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    In Bolivia, donkey milk used to fight respiratory ills

    Aymara women position their female donkeys every morning on a street corner in El Alto, a city neighboring Bolivia's capital. Then they milk them for clients lining up in the cold air. According to popular belief, donkey milk can help fight colds, asthma, bronchitis and pneumonia.

  • Bolivia81
    In this May 12, 2016 photo, an Aymara indigenous woman holds a small glass of fresh donkey milk before drinking it in El Alto, Bolivia. Elizabth Canipa, director of the maternal milk program with Bolivia’s Health Ministry, said there is no scientific study proving that donkey milk has curative properties.
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    AP Photo/Juan Karita
  • Bolivia11
    In this June 8, 2016 photo, Lorenzo Saldias and his wife drink donkey milk from a vendor in the streets of El Alto, Bolivia. "Donkey milk is medicine that heals," Salvias said. "I had pneumonia, my back hurt and i had the chills. Now it's taking effect. I drink it with my wife."
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    AP Photo/Juan Karita
  • Bolivia51
    In this May 23, 2016 photo, donkey milk vendor Petrona Yugra brings her donkeys oats as she works to sell their milk to passing clients in El Alto, Bolivia. Yujra says the milk helped clear up a problem in her lungs. According to popular belief, it can help fight colds, asthma, bronchitis and pneumonia, she said.
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    AP Photo/Juan Karita
  • Bolivia21
    In this May 24, 2016 photo, donkey milk vendor Andrea Aruquipa, an Aymara indigenous woman, pours a glass of milk from her donkey for a client in El Alto, Bolivia. "You have to drink donkey milk with faith and you have to believe," Arequipa said. "It's cured me from pneumonia. Before I drank it all the time, now I'm feeling a little pain again so I'm drinking donkey milk again."
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    AP Photo/Juan Karita
  • Bolivia31
    In this May 15, 2016 photo, Josefina Escobar carries a glass of her donkey's milk as she and her donkey walk around in search of buyers in El Alto, Bolivia. Aymara women like Escobar position their female donkeys every morning on a street corner in El Alto, a city neighboring the capital of La Paz. Then they milk them for clients lining up in the cold air.
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    AP Photo/Juan Karita
  • Bolivia61
    In this June 8, 2016 photo, donkey milk vendor Petrona Yugra milks a donkey by hand to sell the milk to a client in El Alto, Bolivia. Yujra has sold donkey milk for 35 years.
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    AP Photo/Juan Karita
  • Bolivia71
    In this May 24, 2016 photo, Aymara indigenous women walk past donkeys that are used for their milk in El Alto, Bolivia. People drink a glass of fresh donkey milk, believing it will fight respiratory problems during the raw winter of the Bolivian Andes.
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    AP Photo/Juan Karita
  • Bolivia41
    In this June 8, 2016 photo, a man walks his donkeys home after selling their milk to clients in the streets of El Alto, Bolivia. People stop on their walk to work drink a glass of fresh donkey milk, believing it will fight respiratory problems during the raw winter of the Bolivian Andes.
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    AP Photo/Juan Karita
  • Published
    8 Images

    In Bolivia, donkey milk used to fight respiratory ills

    Aymara women position their female donkeys every morning on a street corner in El Alto, a city neighboring Bolivia's capital. Then they milk them for clients lining up in the cold air. According to popular belief, donkey milk can help fight colds, asthma, bronchitis and pneumonia.

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  • In Bolivia, donkey milk used to fight respiratory ills
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