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[Note: full captions will be added on 3 March] Noora Ali Abbas, age 60 and her grandson Harreth, age 6 at their tent in Salamiyah IDP Camp 2, Nineveh Province, Iraq on April 22, 2019. A case worker at the camp identified Noora as suffering from depression because of her trauma. Noora explained to me she has severe anxiety. Noora and and Mardhiya, claim their son and husband, Marwan Ismael Ilyas, was taken by ISIS in 2015. Harreth is stateless and unable to get an Iraqi government ID because the authorities believe the father was ISIS. Noora follows her grandson to school and can't stop watching him because she said her sons last words were “please take care of my son”. How does the human soul survive atrocity? After the horror of ISIS captivity, tens of thousands of Iraqis — many of them children — are caught up in a mental-health crisis unlike any in the world. Adam Ferguson photographed posed portraits of displaced Yazidi, a Kurdish religious minority group of some 700,000 people, most of whom lived west of Mosul in a district called Sinjar. He also photographed displaced Arab's suffering from conflict associated trauma. He took these photographs at camps for displaced people in the Iraqi Kurdistan and in Nineveh Province, Iraq. There are 16 camps scattered around Duhok, a province smaller than Connecticut. At its peak, Duhok was home to nearly half a million people displaced by ISIS. Many have yet to return home. One camp in Mamasharn has a “psychosocial center,” where graduate students are training to treat men and women who have survived atrocity. Earlier this year, Jan Kizilhan, a prominent Kurdish psychologist from Germany who oversees the program, was meeting with Midya, an 8-year-old Yazidi girl who used to faint some 20 times a day. Kizilhan said he frequently received calls from doctors in Canada and Europe wondering what to do about fainting among Yazidis, especially among the women who had been raped. “The women are always having dissociations,” he told me. ( Adam Ferguson, for The New York Times Magazine) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.