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  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Novice Buddhist monks get off a river taxi on the Chao Phraya River in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown035.jpg
  • 06 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A street vendor in the Chinatown section of Bangkok. He was selling fruit.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown080614010.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People walk by a 7-11 in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown034.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Workers in the Hong Kong Noodle shop, a restaurant in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown033.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Workers in the Hong Kong Noodle shop, a restaurant in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown032.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A pork vendor cuts up a customer's order in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown031.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Workers in the Hong Kong Noodle shop, a restaurant in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown030.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Whole cooked chickens for sale in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown029.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A fried food vendor prepares a woman's order in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown028.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Dried fish for sale in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown027.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People walk through an alley in a market in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown026.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A man in his shop in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown025.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Woman food vendors in front of a colorful wall in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown024.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Woman food vendors in front of a colorful wall in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown023.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A food hawker plates up orders of food at his stand in an alley in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown022.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Laborers unload a truck full of peanuts in burlap bags in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown021.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Laborers unload a truck full of peanuts in burlap bags in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown020.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Laborers unload a truck full of peanuts in burlap bags in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown019.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Laborers unload a truck full of peanuts in burlap bags in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown018.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Laborers unload a truck full of peanuts in burlap bags in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown017.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A laborer waits to cross a busy street while unloading a truck full of peanuts in burlap bags in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown016.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Laborers unload a truck full of peanuts in burlap bags in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown015.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Peanuts in a warehouse in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown014.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A man talks on a mobile phone at a peanut warehouse in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown013.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A tuk-tuk (three wheeled taxi)  driver in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown012.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A tuk-tuk (three wheeled taxi)  driver in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown011.jpg
  • 09 JULY 2011 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A tuk-tuk (three wheeled taxi)  driver in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown010.jpg
  • 06 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People pray at the Poh Teck Tung foundation temple and shrine in the Chinatown section of Bangkok. Poh Teck Tung is a Chinese religious NGO that provides educational and health services and an emergency medical system in Bangkok. Every year, during Hungry Ghost Month, the foundation gives away food and staples to the poor of Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown080614009.jpg
  • 06 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People pray at the Poh Teck Tung foundation temple and shrine in the Chinatown section of Bangkok. Poh Teck Tung is a Chinese religious NGO that provides educational and health services and an emergency medical system in Bangkok. Every year, during Hungry Ghost Month, the foundation gives away food and staples to the poor of Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown080614008.jpg
  • 06 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People pray at the Poh Teck Tung foundation temple and shrine in the Chinatown section of Bangkok. Poh Teck Tung is a Chinese religious NGO that provides educational and health services and an emergency medical system in Bangkok. Every year, during Hungry Ghost Month, the foundation gives away food and staples to the poor of Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown080614007.jpg
  • 06 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People pray at the Poh Teck Tung foundation temple and shrine in the Chinatown section of Bangkok. Poh Teck Tung is a Chinese religious NGO that provides educational and health services and an emergency medical system in Bangkok. Every year, during Hungry Ghost Month, the foundation gives away food and staples to the poor of Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown080614006.jpg
  • 06 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People pray at the Poh Teck Tung foundation temple and shrine in the Chinatown section of Bangkok. Poh Teck Tung is a Chinese religious NGO that provides educational and health services and an emergency medical system in Bangkok. Every year, during Hungry Ghost Month, the foundation gives away food and staples to the poor of Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown080614005.jpg
  • 06 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People pray at the Poh Teck Tung foundation temple and shrine in the Chinatown section of Bangkok. Poh Teck Tung is a Chinese religious NGO that provides educational and health services and an emergency medical system in Bangkok. Every year, during Hungry Ghost Month, the foundation gives away food and staples to the poor of Bangkok.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown080614004.jpg
  • 06 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  A Chinese shrine between Wat  Mangkon Kamalawat and Wat Khanikaphon in the Chinatown section of Bangkok.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown080614003.jpg
  • 06 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  A woman selling fruit in a market in the Chinatown section of Bangkok.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown080614002.jpg
  • 06 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Starfruit for sale in a market in the Chinatown section of Bangkok.  Starfruit is  Averrhoa carambola and is cultivated throughout Southeast Asia.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    Chinatown080614001.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2016 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  A Buddhist monk looks into the subway construction at the intersection of Phlap Phla Chai and Chareon Krung Streets in Bangkok's Chinatown neighborhood. The Bangkok Metropolitan Rapid Transit (MRT) system, Bangkok's subway, is being expanded through Chinatown and a station is under construction at the intersection. The small produce market at the intersection will have to move and several of the businesses near the intersection have been evicted to make way for the construction. Bangkok's Chinatown, considered by some to be one of the best preserved Chinatown districts in the world, is changing. Many of the old shophouses are being demolished and replaced by malls and condominium developments.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownRedevelopment0608014.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2016 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Workers building the subway station at the intersection of Phlap Phla Chai and Chareon Krung Streets in Bangkok's Chinatown neighborhood escape the heat during a break in the construction day. The Bangkok Metropolitan Rapid Transit (MRT) system, Bangkok's subway, is being expanded through Chinatown and a station is under construction at the intersection. The small produce market at the intersection will have to move and several of the businesses near the intersection have been evicted to make way for the construction. Bangkok's Chinatown, considered by some to be one of the best preserved Chinatown districts in the world, is changing. Many of the old shophouses are being demolished and replaced by malls and condominium developments.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownRedevelopment0608020.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2016 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  A woman walks through the small produce market at the intersection of Phlap Phla Chai and Chareon Krung Streets in Bangkok's Chinatown neighborhood. The Bangkok Metropolitan Rapid Transit (MRT) system, Bangkok's subway, is being expanded through Chinatown and a station is under construction at the intersection. The small produce market at the intersection will have to move and several of the businesses near the intersection have been evicted to make way for the construction. Bangkok's Chinatown, considered by some to be one of the best preserved Chinatown districts in the world, is changing. Many of the old shophouses are being demolished and replaced by malls and condominium developments.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownRedevelopment0608019.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2016 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  A man rides his motorcycle through the small produce market at the intersection of Phlap Phla Chai and Chareon Krung Streets in Bangkok's Chinatown neighborhood. The Bangkok Metropolitan Rapid Transit (MRT) system, Bangkok's subway, is being expanded through Chinatown and a station is under construction at the intersection. The small produce market at the intersection will have to move and several of the businesses near the intersection have been evicted to make way for the construction. Bangkok's Chinatown, considered by some to be one of the best preserved Chinatown districts in the world, is changing. Many of the old shophouses are being demolished and replaced by malls and condominium developments.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownRedevelopment0608018.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2016 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Traffic drives through some of the subway construction at the intersection of Phlap Phla Chai and Chareon Krung Streets in Bangkok's Chinatown neighborhood. The Bangkok Metropolitan Rapid Transit (MRT) system, Bangkok's subway, is being expanded through Chinatown and a station is under construction at the intersection. The small produce market at the intersection will have to move and several of the businesses near the intersection have been evicted to make way for the construction. Bangkok's Chinatown, considered by some to be one of the best preserved Chinatown districts in the world, is changing. Many of the old shophouses are being demolished and replaced by malls and condominium developments.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownRedevelopment0608017.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2016 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Some of the subway construction at the intersection of Phlap Phla Chai and Chareon Krung Streets in Bangkok's Chinatown neighborhood. The Bangkok Metropolitan Rapid Transit (MRT) system, Bangkok's subway, is being expanded through Chinatown and a station is under construction at the intersection. The small produce market at the intersection will have to move and several of the businesses near the intersection have been evicted to make way for the construction. Bangkok's Chinatown, considered by some to be one of the best preserved Chinatown districts in the world, is changing. Many of the old shophouses are being demolished and replaced by malls and condominium developments.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownRedevelopment0608016.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2016 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Workers building the new subway station at the intersection of Phlap Phla Chai and Chareon Krung Streets in Bangkok's Chinatown neighborhood walk to lunch. The Bangkok Metropolitan Rapid Transit (MRT) system, Bangkok's subway, is being expanded through Chinatown and a station is under construction at the intersection. The small produce market at the intersection will have to move and several of the businesses near the intersection have been evicted to make way for the construction. Bangkok's Chinatown, considered by some to be one of the best preserved Chinatown districts in the world, is changing. Many of the old shophouses are being demolished and replaced by malls and condominium developments.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownRedevelopment0608015.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2016 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:   Women shop for fresh fruit in the small street market at the intersection of Phlap Phla Chai and Chareon Krung Streets in Bangkok's Chinatown neighborhood. The Bangkok Metropolitan Rapid Transit (MRT) system, Bangkok's subway, is being expanded through Chinatown and a station is under construction at the intersection. The small produce market at the intersection will have to move and several of the businesses near the intersection have been evicted to make way for the construction. Bangkok's Chinatown, considered by some to be one of the best preserved Chinatown districts in the world, is changing. Many of the old shophouses are being demolished and replaced by malls and condominium developments.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownRedevelopment0608013.jpg
  • 08 JUNE 2016 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:   What's left of a small street market for fruit and produce at the intersection of Phlap Phla Chai and Chareon Krung Streets in Bangkok's Chinatown neighborhood. The Bangkok Metropolitan Rapid Transit (MRT) system, Bangkok's subway, is being expanded through Chinatown and a station is under construction at the intersection. The small produce market at the intersection will have to move and several of the businesses near the intersection have been evicted to make way for the construction. Bangkok's Chinatown, considered by some to be one of the best preserved Chinatown districts in the world, is changing. Many of the old shophouses are being demolished and replaced by malls and condominium developments.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownRedevelopment0608012.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a Chinese character for a home. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes016.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown looks at a statue of a revered Buddhist monk he just finished painting. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes014.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes009.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes006.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes004.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes002.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes001.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Women pray in the meditation hall at Wat Mangkon Kamalawat, the largest Mahayana Buddhist temple in Chinatown. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes024.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Women pray in the meditation hall at Wat Mangkon Kamalawat, the largest Mahayana Buddhist temple in Chinatown. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes023.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: The meditation hall at Wat Mangkon Kamalawat, the largest Mahayana Buddhist temple in Chinatown. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes022.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: The meditation hall at Wat Mangkon Kamalawat, the largest Mahayana Buddhist temple in Chinatown. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes021.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A man lights incense at Wat Mangkon Kamalawat in Chinatown. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes020.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Commuters on motorscooters in Chinatown. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes018.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a Chinese character for a home. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes017.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a Chinese character for a home. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes015.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes013.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes012.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes011.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes010.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes008.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes007.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes005.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An artisan on Phlap Phla Chai Road in Chinatown paints a statue of a revered Buddhist monk. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes003.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Women make fish sausage in a workshop in their home in Bangkok's Chinatown district. It is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes027.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Roast chickens for sale in Bangkok's Chinatown district. It is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes025.jpg
  • 07 DECEMBER 2012 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  A street food vendor pushes cart past tuk-tuks in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes. Tuk-tuks are three wheeled taxis that use a motorcycle engine. In one form or another they are common in much of Asia.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    TukTuksInBangkok004.jpg
  • 07 DECEMBER 2012 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Tuk-tuks (three wheeled taxi) in traffic in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes. Tuk-tuks are three wheeled taxis that use a motorcycle engine. In one form or another they are common in much of Asia.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    TukTuksInBangkok003.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Women make fish sausage in a workshop in their home in Bangkok's Chinatown district. It is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes030.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Women make fish sausage in a workshop in their home in Bangkok's Chinatown district. It is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes029.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Women make fish sausage in a workshop in their home in Bangkok's Chinatown district. It is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes028.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A woman shopping on her bicycle counts her cash in an alley in Bangkok's Chinatown district, one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes026.jpg
  • 31 JULY 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Lotus blossoms for sale in front of Wat Mangkon Kamalawat, the largest Mahayana Buddhist temple in Bangkok. Bangkok's Chinatown district is one of the largest Chinatowns in the world. It was established in 1781 when Siamese King Rama I gave the Chinese community in Bangkok land outside of Bangkok's city walls so he could build his palace (what is now known as the Grand Palace). Chinatown is now the heart of the Thai-Chinese community. About 14% of Thais have Chinese ancestry.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    0731BKKScenes019.jpg
  • 07 DECEMBER 2012 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Buddhist monks in a tuk-tuk (three wheeled taxi) in traffic in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes. Tuk-tuks are three wheeled taxis that use a motorcycle engine. In one form or another they are common in much of Asia.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    TukTuksInBangkok005.jpg
  • 07 DECEMBER 2012 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  A tuk-tuk (three wheeled taxi) in traffic in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes. Tuk-tuks are three wheeled taxis that use a motorcycle engine. In one form or another they are common in much of Asia.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    TukTuksInBangkok002.jpg
  • 07 DECEMBER 2012 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  A tuk-tuk (three wheeled taxi) in traffic in the Chinatown section of Bangkok, Thailand. Chinatown is the entrepreneurial hub of Bangkok, with thousands of family owned businesses selling wholesale merchandise in everything from food like rice, peanuts and meats, to dry goods like toys and shoes. Tuk-tuks are three wheeled taxis that use a motorcycle engine. In one form or another they are common in much of Asia.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    TukTuksInBangkok001.jpg
  • 26 FEBRUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A woman poses for photos against a weathered wall in Bangkok's Chinatown. Bangkok has one of the largest "Chinatown" districts in the world. About 14% of all Thais have some Chinese ancestry and Chinese cultural practices are incorporated in many facets of Thai daily life.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownStreetScenes006.jpg
  • 26 FEBRUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A man poses for photos against a weathered wall in Bangkok's Chinatown. Bangkok has one of the largest "Chinatown" districts in the world. About 14% of all Thais have some Chinese ancestry and Chinese cultural practices are incorporated in many facets of Thai daily life.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownStreetScenes005.jpg
  • 26 FEBRUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A man carries "ghost gold" into a Wat Mangon Kamalawat in Bangkok's Chinatown. Ghost gold is burned as an offering for ancestors. Bangkok has one of the largest "Chinatown" districts in the world. About 14% of all Thais have some Chinese ancestry and Chinese cultural practices are incorporated in many facets of Thai daily life.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownStreetScenes004.jpg
  • 26 FEBRUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Men in their shophouse in a market in Bangkok's Chinatown. Bangkok has one of the largest "Chinatown" districts in the world. About 14% of all Thais have some Chinese ancestry and Chinese cultural practices are incorporated in many facets of Thai daily life.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownStreetScenes003.jpg
  • 26 FEBRUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A girl in her school uniform runs ahead of her mother in Bangkok's Chinatown district. Bangkok has one of the largest "Chinatown" districts in the world. About 14% of all Thais have some Chinese ancestry and Chinese cultural practices are incorporated in many facets of Thai daily life.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownStreetScenes002.jpg
  • 26 FEBRUARY 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A fish monger cleans a fish for a customer in Bangkok's Chinatown. Bangkok has one of the largest "Chinatown" districts in the world. About 14% of all Thais have some Chinese ancestry and Chinese cultural practices are incorporated in many facets of Thai daily life.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownStreetScenes001.jpg
  • 26 DECEMBER 2015 - SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE:   The entrance to Chinatown Complex, the main market in Singapore's Chinatown. It's now mostly a tourist market for cheap clothes tourist knick knacks.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SingaporeChinatown004.jpg
  • 20 OCTOBER 2017 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A volunteer cleans prayer candle at Chao Zhou Shi Kong Shrine in Bangkok's Chinatown on the first day of the Vegetarian Festival, what Thais call the Taoist Nine Emperor Gods Festival, in the Chinatown neighborhood of Bangkok, Thailand. It is a nine-day Taoist celebration beginning on the eve of 9th lunar month of the Chinese calendar. For nine days people participating in the festival wear only white and don't eat meat, poultry, seafood, and dairy products. The vegetarian festival is celebrated throughout Thailand, but especially in Phuket and Bangkok, cities with large ethnic Chinese communities.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    VegFest012.jpg
  • 18 MAY 2017 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People eating at a street food stall in Bangkok's Chinatown. City officials in Bangkok have taken steps to rein in street food vendors. The steps were originally reported as a "ban" on street food, but after an uproar in local and international news outlets, city officials said street food vendors wouldn't be banned but would be regulated, undergo health inspections and be restricted to certain hours on major streets. On Yaowarat Road, in the heart of Bangkok's touristy Chinatown, the city has closed some traffic lanes to facilitate the vendors. But in other parts of the city, the vendors have been moved off of major streets and sidewalks.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownStreetFood031.jpg
  • 18 MAY 2017 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People eating at a street food stall in Bangkok's Chinatown. City officials in Bangkok have taken steps to rein in street food vendors. The steps were originally reported as a "ban" on street food, but after an uproar in local and international news outlets, city officials said street food vendors wouldn't be banned but would be regulated, undergo health inspections and be restricted to certain hours on major streets. On Yaowarat Road, in the heart of Bangkok's touristy Chinatown, the city has closed some traffic lanes to facilitate the vendors. But in other parts of the city, the vendors have been moved off of major streets and sidewalks.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownStreetFood025.jpg
  • 18 MAY 2017 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People eating at a street food stall in Bangkok's Chinatown. City officials in Bangkok have taken steps to rein in street food vendors. The steps were originally reported as a "ban" on street food, but after an uproar in local and international news outlets, city officials said street food vendors wouldn't be banned but would be regulated, undergo health inspections and be restricted to certain hours on major streets. On Yaowarat Road, in the heart of Bangkok's touristy Chinatown, the city has closed some traffic lanes to facilitate the vendors. But in other parts of the city, the vendors have been moved off of major streets and sidewalks.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownStreetFood021.jpg
  • 18 MAY 2017 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People eating at a street food stall in Bangkok's Chinatown. City officials in Bangkok have taken steps to rein in street food vendors. The steps were originally reported as a "ban" on street food, but after an uproar in local and international news outlets, city officials said street food vendors wouldn't be banned but would be regulated, undergo health inspections and be restricted to certain hours on major streets. On Yaowarat Road, in the heart of Bangkok's touristy Chinatown, the city has closed some traffic lanes to facilitate the vendors. But in other parts of the city, the vendors have been moved off of major streets and sidewalks.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownStreetFood015.jpg
  • 18 MAY 2017 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A vendor cuts up garlic at the food stall Bangkok's Chinatown. City officials in Bangkok have taken steps to rein in street food vendors. The steps were originally reported as a "ban" on street food, but after an uproar in local and international news outlets, city officials said street food vendors wouldn't be banned but would be regulated, undergo health inspections and be restricted to certain hours on major streets. On Yaowarat Road, in the heart of Bangkok's touristy Chinatown, the city has closed some traffic lanes to facilitate the vendors. But in other parts of the city, the vendors have been moved off of major streets and sidewalks.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownStreetFood014.jpg
  • 18 MAY 2017 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A woman grills fish on a street in Bangkok's Chinatown. City officials in Bangkok have taken steps to rein in street food vendors. The steps were originally reported as a "ban" on street food, but after an uproar in local and international news outlets, city officials said street food vendors wouldn't be banned but would be regulated, undergo health inspections and be restricted to certain hours on major streets. On Yaowarat Road, in the heart of Bangkok's touristy Chinatown, the city has closed some traffic lanes to facilitate the vendors. But in other parts of the city, the vendors have been moved off of major streets and sidewalks.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownStreetFood005.jpg
  • 17 FEBRUARY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A woman works on a client at a threading stand on Charoen Krung Road in Bangkok's Chinatown. About a dozen people, mostly women, have set up shop on the sidewalk to do hair removal for clients. They use thread to remove hair, a practice called "threading" which originated in India more than 6,000 years ago. It's growing in popularity in the US and Europe as an alternative to waxing. A cotton or polyester thread is pulled along unwanted hair in a twisting motion, the hair is trapped in a mini lasso, and lifted out of the follicle.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ThreadingHairRemoval003.jpg
  • 19 DECEMBER 2013 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Cooked ducks for display in a shop in the Chinatown section of Bangkok.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BKKScenes1217004.jpg
  • 18 SEPTEMBER 2013 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Evening traffic on Yaowarat Road in the Chinatown section of Bangkok. Thailand in general, and Bangkok in particular, has a vibrant tradition of street food and eating on the run. In recent years, Bangkok's street food has become something of an international landmark and is being written about in glossy travel magazines and in the pages of the New York Times.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownFood0918046.jpg
  • 18 SEPTEMBER 2013 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Thai teenagers sort fruit in a market stall in the Chinatown section of Bangkok. Thailand in general, and Bangkok in particular, has a vibrant tradition of street food and eating on the run. In recent years, Bangkok's street food has become something of an international landmark and is being written about in glossy travel magazines and in the pages of the New York Times.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownFood0918035.jpg
  • 18 SEPTEMBER 2013 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Condiments in a caddy on the table at a noodle stand in the Chinatown section of Bangkok. Thailand in general, and Bangkok in particular, has a vibrant tradition of street food and eating on the run. In recent years, Bangkok's street food has become something of an international landmark and is being written about in glossy travel magazines and in the pages of the New York Times.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChinatownFood0918016.jpg
  • 07 OCTOBER 2009 -- BANGKOK, THAILAND: People praying at the Kuan Yim Shrine in Chinatown, Bangkok, Thailand. The shrine was founded by and is maintained by the Thian Fa Foundation, one of the first charitable foundations in Bangkok to provide medical care for the poor. Chinatown is the old commercial heart of Bangkok with thousands of small shops selling everything from clothes to dried fish to case lots of shoes and gem stones.   Photo By Jack Kurtz
    BKKStreetScenes6018.jpg
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Jack Kurtz: Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

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