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Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

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Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

A photographer returns to the devastated city of Tacloban, as it begins the process of rebuilding.

Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

Severely devastated residential area in Barangay Magallanes, Tacloban City

Credit: Herman Lumanog
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

Mother and daughter survivors of Typhoon Haiyan in Barangay Anibong, Tacloban City.

Credit: Herman Lumanog
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

Survivors of Typhoon Haiyan line up for food in Barangay Magallanes, Tacloban City, the remains of a house in the background.

Credit: Herman Lumanog
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

People work to erect a temporary shelter on the site of what was their house, in Barangay Anibong, Tacloban City.

Credit: Herman Lumanog
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

A woman continues with her daily chores besides one of the ships that were washed ashore in Barangay Anibong, Tacloban City.

Credit: Herman Lumanog
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

A typhoon survivor smiles from the window of her temporary house in Barangay Anibong, Tacloban City.

Credit: Herman Lumanog
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

A worker carries a sack of rice on his head inside one of the UN World Food Programme tents in Tacloban City.

Credit: Herman Lumanog
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

Local workers for the UN Development Programme provide assistance in one of the severely devastated parts of Barangay Anibong, Tacloban City.

Credit: Herman Lumanog
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

A woman carries her washed as she passes by a mass grave where 200 victims of Typhoon Haiyan are buried, along the roadside of Holy Cross Cemetery in Diit Village, Tacloban City.

Credit: Herman Lumanog
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

A woman prays inside the Palo Catholic Church in front of a statue of Jesus and Mary in Palo, Tacloban City.

Credit: Herman Lumanog
Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Aftermath Part I

Children who survived the wrath of Typhoon Haiyan enjoy their afternoon at their temporary shelter at Tacloban City, Philippines.

Credit: Herman Lumanog

Several months after Typhoon Haiyan (known as Typhoon Yolanda in the Philippines) devastated a number of Philippine provinces, leaving more than 6000 dead and roughly 6 million displaced, photojournalist Herman Lumanog visited the affected region for The Diplomat. He reports that even though people there might be without roofs or even homes, there are not without hope.