Olivier Asselin photography

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  • Peyragudes ski resort, Midi-Pyrenees, France.
    FRA12.0105.PYRENEES0854.JPG
  • View of Mont Valier and GR10 signboards near Col de Pause, Ariege, Pyrenees, France.
    FRA12.0103.PYRENEES0676.JPG
  • View of Mont Valier and GR10 signboards near Col de Pause, Ariege, Pyrenees, France.
    FRA12.0103.PYRENEES0677.JPG
  • Mountain shelter in snowy mountain landscape near Col de Pause, Ariege, Pyrenees, France.
    FRA12.0103.PYRENEES0641.JPG
  • A girl stands under a painting that indicates directions to a nearby toilet and bath facility in the West Point slum in Monrovia, Montserrado county, Liberia on Monday April 2, 2012.
    LBR12.0402.NUT1422.JPG
  • Sign indicating that consultations are free in the pediatrics wing of the Koumassi general hospital in Abidjan Cote d'Ivoire on Friday July 19, 2013.
    CIV13.0719.UNCF0271.JPG
  • A young woman stands in the doorway of her home after the door was marked with chalk by vaccinators to indicate that occupants were vaccinated against polio in Djambala, Republic of Congo on Wednesday December 8, 2010.
    COG10.1208.POLIO0593_BW.JPG
  • A health worker marks a house with chalk to indicate that children have been vaccinated during a national polio immunization exercise in Salaga, northern Ghana on Thursday March 26, 2009.
    GHA09.0326.POLIO0524.JPG
  • Sign indicating the name of the Republica street in Baracoa, Cuba on Monday July 14, 2008.
    CUB08.0714.BARACOA0009.jpg
  • Children stand in a doorway in the village of Lalo, Benin on Tuesday September 18, 2007. The chalk marks above the door indicate that children have been vaccinated.
    BEN07.0918.MOSQUITONETS0133.jpg
  • A health worker marks a house with chalk to indicate that children have been vaccinated during a national polio immunization exercise in Salaga, northern Ghana on Thursday March 26, 2009.
    GHA09.0326.POLIO0470.JPG
  • A child stands by a wall that has been marked with chalk to indicate that children in the house have been vaccinated in the village of Wantugu, northern Ghana, during a national polio immunization exercise on Friday March 27, 2009.
    GHA09.0327.POLIO0196.JPG
  • A health worker and a community volunteer mark a home with chalk to indicate that children have been vaccinated during a national polio immunization exercise in the village of Kpalbe, northern Ghana on Thursday March 26, 2009.
    GHA09.0326.POLIO0063.JPG
  • Koffi Aya Rose, 19, holds a form indicating that she tested negative for HIV at the NDA health center in Dimbokro, Cote d'Ivoire on Friday June 19, 2009.
    CIV09.0619.GATES0214.jpg
  • Dead chicken sacrificed during a "coming out" ceremony at a fetish shrine in Aflao, Volta Region, Eastern Ghana. A woman was released after spending three months in a small, dark room, hoping that she'd then be able to find a husband. Both chickens lay on their left side, indicating that the shrine servant is free to go. One or both of the chickens laying on their right side would mean the servant needs to spend another three months at the shrine. Despite most Ghanaians being adamant followers of christianism or islam, many of them still maintain traditional beliefs. When facing a problem of any nature, some people will visit a local fetish shrine, looking for help. The main priest will consult the oracles and tell the person in need what has to be done for the problem to go away. People will typically be asked to "serve" the shrine for weeks, sometimes months, as their families pay the priest for their upkeep.
    GHA05AflaoShrine0011.jpg
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