Photo Gallery
Images of life on the streets of Nairobi for a group of homeless boys.
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/1-2009197kns033.jpg)
As the sun rises through the Nairobi smog, several boys warm themselves by burning tires in a back alley of the city. A group of about 20 children, ages 10-18, live on the streets at a place called Riverside (near the Nairobi River).
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/2-2009197kns395.jpg)
Boys warm themselves by an early-morning fire. The young boys work for the government during the day so that they will be allowed to sleep on the ground at night.
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/3-2009197kns145.jpg)
Peter (far right) sits by the burning tire as the city comes to life. The boys stay covered in soot and ash from burning tires, and it’s difficult to breathe.
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/4-2009197kns061.jpg)
The Riverside boys laugh together one morning as they hang out around a drainage pipe near the Nairobi River. Several of the boys sleep in the dirty pipe until they are chased away.
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/5-2009197kns223.jpg)
The Riverside boys sniff glue to ward off hunger pains. “I take the glue at night, before I sleep,” one of the boys said. “If I take the glue, I can sleep anywhere, and it won’t hurt when someone beats me.”
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/6-2009197kns536.jpg)
Peter screams out in pain as one of the other Riverside boys tries to comfort him. One of the older boys was trying to take his glue, and they pushed him into the hot ashes of a dying fire. He burnt his bare feet, and was lying, doubled over in pain, screaming “Why, why, why?”
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/7-2009197kns087.jpg)
Oscar, age 10, falls down sick in the filth of Nairobi’s streets.
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/8-2009197kns211.jpg)
The Riverside boys care for a dog (some call it Snoopy, others Milo) they found on the streets of downtown Nairobi. The dog goes with the boys everywhere, and if they get extra food or milk, they will share with him.
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/9-2009197kns243.jpg)
The Riverside boys work to collect metal for the Nairobi Ministry of Environment. They give the money they earn to the ministry officials who, in turn, allow them to sleep on the ground near the Nairobi River.
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/10-2009197kns311.jpg)
Collecting metal for the Ministry of Environment is difficult work, and boys will often get hurt or killed trying to transport the metal.
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/11-2009197kns195.jpg)
A worker from the Nairobi Ministry of Environment beats one of the Riverside boys with a rubber whip, as passersby watch from above. Often, police will arrest the boys and take them to Moroto, a holding cell where they are beaten and left without food or toilets for days.
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/12-2009197kns634.jpg)
The Riverside boys beg for coins in the afternoon traffic of downtown Nairobi. At the end of the day, they will sometimes gamble among themselves for the money.
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/13-2009197kns358.jpg)
One of the Riverside boys looks for some money he has hidden in the wall of a building.
![](/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/14-2009197kns428.jpg)
Boys gather around a comic book they have bought. Most of the boys at Riverside are between the ages of 10 and 18, and act like young boys anywhere else in the world.
Follow Us Online!