faith healing in venezuela
an incredibly skinny girl sitting on a ladder outside of a blue house
two widows in a shelter in Vrindavan, India
girls jumping off hay bales
children with albinism laying on beds reading and playing
boys with face paint walking down the street during Dia de Los Muertos in Mexico
a young macaque chained to a chair in Kumersot
Elephant Sanctuary
Frozen bald eagles
Kutupalong refugee Camp.
transgender woman in Kingston Jamaica showing scars from attacks
a woman staying in her home destroyed by a hurricane in Haiti
valuables on a bed
a girl standing next to a dog wearing a crown in front of a village of tents
President Barack Obama snorkeling at Midway Islands
Sufi Muslims praying
a refugee boy in Serbia
Ethiopian Orthodox pilgrims in white gowns with candles at church rooftop, Easter night.
a room filled with women wearing traditional clothes holding tablets
Avery Jackson
investigators recover body of Angelito Luciano was killed in what appears
man holding his four-yearold daughter crippled by polio, Karachi, Pakistan.
a girl salvaging items in a landfill with 70 acres of trash in Delhi, India
a gray whale against bright green water with human hands in water
a gelada giving birth silently while isolated from the rest of the group
total solar eclipse
1 of 30
"Once refugees reach the crowded camp, they must set up their own tents with bamboo sticks and a tarp," says photographer William Daniels. "In every tent I entered someone was wounded or sick, or traumatized by having witnessed family members killed before their eyes. All of the children of Nur Kober (right) and his wife Joleka (left) were sick with fever." This photo was originally published in "Path of Persecution," in November 2017.
Photograph by William Daniels, National Geographic

Most Moving Photos of 2017

National Geographic selects the most emotionally compelling photographs published this year.

ByDaniel Stone
December 07, 2017
2 min read

Every year, we look at the photos that moved us most. The funny, frustrating, and poignant images that we linger on a little more than we did on other photos because of how they make us feel. The famed photographer Ansel Adams called this feeling the measure of photographic excellence when he said, "A great photograph is a full expression of what one feels about what is being photographed in the deepest sense."

This year, from the almost two million images National Geographic received from photographers all over the world, we chose our favorite 30. Favorite, of course, is subjective. How you feel about a photo depends on your mood, the time of day when you see it, a childhood memory it might evoke. Selecting photographs is notoriously difficult. Narrowing down emotionally-powerful images is even harder—a little like picking among favorite family members.

But even among relatives, some usually stand out. Based on sales of our magazine and views online, one of the most striking images we published this year was part of our special issue on gender. The topic has changed our understanding of biology and identity, and on the cover of National Geographic's January edition, we published a photo of nine-year-old Avery Jackson, who has lived as an openly transgender girl since she was five. National Geographic editor-in-chief Susan Goldberg loved what the image conveyed—strength and pride. Both were unspoken, but are unmistakable owing to the power of photography.

Altogether, the collection was challenging to curate, which may go some way in reflecting an otherwise challenging year. But light and beauty often have a way of breaking through. "It's been a difficult year for many people," says National Geographic photo editor Jehan Jillani. "But while selecting these photos, I was reminded of how beautiful and complex our world is."

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