The Nubians, inhabiting a 700 mile stretch of Nilotic villages between Egypt and Sudan since the days of the Pharaohs, have been around for the most of Egypt's long history. Until the construction of the High Dam in 1964, their lives were determined by the ebb and flow of this ancient river. Subsequently some 50,000 Nubians from 45 towns were forcibly relocated to ″New Nubia″, a vast concrete housing development far from any arable land. This catastrophic loss of land heightened the already common migratory trend of men going abroad for employment and changed the community for good. Text and photos by Maya Hautefeuille