One section of the 500 arhats at the Longhua Temple, considered the largest, most authentic and complete ancient temple complex in Shanghai.
Continue readingPost Category → Asia
Guardian: How India’s heatwaves are shutting schools – and pushing women out of the workforce
Arsalan Bukhari and Naila Tabbasum report from Delhi:
Outside, the temperature has passed 41C (105.8F). Inside Sakshi Katyal’s city apartment, the air conditioner is blasting but it does little to relieve the stress of balancing housework and helping her five-year-old log in on a laptop to online classes. Her daughter’s school closed in May and Katyal is not clear when it will reopen. Probably not till the autumn.
Schools across Delhi and in about half of India’s 28 states have been ordered to close from mid-May until the end of June, when in many places the summer break starts. There is no official record of closures in past years but the Guardian has spoken to school officials who say the number of days schools are shut for because of the heat has risen sharply. The impact on families, especially on working women, has been huge.
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India is facing increasingly intense spells of extreme heat, with this year’s heatwaves beginning as early as April. Hundreds of thousands of parents in India are struggling with managing jobs and children as lives are disrupted by prolonged school closures linked to the high temperatures. And as childcare disproportionately falls to women, it is women who are bearing the brunt.
Link.
Global Sumud Flotilla Homecoming in Nice – A Dozen Photos and Video Statements
Malika Baouya and Scott Moreau, two members of the Global Sumud Flotilla who were detained by Israeli forces in international waters last week, returned home to Nice Tuesday evening (26 May), where a large group of friends, family and supporters welcomed them home.
Continue readingGuardian: ‘My head spins with the heat’ – India’s gig workers battle exhaustion amid soaring temperatures.
The climate crisis is a serious health crisis. From the report:
Rising temperatures are turning cities across south and south-east Asia into places where workers can no longer recover from the heat. A new report by US-based People’s Courage International (PCI), using research in Delhi, Dhaka, Kathmandu, Jakarta and Quezon City, has found hotter nights, combined with the urban heat island effect – the trapping of heat inside dense cities – are leaving millions of informal workers exhausted before a new workday even begins.
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The crisis is worsening in south Asia as climate change is predicted to triple the chance of pre-monsoon heatwaves, such as a 15-day one that turned deadly last month. Scientists say night-time temperatures are rising faster than daytime temperatures across much of the region, reducing the hours people once relied on to recover from extreme heat.
Across Asia, the International Labour Organization estimates that more than 70% of the workforce are exposed to excessive heat at some point during their jobs, with informal workers among the most vulnerable. This has a big impact in countries like India, where nearly 90% of workers are employed in the informal economy.
Link.
Guardian: ‘It’s no longer exceptional’ – Karachi struggles under brutal new reality of extreme heat.
The climate crisis driving a health crisis is rapidly reshaping everyday life. From the report:
An intense and prolonged heatwave has been causing misery for millions across Pakistan and India. In southern Pakistan throughout April and May, temperatures have risen far above seasonal norms. In Sindh, daytime temperatures have frequently crossed 44C to 46C, forcing residents indoors during peak afternoon hours and severely affecting outdoor labourers, transport workers and farming communities.
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The strain is also becoming visible in local healthcare facilities. Dr Suresh Kumar, who heads the children’s ward at Ibrahim Hyderi government hospital, said the number of children visiting the outpatient department has risen sharply since the last week of April. “On normal days, we would see around 50 to 60 children,” he said. “Now the number has crossed 200 daily.”
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The World Weather Attribution group has looked at the current extreme heat in Pakistan and India and found that “human-caused climate change approximately tripled the probability of an event like this happening, making it no longer exceptional in today’s climate. The same heat event would have been about 1C cooler in a pre-industrial climate.”
Link.
45 Minutes at the Hanoi Night Market
A market similar to many elsewhere in the world, where women do most of the work and men count the money.
Continue readingGray Heron, Tokyo
I spotted this Gray Heron sitting patiently high above the Sakuradabori Moat on the southwestern edge of the Imperial Palace Gardens in Tokyo. I think this scene would make for a beautiful Ukiyo-e landscape woodcut.
Mitsui Garden Hotel, Tokyo
Across from the National Stadium. 14 September 2025.
Continue reading8 Images from the National Art Center, Tokyo
Here are eight images of the National Art Center, Tokyo, a museum in the upscale Roppongi district. I really liked its wavy curtain-of-glass exterior and three-story high entry lobby and concrete conical niches at each end. And the cozy lounge chairs in its ground floor cafe.
Office Tower at Night, Tokyo
From the New Otani Hotel, Tokyo, 11-Sep-2025.
11 Photos From A Palestine Solidarity Rally In Geneva
International condemnation of last week’s massacre in Gaza by Israeli Defense Forces continues. Sixty Palestinians were killed, including eight children and one health worker, and another 2,771 injured by live ammunition, rubber bullets and tear gas used by Israeli forces who were targeting demonstrators, marking May 14 as the deadliest in Gaza since 2014. Of those… Continue reading
95 Seconds in the Bird Department at Doha’s Souq Waqif
If exotic chirping is your thing, then today’s 95-second mental health break is for you.
Continue readingThe Syrian Refugee Crisis in Lebanon – a Notebook and Primer
NOTE: When I was in Beirut last month I met with country officials from the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and UNICEF for a briefing on the situation of Syrian refugees currently living in the country. It’s one that has reached crisis proportions in less than four years: Lebanon now hosts more than one million… Continue reading
Runners From Palestine Journey to Beirut to Exercise Their Freedom to Move
Seasoned marathon runners often talk about hitting “the wall”, that latter stage of a race when mental and physical barriers move from being difficult to really, really difficult. Organizers and participants of the now annual Palestine Marathon in Bethlehem have additional walls, very real ones, to consider before they even take their first step. One,… Continue reading
The Irresistible Creepiness Of Urs Fischer’s Lamp Bear
The first thing you’ll notice after clearing immigration in the recently-opened Hamad International Airport in Doha is Lamp Bear, a 23-foot (7m) high canary yellow bronze sculpture that takes pride of place in the center of the massive duty-free hall. Tipping the scales at about 35,000 pounds (15,875 kg), it was bought at a Christie’s… Continue reading