Markets, Schools, And Football In Baghdad's Sadr City

A boy walks past a building in Sadr City, damaged during the 2003 U.S. invasion that toppled Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.

A poultry merchant listens to music at a market in Sadr City. The neighborhood is home to some 1 million people.

A poster depicts Imam Hussein (right) and Imam Abbas, major figures in Shi'ite Islam.

A woman walks out of a cosmetics shop in Sadr City.

Girls attend classes at an Islamic school. Sadr City bears the name of revered Shi'ite cleric Muhammad al-Sadr, who was killed in 1999, reportedly by agents of the Iraqi regime.

Barbers offer haircuts and shaves for their customers.

Men relax in Sadr City.

An Iraqi Shi'ite shepherd watches his buffalos cool off in a pool of sewage.

Women wait with their babies at a health clinic in Sadr City.

A fishmonger sells carp, popular as a grilled dish in Baghdad.

Young men smoke water pipes in Sadr City.

Young people have lunch at a fast-food restaurant.

An impromptu soccer game

Shi'ite orphans attend classes at the Dar Al Noor Orphans Rehabilitation Center in Sadr City. The center helps more than 330 children, most of whom lost their parents in suicide attacks.

Youths play at a swimming pool in Sadr City.

Girls walk home from school in the Al-Fdhiliya district of eastern Baghdad.

A girl cleans up after a sewage leak at her house in the Al-Fdhiliya district of eastern Baghdad.

Hassoun Karroum Hirmiz, who is blind, poses for a picture inside his house in the Al-Fdhiliya district.

A girl watches television at home in the Al-Fdhiliya district.

An Iraqi Shi'ite cleric walks through a poor neighborhood in the Al-Fdhiliya district.