Tibetan children play in school in Dharamshala, India : NPR


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Far-Flung Postcards is a weekly collection through which NPR’s worldwide correspondents share snapshots capturing moments from their lives and work all over the world.

I used to be resting close to a playground, between interviews for a narrative on the shrinking variety of Tibetan children in a boarding college constructed for them within the northern Indian metropolis of Dharamshala. This Himalayan valley is the place the Dalai Lama settled after fleeing Tibet, and so did 1000’s of Tibetan refugees. The Tibetan diaspora in India is far smaller now, however the college continues to absorb Tibetan youngsters as boarders and teaches them about their heritage.

It was quiet within the alpine cool of the afternoon — till a couple of ladies rushed out of a constructing. They scrambled up play gear and goaded one another to leap off a platform that appeared excessive for little ones. A lady walked out — a home mom or a instructor — and scolded the women in Tibetan. They nodded obediently, and as quickly as the girl turned her again, they had been again to leaping off the platform once more. I used to be laughing as I took this image — I’ve a delicate spot for cheeky children, and I really like seeing how youngsters, irrespective of the place they’re, discover a method to play.