कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
LET REFUGEES HELP REFUGEES
Time
|October 28, 2024
At the annual gathering of the U.N. General Assembly last month, when the subject was briefly Sudan, the U.S. ambassador spoke of "compassion collapse," defined as the human tendency to turn away from mass suffering. The suffering in Sudan is certainly on a mass scale. Eleven million people have fled their homes, pursued by men with guns and followed by famine.
More than half of the country's population of 46 million is experiencing acute hunger, and three-quarters of a million people face starvation. Sudan is the worst humanitarian situation in the world, and with the international appeal for funds short by 60%, governments are not rising to it.
But people are. During a visit to the Sudanese border this fall, I saw volunteers doing more, with next to nothing, than those who have the ability to make the biggest impact. Hafiz Issak Aroun, a Chadian doctor, had resigned his job at a hospital to set up a clinic in the border town of Adré, treating refugees for free. "We are all volunteers here," he said, "and we're desperate for support to keep this going" In Khartoum, neighborhood mutualaid groups known as Emergency Response Rooms operate 350 communal kitchens. They know the value of living a life of service and grace, of adding to the lives of those around you.
Local responders see not mass suffering but, rather, the needs of the person in front of them. Local volunteers, who include refugees themselves, are doing the work that the outside world says should be done, and often better than any outsider could. But they struggle to do it without the support that wealthier countries can provide.
यह कहानी Time के October 28, 2024 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Time से और कहानियाँ
Time
Heated Rivalry depicts autism with a familiar kind of love
THE MAJORITY OF AUTISTIC AND AUTISTIC-coded characters in film and television have long looked, moved, and sounded a certain way. Think Dustin Hoffman's Raymond in Rain Man, Jim Parsons' Sheldon in The Big Bang Theory, or Freddie Highmore's Sean in The Good Doctor.
2 mins
February 09, 2026
Time
A musical about a religious zealot that's never boring
HOW MUCH DO AMBITION AND CHUTZPAH count in filmmaking these days? The Testament of Ann Lee, directed by Mona Fastvold, is for better or worse like no other movie you've seen.
2 mins
February 09, 2026
Time
A SPEEDSKATING SENSATION
Erin Jackson's unconventional path to her third Olympics
2 mins
February 09, 2026
Time
5 doctor-approved ways to use AI for health information
LAST SUMMER, LANCE JOHNSON WOKE up in the middle of the night with excruciating pain in his lower right side. He initially blamed it on the pizza and ice cream he had enjoyed the night before. But five sleepless hours later, the 17-year-old from Phoenix was still suffering, so he decided to consult the nearest expert: ChatGPT.
2 mins
February 09, 2026
Time
Iranian protesters say Trump 'betrayed' them
SEVEN TIMES IN EIGHT DAYS, U.S. PRESIDENT DONALD Trump promised to come to the aid of Iranian protesters if the country's authoritarian regime began killing them in the streets. When it did—slaying thousands on Jan. 8 and 9— Trump doubled down. “KEEP PROTESTING” he urged on Truth Social on Jan. 12. “HELP IS ON ITS WAY.”
5 mins
February 09, 2026
Time
DOMESTIC DISTURBANCE
How a soapy strain of thriller became the defining metaphor of our time
6 mins
February 09, 2026
Time
Venezuelan oil
After the U.S. military operation that led to the capture of Venezuela's President, Nicolás Maduro, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that the U.S. would seize and sell up to 50 million barrels of the South American nation's oil.
1 min
February 09, 2026
Time
The women saving America's climate data
A COUPLE OF WEEKS AFTER DONALD TRUMP WAS elected President for the second time, a group of federal data watchers gathered in Denice Ross’s dining room. As chief U.S. data scientist under the Biden Administration, Ross had a clear window into just how much information the government collects—whether monitoring a fleet of ocean buoys to guide safe shipping routes or tracking how vulnerable communities are to disaster—and just how useful it is.
5 mins
February 09, 2026
Time
Nia DaCosta The director of 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple on stepping into a storied zombie franchise and calibrating just how much gore serves the story
You've worked with Tessa Thompson on three projects. Do you consider her a muse?
3 mins
February 09, 2026
Time
The Risk Report
THE U.K., FRANCE, AND GERMANY—Europe's political core—begin 2026 with weak, unpopular governments under siege from populists on both the left and right, and a Trump Administration openly working to undermine them. None of these countries holds general elections this year, but all three face risks of political paralysis—and maybe lasting damage.
2 mins
February 09, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
