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  • Daw Mu Htan picking cotton and removing the seeds in the ethnic Kayan village of Lo Ka Na village, Panpet, Kayah State, Myanmar on 13th November 2016. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings . Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
    A0034943cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Maria, a Kayan ethnic minority woman at her home in Kayah State, Myanmar on 12th November 2016. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF3749cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman on 17 January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    A0032569cc_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Daw Mu Naw, aged 80, a Kayan ethnic minority woman at her home in Lo Pu village, Kayah State, Myanmar on 12th November 2016. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their ne
    DSCF4158cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman on 26th March 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF6726cc_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman and a young child drinking millet wine on 23rd January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF6037cc_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman on 17 January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    A0032580cc_1_1.jpg
  • Daw Mu Htan picking cotton in the ethnic Kayan village of Lo Ka Na village, Panpet, Kayah State, Myanmar on 13th November 2016. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    A0034926cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman on 17 January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF7457cc_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman on 26th March 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF6742cc_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman on 23rd January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF6042cc_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Maria, a Kayan ethnic minority woman at her home in Kayah State, Myanmar on 12th November 2016. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF3747cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman with her grand-daughters on 26th March 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF6733cc_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman on 26th March 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF6741cc_1_1.jpg
  • Close up of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority womans brass leg rings on 23rd January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings. It is very unusual to see a woman wearing brass leg rings  It is very unusual to see a woman wearing brass leg rings photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
    DSCF6038cc_1_1.jpg
  • A portrait of a tattooed Kayan man, sitting cross-legged in his traditional longhouse, located on the Metah River, 14th March 1982, in Sarawak, East Malayasia Borneo. The population of the Kayan ethnic group may be around 27,000. They are part of a larger grouping of people, settled mainly along the middle reaches of the Baram, Bintulu, and Rajang rivers in Sarawak, Malaysia and referred collectively as the Orang Ulu, or upriver people. Like some other Dayak people, they are known for being fierce warriors, former headhunters, adept in Upland rice cultivation, and having extensive tattoos and stretched earlobes amongst both sexes.
    longhouse_man-14-03-1982.jpg
  • Portrait of Maria, a Kayan ethnic minority woman at her home in Song Duu village, Kayah State, Myanmar on 12th November 2016. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF4029cc_1.jpg
  • Grandmother takes care of a baby during a rice harvest in the ethnic Kayan village of Lo Pu, Kayah State, Myanmar on 16th November 2016. Kayan women traditional carry their babies in a bamboo basket until they are a year old
    A0035211cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman on 26th March 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF6694cc_1_1.jpg
  • Close up of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority womans brass leg rings on 23rd January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings. It is very unusual to see a woman wearing brass leg rings
    DSCF6035cc_1_1.jpg
  • A Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman holds a spool of handspun cotton on 17 January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF3042cc_1_1.jpg
  • A Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman weaving a skarf for tourists on 17 January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF3072cc_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman on 17 January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    A0032561cc_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a Kayan Padaung ethnic minority woman on 26th March 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    A0032878cc_1_1.jpg
  • A Padaung ethnic minority woman spinning cotton on 17 January 2016 in Kayah State, Myanmar. Myanmar is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia with 135 different indigenous ethnic groups. There are over a dozen ethnic Karenni subgroups in the region including the Kayan who are perhaps the best known due to the traditional practice of the Kayan women extending their necks with brass rings
    DSCF3029cc_1_1.jpg
  • Dta Mi 7, an ethnic Kayan girl from Myanmar at Baan Tong Luang, Eco-Agricultural Hill Tribes Village on 7th June 2016 in Chiang Mai province, Thailand. The fabricated village is home to 8 different hill tribes who make a living from selling their handicrafts and having their photos taken by tourists
    A0033112cc_1.jpg
  • Ma Su 20 an ethnic Kayan woman from Myanmar at Baan Tong Luang, Eco-Agricultural Hill Tribes Village on 7th June 2016 in Chiang Mai province, Thailand. The fabricated village is home to 8 different hill tribes who make a living from selling their handicrafts and having their photos taken by tourists
    A0033170cc_1.jpg
  • Ma Hui 10, an ethnic Kayan girl from Myanmar at Baan Tong Luang, Eco-Agricultural Hill Tribes Village on 7th June 2016 in Chiang Mai province, Thailand. The fabricated village is home to 8 different hill tribes who make a living from selling their handicrafts and having their photos taken by tourists
    A0033120cc_1.jpg
  • Ma Su 20 an ethnic Kayan woman from Myanmar at Baan Tong Luang, Eco-Agricultural Hill Tribes Village on 7th June 2016 in Chiang Mai province, Thailand. The fabricated village is home to 8 different hill tribes who make a living from selling their handicrafts and having their photos taken by tourists
    A0033146cc_1.jpg
  • Harvesting rice in the ethnic Kayan village of Panpet, Kayah State, Myanmar on 14th November 2016
    A0034999cc_1.jpg
  • Ma Su 20 an ethnic Kayan woman from Myanmar at Baan Tong Luang, Eco-Agricultural Hill Tribes Village on 7th June 2016 in Chiang Mai province, Thailand. The fabricated village is home to 8 different hill tribes who make a living from selling their handicrafts and having their photos taken by tourists
    A0033134cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Ma Prai Ta, a Yinbaw Kayan Kangan ethnic minority woman wearing her traditional costume at home in Daw We Ku village in Kayah State, Myanmar on 19th November 2016
    DSCF4176cc_1.jpg
  • Helen, an ethnic Kayan woman with Faustina her 5 month old daughter at her home in Song Duu village, Kayah State, Myanmar on 16th November 2016
    DSCF3613cc_1.jpg
  • Harvesting rice in the ethnic Kayan village of Panpet, Kayah State, Myanmar on 14th November 2016  photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
    A0035022cc_1.jpg
  • Ma Su 20 an ethnic Kayan woman from Myanmar at Baan Tong Luang, Eco-Agricultural Hill Tribes Village on 7th June 2016 in Chiang Mai province, Thailand. The fabricated village is home to 8 different hill tribes who make a living from selling their handicrafts and having their photos taken by tourists
    B0033148cc_1.jpg
  • Dta Mi 7, an ethnic Kayan girl from Myanmar at Baan Tong Luang, Eco-Agricultural Hill Tribes Village on 7th June 2016 in Chiang Mai province, Thailand. The fabricated village is home to 8 different hill tribes who make a living from selling their handicrafts and having their photos taken by tourists
    A0033109cc_1.jpg
  • A religious picture on the wall in the old Catholic church in Song Duu Kayan ethnic minority village in Kayah State, Myanmar on 15th November 2016
    DSCF4016cc_1.jpg
  • Grandmother takes care of a baby during a rice harvest in the ethnic Kayan village of Lo Pu, Kayah State, Myanmar on 16th November 2016
    A0035199cc_1.jpg
  • Ma Su 20 an ethnic Kayan woman from Myanmar at Baan Tong Luang, Eco-Agricultural Hill Tribes Village on 7th June 2016 in Chiang Mai province, Thailand. The fabricated village is home to 8 different hill tribes who make a living from selling their handicrafts and having their photos taken by tourists
    A0033162cc_1.jpg
  • Ma Hui 10, an ethnic Kayan girl from Myanmar at Baan Tong Luang, Eco-Agricultural Hill Tribes Village on 7th June 2016 in Chiang Mai province, Thailand. The fabricated village is home to 8 different hill tribes who make a living from selling their handicrafts and having their photos taken by tourists
    A0033117cc_1.jpg
  • Harvesting sunflower seeds in the ethnic Kayan village of Daw Thawe, Kayah State, Myanmar on 14th November 2016
    A0035075cc_1.jpg
  • A bible in the Catholic church in Ka The Ko ethnic Kayan village on 17th January 2016, Kayah state, Myanmar. In the past most people residing in Kayah State were traditional spirit worshippers, but significant numbers have converted to Christianity, especially  Baptists or Catholics
    DSCF3059cc_1_1.jpg
  • Harvested sunflower seeds in the ethnic Kayan village of Daw Thawe, Kayah State, Myanmar on 14th November 2016  photo by Tessa Bunney/In Pictures via Getty Images
    A0035130cc_1.jpg
  • Harvested sunflower seeds in the ethnic Kayan village of Daw Thawe, Kayah State, Myanmar on 14th November 2016
    A0035120cc_1.jpg
  • Harvesting sunflower seeds in the ethnic Kayan village of Daw Thawe, Kayah State, Myanmar on 14th November 2016
    A0035093cc_1.jpg
  • Dta Mi 7, an ethnic Kayan girl from Myanmar at Baan Tong Luang, Eco-Agricultural Hill Tribes Village on 7th June 2016 in Chiang Mai province, Thailand. The fabricated village is home to 8 different hill tribes who make a living from selling their handicrafts and having their photos taken by tourists
    A0033124cc_1.jpg
  • Ma Su 20 an ethnic Kayan woman and her baby daughter from Myanmar at Baan Tong Luang, Eco-Agricultural Hill Tribes Village on 7th June 2016 in Chiang Mai province, Thailand. The fabricated village is home to 8 different hill tribes who make a living from selling their handicrafts and having their photos taken by tourists
    A0033128cc_1.jpg
  • An altar in the Catholic church in Ka The Ko ethnic Kayan village on 17th January 2016, Kayah state, Myanmar. In the past most people residing in Kayah State were traditional spirit worshippers, but significant numbers have converted to Christianity, especially  Baptists or Catholics
    DSCF7467cc_1_1.jpg
  • A net curtain at a window in the old Catholic church in Song Duu Kayan ethnic minority village in Kayah State, Myanmar on 15th November 2016
    DSCF4011_1.jpg
  • Harvesting paddy rice in the ethnic Kayan village of Lo Pu, Kayah State, Myanmar on 16th November 2016
    A0035175cc_1.jpg
  • Ma Su 20 an ethnic Kayan woman from Myanmar at Baan Tong Luang, Eco-Agricultural Hill Tribes Village on 7th June 2016 in Chiang Mai province, Thailand. The fabricated village is home to 8 different hill tribes who make a living from selling their handicrafts and having their photos taken by tourists
    A0033132cc_1.jpg
  • Sister Martina Khine at St Anns Home, Sisters of Charity in Le Wo ethnic Kayan village, Kayah State, Myanmar on 13th November 2016
    DSCF3826cc_1.jpg
  • Sunday morning service at the Mary of Christian church in the Kayan village of Ye Phyu, Kayah State, Myanmar on 13th November 2016
    DSCF3765cc_1.jpg
  • A wooden cross standing in a paddy rice field in the ethnic Kayan village of Lo Pu, Kayah State, Myanmar on 16th November 2016. In Catholic villages farmers erect wooden crosses two or three weeks before harvest to pray for more grains
    A0035193cc_1.jpg
  • Brother Peter Victor at Mary of Christian church in the Kayan village of Ye Phyu, Kayah State, Myanmar on 13th November 2016. In the past most people residing in Kayah State were traditional spirit worshippers, but significant numbers have converted to Christianity, especially Baptist or Catholic.
    DSCF3792cc_1.jpg
  • Brother Peter Victor at Mary of Christian church in the Kayan village of Ye Phyu, Kayah State, Myanmar on 13th November 2016. In the past most people residing in Kayah State were traditional spirit worshippers, but significant numbers have converted to Christianity, especially Baptist or Catholic.
    DSCF3807cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Innocent, a ten year old ethnic Kayan girl at her first communion at Christ the King Cathedral in Loikaw, Kayah State, Myanmar on 20th November 2016. In the past most people residing in Kayah State were traditional spirit worshippers, but significant numbers have converted to Christianity, especially Baptist or Catholic
    DSCF4305cc_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Innocent, a ten year old ethnic Kayan girl at her first communion at Christ the King Cathedral in Loikaw, Kayah State, Myanmar on 20th November 2016. In the past most people residing in Kayah State were traditional spirit worshippers, but significant numbers have converted to Christianity, especially Baptist or Catholic
    DSCF4303cc_1.jpg
  • Sister Louise Claire at St Anns Home, Sisters of Charity in Le Wo ethnic Kayan village, Kayah State, Myanmar on 13th November 2016
    DSCF3818cc_1.jpg
  • Sister Louise Claire and Sister Martina Khine at St Anns Home, Sisters of Charity in Le Wo ethnic Kayan village, Kayah State, Myanmar on 13th November 2016
    DSCF3832cc_1.jpg
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