
Week in Pictures
The Week in Pictures: March 14 - 21
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A devastating mosque attack in New Zealand, a climbable sculpture in New York, dressing up for Purim in Israel and more.

Blue ice
Shards of ice pile up on Lake Michigan in South Haven, Michigan, on March 19, 2019.
Rising temperatures have caused a thawing of Lake Michigan that has produced stunning ice shard formations.

Cyclone's toll
Rebecca Albino, a mother of three, mourns beside the coffin of her husband during his funeral in Beira, Mozambique on March 20.
Cyclone Idai lashed southern Africa, submerging towns and villages and leaving at least 500 dead.
Photos: Mozambique, Zimbabwe mourn after destructive Cyclone Idai


A nation in pain
A girl lays flowers on a wall at the Botanical Gardens in Christchurch, New Zealand, on March 17.
New Zealand's stricken residents reached out to Muslims in their neighborhoods and around the country, in a fierce determination to show kindness to a community in pain.



Iowa under water
Homes and businesses are surrounded by floodwaters on March 20 in Hamburg, Iowa.
Several Midwest states battled some of the worst flooding they have experienced in decades as rain and snow melt from the recent "bomb cyclone" inundated rivers and streams.

Polar bear debut
A polar bear cub plays with her mother Tonja as the cub ventured out for the first time outside of their indoor cage on March 18 at the Tierpark zoo in Berlin.
The bear was born on December 1 but has spent three and a half months living in darkness with her mother inside her enclosure. Born deaf and blind, polar bear cubs require intensive maternal nurturing.






London restoration
The newly restored Painted Hall at the Old Royal Naval College on March 20 in London.
The hall, designed by Sir Christopher Wren as a ceremonial dining room in the early 18th Century, reopens to the public on March 23 after a two-and-a-half year conservation project.



Blastoff!
Photographers take pictures as a Soyuz rocket carrying cosmonaut Alexei Ovchinin and U.S. astronauts Nick Hague and Christina Koch blasts off to the International Space Station from the launchpad at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on March 15.
Hague and Ovchinin were part of an aborted launch in October that failed two minutes into its flight, activating a rescue system that allowed their capsule to land safely.
That accident was the first aborted crew launch for the Russian space program since 1983, when two Soviet cosmonauts safely jettisoned after a launch pad explosion.