Please note: this gallery contains graphic images. 

The April 2015 Nepal earthquake killed more than 8,800 people and injured more than 23,000. Hundreds of thousands of people were made homeless with entire villages flattened. Centuries-old buildings were destroyed at UNESCO World Heritage sites in the Kathmandu Valley, including some at the Kathmandu Durbar Square, the Patan Durbar Squar, the Bhaktapur Durbar Square, the Changu Narayan Temple and the Swayambhunath Stupa. 

  • The temples in Durbar Square, the cultural center of Nepal, are in ruins, the morning after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.  A series of aftershocks continued to strike fear into residents, who were sleeping outside in streets and parks for fear of collapsing buildings. © Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • Residents of Harisiddhi village in the Lalitpur district continue to clean up after a 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan. © Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • 2 year-old Lijeesha Shahi and her family have been sleeping under a tarp on the sidewalk since the earthquake, afraid that their home is structurally unstable.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • KATHMANDU, NEPAL (4/27/15)-Collapsed buildings line the streets of Kathmandu, two days after a massive 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • KATHMANDU, NEPAL (4/27/15)-A Nepali recovery team prepares to remove a dead body from a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.  © Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • A Nepali recovery team works to remove a dead body from beneath a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.  A series of aftershocks continue to strike fear into residents, who are sleeping outside in streets and parks for fear of collapsing buildings.  The death toll continues to rise.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • A Nepali recovery team works to remove a dead body from beneath a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.  A series of aftershocks continue to strike fear into residents, who are sleeping outside in streets and parks for fear of collapsing buildings.  The death toll continues to rise.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • A Nepali recovery team cuts away a metal railing, as they attempt to remove a dead body from beneath a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • A Nepali recovery team works to remove a dead body from beneath a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.  A series of aftershocks continue to strike fear into residents, who are sleeping outside in streets and parks for fear of collapsing buildings.  The death toll continues to rise.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • An exhausted soldier takes a break, as his team works to remove a dead body from beneath a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.  A series of aftershocks continue to strike fear into residents, who are sleeping outside in streets and parks for fear of collapsing buildings.  The death toll continues to rise.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • A Nepali recovery team works to remove a dead man from beneath a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.  A series of aftershocks continue to strike fear into residents, who are sleeping outside in streets and parks for fear of collapsing buildings.  The death toll continues to rise.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • A Nepali recovery team carries a dead body from beneath a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.  A series of aftershocks continue to strike fear into residents, who are sleeping outside in streets and parks for fear of collapsing buildings.  The death toll continues to rise.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • A Nepali recovery team removed a dead body from a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.  © Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • KATHMANDU, NEPAL (4/27/15)-A Nepali woman identifies the body of her dead cousin, after he was removed from a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan. © Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • A Nepali woman identifies the body of her dead cousin, after he was removed from a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan. © Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • KATHMANDU, NEPAL (4/27/15)-A woman mourns the death of her sister-in-law, after a recovery team removed her from a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • Family members transport the body of a Nepali man, after a recovery team removed him from a collapsed building, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.  © Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • Bodies are cremated in the Buddhist tradition, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • Bodies are cremated in the Buddhist tradition, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
  • Family members participate in a Buddhist ceremony before cremating the bodies of a husband and wife, two days after a huge 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Nepal, and was felt as far as India and Pakistan.  A series of aftershocks continued to strike fear into residents, who were sleeping outside in streets and parks for fear of collapsing buildings.  The death toll rose to over 8,000.© Habitat for Humanity International/Ezra Millstein
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