Monday, August 3, 2020

New Student Photo Series 2010 Entry #6 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY - SIPA Admissions Blog

New Student Photo Series 2010 Entry #6 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY - SIPA Admissions Blog Thank you to all of the new students that have been sending in photos.   It can take me a bit to catch up as they come in so thanks for your patience.   For new students that want to contribute, please see this entry for instructions. The first set of photos were sent in by Sujata Bordoloi, an incoming MPA student with an Economic and Development focus. __________________________ The first two photos are of a school in the Wau region of Southern Sudan. The rusty tank is a reminder of the 21 years of civil war. Children in Southern Sudan finally get a chance to return to normalcy albeit in very basic conditions. The school ground used to be a Church where children now gather under trees to learn. Resources are scarce and teachers lack the requisite training to assimilate newly enrolled repatriated children from neighbouring Uganda, Kenya and Ethiopia. It does not deter teachers and children from coming to school everyday with chairs and blackboards in 50 degrees heat a truly inspiring sight! First day at a temporary school for children from a slum in Martissant, Port-Au-Prince. This was one of the first temporary schools to have opened in PAP 7 weeks after the disaster. The earthquake of January 2010 in Haiti was more devastating than the 2004 Tsunami in terms of the thousands of people killed and millions rendered homeless and without basic services. _________________________ The next set of photos were submitted by Ryan Arant, an incoming MIA student. _________________________ The first photo was taken in Dahiya, the Hezbollah controlled Shiite borough of southern Beirut shortly after the 2006 Israeli-Hezbollah War.   It was taken during a thoroughly guided tour of the area and with the not so tacit approval of our hosts. The second photograph was taken in the Palestinian refugee camp Sabra and Shatila in West Beirut.   This child was one of the tens of thousands of refugees displaced from the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp near Tripoli by a conflict between the Lebanese Internal Security Forces and the Fatah al-Islam militant group.   His face was painted as a show of support for Palestinian solidarity. The third photo was taken in Syria about 50 miles outside of the city of Hama.   The man in this photograph (a shepherd named Amjed) not only invited me and my companions to spend the afternoon with him in his tentâ€" he also rode his horse several miles into the desert to search for (and almost instantly find) a missing cell phone, used several days worth of his earnings to provide us with a meal, and managed to disinfect a series of wounds I had recently acquired in a fall with arak, the locally popular aniseed-flavored liquor (in the latter case completely against my will).

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