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View all search resultsA visitor touches the light wall "Colours of Dignity" during an open doors day of the new permanent exhibition at the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum in Geneva, Switzerland, Saturday
Colours of dignity: A visitor touches the light wall "Colours of Dignity" during an open doors day of the new permanent exhibition at the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum in Geneva, Switzerland, Saturday. 25 years after it first opened, the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum (IRCM) unveils its new permanent exhibition titled "The Humanitarian Adventure" planned around the three crucial topics "Defending human dignity", "Restoring family links" and "Reducing natural risks". The exhibition has been completely reworked by a trio of international architects, Shigeru Ban (Japan), Gringo Cardia (Brazil) and Diebedo Francis Kere (Burkina Faso), to reflect today's changing world, and particularly the changes affecting humanitarian action.(AP/Keystone, Laurent Gillieron) (IRCM) unveils its new permanent exhibition titled "The Humanitarian Adventure" planned around the three crucial topics "Defending human dignity", "Restoring family links" and "Reducing natural risks". The exhibition has been completely reworked by a trio of international architects, Shigeru Ban (Japan), Gringo Cardia (Brazil) and Diebedo Francis Kere (Burkina Faso), to reflect today's changing world, and particularly the changes affecting humanitarian action.(AP/Keystone, Laurent Gillieron)
A visitor touches the light wall "Colours of Dignity" during an open doors day of the new permanent exhibition at the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum in Geneva, Switzerland, Saturday. 25 years after it first opened, the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum (IRCM) unveils its new permanent exhibition titled "The Humanitarian Adventure" planned around the three crucial topics "Defending human dignity", "Restoring family links" and "Reducing natural risks". The exhibition has been completely reworked by a trio of international architects, Shigeru Ban (Japan), Gringo Cardia (Brazil) and Diebedo Francis Kere (Burkina Faso), to reflect today's changing world, and particularly the changes affecting humanitarian action.(AP/Keystone, Laurent Gillieron)
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