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PHOTOGRAPHS BY ANA PALACIOS
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By Whitney Johnson, Director of Visual and Immersive Experiences
Photojournalism can take you to a new place, far from your home. If it is done right, the storytelling can make you care about something you may not have known about before.
In this story for Nat Geo, photographer Ana Palacios not only had to overcome the distance of a reader from Spain, but she had to transcend perhaps a touch of skepticism: Would a reader care about a grassroots movement of people rescuing injured farm animals from slaughter—and in one case, the dumpster—to take them to places where the animals could live out their days with love?
In the photo above, Palacios married the beauty of Laietana the duck with the care with which it is shown. Volunteer Carla Heras cradles Laietana, which is one of 1,500 animals—most rescued from the streets and the farming industry—living at the Santuario Gaia in Camprodon, Spain. Gaia is among a few dozen sanctuaries in Spain providing a home to animals previously farmed for food.
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