Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 38 images found }

Loading ()...

  • DUBLIN, IRELAND - AUGUST 26, 2018: People holding protest posters against clerical sexual child abuse in Ireland, during a protest gathering at the Garden of Remembrance in Dublin City centre. Thousands took the streets of Dublin protesting the wrongdoings of the Catholic Church, during the two day visit of Pope Francis to Ireland. CREDIT: Paulo Nunes dos Santos for The New York Times
    Ireland_PopeProtests_21.jpg
  • A protester against clerical sexual abuse dressed as the Virgin Mary in Dublin.
    Ireland_PopeProtests_36.jpg
  • Martin Gallagher, who was 12 when he was first sexually abused by Rev. Eugene Greene, looks through the window of his home in Gortahork, County Donegal, Ireland. “There’s something there that’s never going to go away”, he said in an interview. “You try to forget, but you can’t. It’s a thing you just need to have to live with, work around”.
    Donegal_ChurchAbuse_07.jpg
  • Peter Mulryan, a former resident of the St. Mary’s Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, working at his family home in Ballinasloe, Ireland. Mulryan, who grew up in a abusive foster family, is seeking information about the fate of the infant sister he has never known after she went into the St. Mary’s Mother and Baby Home in Tuam. He says Catherine Corless, whose research uncovered a pit at the home where it is suspected many children were buried, contacted him in 2014 to say she believed she had identified his sister among the 796 children interred at the site.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_09.jpg
  • People gather outside Belfast City Hall protesting against Northern Ireland’s abortion laws. The country’s laws governing the termination of pregnancy date to the 19th century.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_14.jpg
  • A catholic priest attempts to cover his face during an anti-abortion rally throughout Dublin City centre, on March 10, 2018.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_02.jpg
  • An anti-abortion preacher handles a miniature baby while demonstrating the supposed size of a 12 week foetus to people passing by in a shopping street in central Dublin, Ireland.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_22.jpg
  • Frannie Hopkins, who at age of 12 in 1975, while playing with a friend, found the remains of children at St. Mary’s Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, poses for a portrait at his house in Tuam, Ireland.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_18.jpg
  • A member of Ireland’s Church of God, preaches anti-abortion words to pro-life supporters taking part on a rally throughout Dublin City centre, on March 10, 2018.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_12.jpg
  • Religious paraphernalia is seen for sale outside Knock Shrine, a major pilgrimage site in Knock, Ireland, where millions believe the Virgin Mary appeared in 1879. Despite the general population showing outrage for the treatment of infants at the hands of local Catholic institutions, and other scandals involving the church, Catholic devotion and  faith is still very prominent in this part of the country.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_04.jpg
  • Pro-equality mural by artist Joe Caslin on the side of the Mercantile building at the junction of South Great George's Street and Dame Street in ‎Dublin, ‎Ireland. May 22nd, voters will take part in a historic vote allowing the public to decide if same sex marriage can be allowed in the country.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_24.jpg
  • Fr. Dermod McCarthy greets people attending Sunday mass at St. Mary’s Pro-Cathedral in Dublin City centre, on May 13, 2018.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_16.jpg
  • A pro-marriage equality campaigner outside a bar in central Dublin, Ireland.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_13.jpg
  • A visitor touches the stone, on a wall in Knock Shrine, where millions believe the Virgin Mary appeared in 1879. Despite the general population showing outrage for the treatment of infants at the hands of local Catholic institutions, and other scandals involving the church, Catholic devotion and  faith is still very prominent in this part of the country.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_11.jpg
  • The derelict back wall of Gloucester Laundry, the last of Ireland’s infamous “Magdalene laundries” to go out of business, as seen from Railway Street. Dublin City council announced plans to demolished the building to make way for a budget hotel, a controversial decision for some survivors and campaigners who would rather see some or all of the Gloucester site to be turned into a permanent memorial to all the Magdalene women.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_01.jpg
  • The tomb of Julia Devaney in Tuam Cemetery, Tuam. Julia Devaney is unique in that she left a record of her almost 40 years in the Tuam Mother and Baby Home. From entering the home as a child in about 1923, to leaving it as an employee when it closed its doors for the last time on September 16, 1961, she had an insight into every aspect of the place.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_19.jpg
  • A man holding a crucifix takes part on a anti-abortion rally throughout Dublin City centre, on March 10, 2018.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_10.jpg
  • People holding pro-life posters, gather for the begging of an anti-abortion rally throughout Dublin City centre, on March 10, 2018.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_07.jpg
  • Rachel Quinn, a 25 year old graphic designer and pro-choice activist, poses for a portrait while canvassing in favour of a vote for repeal the Eighth Amendment from the Irish constitution, in Dumcondra, a working class neighbourhood in the northern side of Dublin, on April 03, 2018.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_05.jpg
  • Local historian Catherine Corless contemplates childhood photographs in her house in the outskirts of Tuam, Ireland. Corless's investigation into a burial site in St. Mary’s Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, where she believed 796 children, most of them infants, were interred between 1925 and 196, proved to be right when a state-financed investigation uncovered the remains of babies, small children and foetuses interred where she said they would.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_03.jpg
  • A figure of Pope Francis on a window ledge of Dublin's National Wax Museum, flanked by Irish and rainbow flags, as people await for the pope to pass by during the first day of a visit to Ireland.
    Ireland_PopeProtests_04.jpg
  • A pro-life supporter shouts anti-abortion slogans during a rally throughout Dublin City centre, on March 10, 2018.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_20.jpg
  • A marriage equality supporter sits outside Pantibar, Dublin’s most famous gay bar, as the votes on Ireland’s referendum on same-sex marriage were being counted around the country. Ireland became the first nation to approve same-sex marriage by a popular vote, sweeping aside the opposition of the Roman Catholic Church in a resounding victory for the gay rights movement.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_21.jpg
  • A devoted woman praying after Sunday mass at St. Mary’s Pro-Cathedral in Dublin City centre, on May 13, 2018.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_17.jpg
  • People walk by a pro-marriage equality campaign grafittu in central Dublin, Ireland.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_06.jpg
  • A memorial plaque is seen among vegetation in a corner of the grave site where Catherine Corless, a local historian from Tuam, claims to be the resting place of 796 children, most of them infants, who died between 1925 and 1961 at the ‘Home’, a old single mother and baby orphanage called St. Mary’s, run by Sisters of Bons Secours. The story that emerged from Corless’s research has been reported in recent weeks in dramatic headlines around the world, with many describing the site, used in the past as a septic tank for the orphanage, as a mass grave.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_08.jpg
  • Tearsheet of "Ireland's Magdalene Laundries" published in The New York Times
    NYT_MagdaleneLaundries_01.jpg
  • Screengrab of "Ireland's Magdalene Laundries" published in International Herald Tribune/NYT
    IHT_MagdaleneLaundries_01.jpg
  • Screengrab of "Tuam Children's Grave Yard" published in The New York Times
    NYT_Tuam_Graves_01.jpg
  • Screengrab of "Ireland's Magdalene Laundries" published in International Herald Tribune/NYT
    IHT_MagdaleneLaundries_02.jpg
  • Tearsheet of "Ireland's Magdalene Laundries" published in International Herald Tribune/NYT
    IHT_MagdaleneLaundries_03.jpg
  • Jenifer Ikponmwosa, a 19-year old nursing assistant from Limerick, poses for a portrait at her aunt’s home in Dublin, Ireland, on July 17, 2020. Although she was born and raised in Ireland, Miss Ikponmwosa says she constantly experiences racist abuse. CREDIT: Paulo Nunes dos Santos for The Wall Street Journal<br />
<br />
IRELANDBLM
    BLM_Ireland_014.jpg
  • January 18, 2012 - Idleb, Syria: A local resident shows the marks in his back cause by violent physical abuse during interrogation by the Syrian Intelligence. The man claims to have been tortured with electrical shocks and constant beaten at the hands of the interrogators during a period of 10 days.
    DSC_0269.jpg
  • January 20, 2012 - Idleb, Syria: Around two thousand protestors gathered in central Taftanaz to demonstrate against the abuses of the Syrian regime and demanding the resignation of the president Bashar Al-Assad.
    DSC_0397.jpg
  • January 20, 2012 - Idleb, Syria: Around two thousand protestors gathered in central Taftanaz to demonstrate against the abuses of the Syrian regime and demanding the resignation of the president Bashar Al-Assad.
    DSC_0471.jpg
  • January 20, 2012 - Idleb, Syria: Around two thousand protestors gathered in central Taftanaz to demonstrate against the abuses of the Syrian regime and demanding the resignation of the president Bashar Al-Assad.
    DSC_0326.jpg
  • January 20, 2012 - Idleb, Syria: Around two thousand protestors gathered in central Taftanaz to demonstrate against the abuses of the Syrian regime and demanding the resignation of the president Bashar Al-Assad.
    DSC_0423.jpg
  • January 20, 2012 - Idleb, Syria: Around two thousand protestors gathered in central Taftanaz to demonstrate against the abuses of the Syrian regime and demanding the resignation of the president Bashar Al-Assad.
    DSC_0416.jpg

Paulo Nunes dos Santos

  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive Galleries
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area