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Caption: After surviving a harrowing trek across hundreds of miles of desert, an estimated 11,000 "Lost Boys" found the protection of the U.N. They crossed the Sudan border into Kenya and were taken to Kakuma refugee camp where they spent the next 9 years waiting for an end to their country's Civil War.
Credit: B. Press/UNHCR
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Caption: Santino Majok Chuor a month after arriving in Houston, Texas.
Credit: Megan Mylan
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Caption: Peter "Nyarol" Dut celebrating his upcoming journey to America in Kakuma refugee camp the night before departure, August 2001.
Credit: Jon Shenk
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Caption: UNHCR/B. Press
Credit: Southern Sudanese youth known as the "Lost Boys of Sudan" on the Sudan/Kenya border in 1992. They were given U.N. protection and taken to Kakuma refugee camp where they lived for nearly a decade.
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Caption: Dan Wayne
Credit: Peter "Nyarol" Dut supports himself with a job at Wal-Mart.
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Caption: Dan Wayne
Credit: Peter "Nyarol" Dut outside of Olathe East High School in Olathe, KS. He graduated in May 2003.
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Caption: Dan Wayne
Credit: Peter "Nyarol" Dut in Olathe, Kansas.
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Caption: Dan Wayne
Credit: Peter "Nyarol" Dut supports himself with a job at Wal-Mart.
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Caption: Dan Wayne
Credit: Peter "Nyarol" Dut talks with friends after school at Olathe East High School in Olathe, Kansas. He graduated in May of 2003.
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Caption: Filmmaker Megan Mylan
Credit: Courtesy of Megan Mylan
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Caption: Filmmaker Jon Shenk
Credit: Courtesy of Jon Shenk
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