Archive for culture – Page 18

New Student Photo Series 2010 – Entry #9

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.

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The first set of photos was submitted by Carmela Zuniga, an incoming MIA student.

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The first picture was taken at Miyajima, Japan at dusk.  The torii, or gate, marks the entrance to Itsukushima Shrine.  When the tide is low, you can actually walk up to the torii.

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The second picture was taken in Acapulco, Mexico.  With the vendors’ backs turned, it seemed the perfect opportunity for those pelicans to snatch some fish.

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The third picture was taken at Zabriskie Point in Death Valley National Park, one of my favorite places to go for vacation.

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The second set of photos were submitted by Xiao Jing, an incoming MIA student.

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I’m from a small city in Jiangsu Province in China. I’ve seen extreme poverty during my visit to the poorest towns in Jiangsu Province and I’m sure there are many more poor people in China than American normally see. The real China is different from the one you see from The 2008 Olympic Game or 2010 world expo. Millions of people still live below the poverty line in rural areas.

The first one was taken in summer 2008 during my trip to a primary school in Xuyi county in Jiangsu Province. The scene is the only class room for all students in this primary school from grade 1 to grade 6. The roof leaks and eight students share one desk.

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The second picture is the headmaster and the only teacher there. Mr. Ye has been teaching there for 10 years. His salary is 200RMB($28) per month. During my interview he said that he would like to dedicate his life to the education of kids in rural China. Teachers are in great demand there but not a single university graduate is willing to go due to the poverty which has haunted the villagers there for decades.

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New Student Photo Series 2010 – Entry #8

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.

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The first set of photos was submitted by Jessemin Sheyda-Losick, an incoming MPA-DP student.

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Adam’s Peak, Sri Lanka – one of the few sites that is holy for Buddhists, Hindus, Christians, and Muslims alike. I look forward to seeing that religious diversity reflected in the SIPA student body. Hiking through the night with thousands of pilgrims to arrive at dawn, shivering, at the summit of the 7360 foot peak was an exhausting experience, but to see the sun cast a shadow of the peak on the clouds below (visible in pic behind bell ringer) was nevertheless incredible. you can ring the bell the number of times you’ve made the pilgrimage up the mountain. I rang once.

Adam's Peak Sri Lanka ringing bells

Lhasa, Tibet. Kids breakdancing in the street. At one point while I was watching these kids break it down two older Tibetan women came by twirling their prayer wheels. They stopped and stared in bewilderment at these representatives of the next, younger generation. A clear sign of an odd cultural gap forming in this traditional land.

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Gold mine approximately 1 hour drive outside of Bolgatanga, Ghana. I followed these 10-12 year old kids through the manhole-sized entrance and clambered down 300-400 feet of sketchy wet slippery logs to the bottom of this gold mine. It was dark, vertical, narrow and dangerous to say the least….and I thought my first jobs mowing lawns and working at Dunkin’ Donuts and McDonald’s were bad.

kids working in gold mine in northern ghana

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The second set of pictures was submitted by incoming MIA student Dominic Kalms.

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This is a picture taken on Las Vegas Boulevard, I was walking with friends and I turned to my right and saw the Bellagio Water show start up and it was amazing. The water shot 100 feet into the air and splashed down with such force making the sound echo all the way up and down the strip for minutes. The water rose so high it actually touched the top of the hotel, truly amazing!

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This is a picture taken at the Mirage Aquarium in Las Vegas of the Dolphin Exhibit. The Dolphins came right up the class to say hello and it was very amazing to see them so close, truly a spectacle!

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2009, Budapest, Hungary – Turkish Bathouse.

Turkish Bathouse Budapest

New Student Photo Series 2010 – Entry #7

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.

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The first group of photos were take and submitted by Bhuvan Jain, an incoming MIA student.

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This picture was shot in New Delhi using a roll camera in the summer of 2007. The man in the ‘rickshaw’, a popular form of public transport in India, was taking an afternoon nap. Temperatures in summer tend to go above 40 degrees celsius sometimes! (108 farhenheit).

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I caught these two kids playing in the coracle while cycling around Hampi, once the capital of a glorious ancient kingdom in India, and now a town in ruins. Though these coracles are made out of woven grasses, reeds, or saplings covered with hides, I have seen them carry everything, from heavyweight machinery equipment to motorbikes!

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This picture was clicked in a cafe in Munnar, a hill station in Southern India which is full of tea gardens. I liked how the tree got reflected in the glass and thought it would make a good picture.

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This second photo was submitted by Paula Cerutti, an incoming MIA student.

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New Student Photo Series 2010 – Entry #6

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.

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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!

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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.

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The next set of photos were submitted by Ryan Arant, an incoming MIA student.

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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.

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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”.

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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 tent— 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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New Student Photo Series 2010 – Entry #5

Submissions continue to roll in for our new student photo series.  If you are an incoming student we encourage you to review this entry for details on how to submit your own photos to display on the blog.

The first set of photos was submitted by Jiaming Ju, an incoming MPA student focusing on Economic and Political Development.

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The first photo was taken in Ghana, I was working as a photographer and correspondent in Accra at the time. My colleagues and I spent a relaxing day on the beach one day and I saw those two local boys playing football, they were truly enjoying it.

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The second photo was taken in Seoul, South Korea.  I took this shot near Hongdae University by accident when there happened to be a B-boy ( break dancing boys) dancing competition going on. It was truly impressive.

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The third photo was taken in Dandong, Liaoning,China. I have been a head teacher for Roots&Shoots(an educational project engaging youth in environmental issues) in school here. This is a photo of my students from Class2, Grade 2, No.17 middle school.

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The second set of photos comes from Laura Agosta, an incoming MPA student from Argentina.

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The first picture is a typical postcard from Buenos Aires. I took it in a very nice park and they are three couples dancing tango in a very professional way. I certainly don’t dance it this way!!!

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The second and the third picture are the ones that I’ve taken in San Telmo, one of the nicest “porteño” towns in the city. Every Sunday people gather in Defensa Street and they buy different handcrafts and clothing from sellers that show their stuff there.  The first picture below is a very strange garbage can that I’ve found in the street. Apparently, I was not the only one who was interested in taking a picture of it! The third one is a guy playing a strange instrument. What I love about this picture is that he is very focused on his music, while everyone around him don’t seem to notice his presence.

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"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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