Nhắn tuổi 20

Chào các bạn,

“Nhắn tuổi 20” một bài hát rất dễ thương và truyền cảm hứng của ban nhạc Đồng Hồ Báo Thức. Đây là một ban nhạc thân thuộc với thế hệ 8x, 7x ở miền Bắc những năm cuối 1990s đầu 2000s. Mình không nhớ lần đầu tiên nghe được bài này là khi nào, có lẽ mới học cấp 2. Mình ấn tượng với bài hát này nên thuộc lời và nhạc ngay những lần đầu nghe. Mỗi lần nghe ca khúc mình vẫn thấy đang ở tuổi 20. Continue reading Nhắn tuổi 20

John 18

Series on John:
(0)(1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6)(7)(8)(9)(10), (11),
 (12)(13)(14),(15)(16)(17)(18), (19), (20), (21), (final)

Chapters 13 to 17 contain Jesus’ teachings during the Last Supper,
which took place on Thursday, now celebrated as Holy Thursday.

Jesus Arrested

18 When he had finished praying, Jesus left with his disciples and crossed the Kidron Valley. On the other side there was a garden, and he and his disciples went into it.

Now Judas, who betrayed him, knew the place, because Jesus had often met there with his disciples. So Judas came to the garden, guiding a detachment of soldiers and some officials from the chief priests and the Pharisees. They were carrying torches, lanterns and weapons.

Continue reading John 18

Phép lạ hằng ngày 53

Chào anh chị em,

Hôm rồi, một người anh có nói với mình về việc ở Singapore có rất nhiều con đường đi bộ mà người ta lát bằng các viên sỏi để người dân đi chân trần lên đó. Các viên sỏi sẽ giúp xoa bóp các vùng huyệt ở bàn chân một cách tự nhiên. Việc này mang lại nhiều lợi ích cho sức khỏe cho người dân. Anh liền hỏi mình là gần chỗ em ở có các con đường như vậy không. Mình chợt nhớ ra nhà mình đang ở có ban công được lát bằng các viên sỏi này. Mình biết đó là phép lạ của Chúa, vì giờ ít có nhà nào lát sỏi kiểu này. Là Chúa dạy mình một cách để chăm sóc sức khỏe. Continue reading Phép lạ hằng ngày 53

How the climate crisis fuels gender inequality

The climate crisis may be a collective problem, but its impacts do not fall equally. Women and girls often bear the heaviest burdens.

November 30, 2023

Editor’s note

This story is part of As Equals, CNN’s ongoing series on gender inequality. For information about how As Equals is funded and more, check out our FAQ.

Climate change acts as a threat multiplier, finding existing injustices and amplifying them. Women and girls already grapple with gender inequality, but when extreme weather devastates a community, the UN found that inequalities worsen: Intimate partner violence spikes, girls are pulled from school, daughters are married early, and women and girls forced from their homes face a higher risk of sexual exploitation and trafficking.

“When we look at who’s affected worse, who’s on the frontlines of the climate crisis, it’s primarily women — women in poor and vulnerable countries,” Selwin Hart, UN Special Adviser to the Secretary-General on Climate Action and Just Transition, told CNN. “And unfortunately, our policies or strategies are really not geared to address this challenge.”

To explore the complex links between gender and climate change, CNN worked with seven women photojournalists who spent time with women and girls in seven countries across the Global South to document the challenges they face.

This visual project gives a snapshot of the myriad ways the human-induced climate crisis is upending their lives, but also shows how they are fighting back. Every image shows both struggle and survival, the battle to live a decent life in a swiftly changing climate.

Girls’ education in Nigeria

The Center for Girls’ Education runs a series of programs in Nigeria to help girls stay in school. One in every five of the world’s children who are out of school is in Nigeria, according to UNICEF, and it is girls who are impacted the most.

Photographs by Taiwo Aina for CNN

More than 10 million children between 5 and 14 years old are absent from classrooms across Nigeria, according to UNICEF. For girls, the statistics are even bleaker: In states in the northeast and northwest of the country, fewer than half attend school.

This education crisis is the result of a tangle of factors, including poverty, geography and gender discrimination, the UN agency adds. But against the backdrop of these individual factors is the broader context of the climate crisis.

Nigeria is growing hotter and dryer, and extreme weather such as flash floods and landslides are becoming fiercer and more frequent. Climate disasters can make schools inaccessible and classrooms unsafe. Communities struggling to cope with extreme weather sometimes turn to their children to help or to earn extra money to support the family. And girls, whose attendance at school is already discouraged in some communities, are often most affected.

For every additional year the average girl attends school, her country’s resilience to climate disasters can be expected to improve by 3.2 points on an index that measures vulnerability to climate-related disasters, according to estimates from the Brookings Institution.

There are efforts to support girls’ education and equip them with the resources to cope with a fast-changing climate. The Center for Girls’ Education in the northern Nigerian city of Zaria runs programs to help girls stay in school and offers training on how to cope with the impacts of extreme weather.

“I feel when we give the girls education on climate change, how to mitigate it, it will go a long way in helping the girls in how to support themselves in times of difficulties, and even help them prepare for it,” said Habiba Mohammed, director of the Center for Girls’ Education.

Asiya Sa’idu, 17

Continue reading How the climate crisis fuels gender inequality