{"id":7826,"date":"2019-08-01T05:49:56","date_gmt":"2019-08-01T12:49:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/?p=7826"},"modified":"2019-08-12T05:20:01","modified_gmt":"2019-08-12T12:20:01","slug":"message-of-the-day-51","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/?p=7826","title":{"rendered":"Message of the Day: Population, Hunger, Disease, War, Economic Opportunity, Environment, Human Rights, Personal Growth"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-medium wp-image-7822\" src=\"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/07\/image-15-300x293.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"293\" srcset=\"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/07\/image-15-300x293.png 300w, https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/07\/image-15-150x147.png 150w, https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/07\/image-15-768x751.png 768w, https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/07\/image-15-1024x1001.png 1024w, https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/07\/image-15.png 1190w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: 8pt;\"><em>In the 21st century, we are all migrants,<\/em> National Geographic, August 2019 Issue<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>This is the first day of August, a good day to focus on the new issue of National Geographic, which focuses on the subject of human migration, from the beginning to this moment.<\/p>\n<p>We pass on two articles, the cover story and this month&#8217;s related big idea piece. There are additional excellent related articles linked.<\/p>\n<p>The first, the cover story,\u00a0<em>Out of Eden Walk:<\/em>\u00a0<em><span class=\"main-title--span\">A storyteller chronicles the mass migrations that define our age<\/span><\/em><span class=\"main-title--span\">, by Paul Salopek, is simply breathtaking in every way.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Here&#8217;s the first sentence.<\/p>\n<p><em><span class=\"smartbody__lead-in\">FOR NEARLY SEVEN<\/span><b> <\/b>years I have been walking with migrants.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Okay, got our attention.<\/p>\n<p>Then this.<\/p>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p><em>In the winter of 2013 I set out from an ancient Homo sapiens fossil site called Herto Bouri, in the north of Ethiopia, and began retracing, on foot, the defining journey of humankind: our first colonization of the Earth during the Stone Age.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p><em>My long walk is about storytelling. I report what I see at boot level along the pathways of our original discovery of the planet. From the start, I knew my route would be vague. Anthropologists suggest that our species first stepped out of Africa 600 centuries ago and eventually wandered, more or less aimlessly, to the tip of South America\u2014the last unknown edge of the continents and my own journey\u2019s finish line. We were roving hunters and foragers. We lacked writing, the wheel, domesticated animals, and agriculture. Advancing along empty beaches, we sampled shellfish. We took our bearings off the rippling arrows of migrating cranes. Destinations had yet to be invented. I have trailed these forgotten adventurers for more than 10,000 miles so far. Today I am traversing India.<\/em><\/p>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p><em>Our modern lives, housebound as they are, have changed almost beyond recognition since that golden age of footloose exploration.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Or have they?<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p><em>The United Nations estimates that more than a billion people\u2014one in seven humans alive today\u2014are voting with their feet, migrating within their countries or across international borders. Millions are fleeing violence: war, persecution, criminality, political chaos. Many more, suffocated by poverty, are seeking economic relief beyond their horizons. The roots of this colossal new exodus include a globalized market system that tears apart social safety nets, a pollutant-warped climate, and human yearnings supercharged by instant media. In sheer numbers, this is the largest diaspora in the long history of our species.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Okay, now we can&#8217;t turn away.<\/p>\n<p>Then, a companion commentary by Mohsin Hamid,\u00a0<em>In the 21st century, we are all migrants.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Here&#8217;s the first three paragraphs.<\/p>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p><em><span class=\"smartbody__lead-in\">ALL OF US<\/span> are descended from migrants. Our species, Homo sapiens, did not evolve in Lahore, where I am writing these words. Nor did we evolve in Shanghai or Topeka or Buenos Aires or Cairo or Oslo, where you, perhaps, are reading them.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p><em>Even if you live today in the Rift Valley, in Africa, mother continent to us all, on the site of the earliest discovered remains of our species, your ancestors too moved\u2014they left, changed, and intermingled before returning to the place you live now, just as I left Lahore, lived for decades in North America and Europe, and returned to reside in the house where my grandparents and parents once did, the house where I spent much of my childhood, seemingly indigenous but utterly altered and remade by my travels.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p><em>None of us is a native of the place we call home. And none of us is a native to this moment in time. We are not native to the instant, already gone, when this sentence began to be written, nor to the instant, also gone, when it began to be read, nor even to this moment, now, which we enter for the first time and which slips away, has slipped away, is irrevocably lost, except from memory.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Presumably, we have your attention now too.<\/p>\n<p>This is another of those times for no further comment from us. Here are the articles.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong>. . .<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/culture\/2019\/07\/paul-salopek-chronicles-the-mass-migrations-that-define-our-age-feature\/\">&#8220;Out of Eden Walk:\u00a0<span class=\"main-title--span\">A storyteller chronicles the mass migrations that define our age&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span class=\"main-title--span\">By Paul Salopek, Photogrpahs by John Stanmeyer, National Geographic Magazine, August 2019 Issue<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><em>Paul Salopek is tracing humankind\u2019s footsteps out of Africa, giving voice on the way to migrants who are part of history&#8217;s largest diaspora.<\/em><\/p>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p><strong><span class=\"smartbody__lead-in\">FOR NEARLY SEVEN<\/span><\/strong><b> <\/b>years I have been walking with migrants.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>In the winter of 2013 I set out from an ancient <i>Homo sapiens <\/i>fossil site called Herto Bouri, in the north of Ethiopia, and began retracing, on foot, the defining journey of humankind: our first colonization of the Earth during the Stone Age.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>My long walk is about storytelling. I report what I see at boot level along the pathways of our original discovery of the planet. From the start, I knew my route would be vague. Anthropologists suggest that our species first stepped out of Africa 600 centuries ago and eventually wandered, more or less aimlessly, to the tip of South America\u2014the last unknown edge of the continents and my own journey\u2019s finish line. We were roving hunters and foragers. We lacked writing, the wheel, domesticated animals, and agriculture. Advancing along empty beaches, we sampled shellfish. We took our bearings off the rippling arrows of migrating cranes. Destinations had yet to be invented. I have trailed these forgotten adventurers for more than 10,000 miles so far. Today I am traversing India.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"image parbase section\">\n<figure id=\"media-image-blfg9enr\" class=\"image media-image media--medium left \">\n<div id=\"blfg9enr\" class=\"standalone-linked\" data-pagewide-presentation-disabled=\"false\">\n<div class=\"placeholder-image-wrap\">\n<div class=\"picturefill\" data-pestle-module=\"PictureFill\">\n<figure class=\"modules-images modules-images--box-logo modules-images--low-rez-placeholder modules-images--no-aspect-ratio modules-images--natural modules-images--large-placeholder\">\n<div>\n<div class=\"low-rez-image\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"LazyLoad is-visible\"><picture><source srcset=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.133.1.jpg 133w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.152.1.jpg 152w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.162.1.jpg 162w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.210.1.jpg 210w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.224.1.jpg 224w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.225.1.jpg 225w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.280.1.jpg 280w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.352.1.jpg 352w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.470.1.jpg 470w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.536.1.jpg 536w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.590.1.jpg 590w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.676.1.jpg 676w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.710.1.jpg 710w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.768.1.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.885.1.jpg 885w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.945.1.jpg 945w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.1190.1.jpg 1190w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-woman-child-ethiopia-camp.adapt.1900.1.jpg 1900w\" sizes=\"730px\" \/><img alt=\"Picture of a young woman with small child under canopy in sun rays penetrating canvas.\" \/><\/picture><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"media__caption \">\n<div class=\"media__caption--text\">Aisha Barka and her daughter, Mariam, hadn\u2019t eaten in days when they arrived in an Eritrean refugee camp in 2008, driven from their home by drought, which killed all their animals. After the Eritrean military began abducting young men, people fled for safety across the border into Ethiopia.<\/div>\n<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div data-pestle-module=\"CaptionTruncation\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Our modern lives, housebound as they are, have changed almost beyond recognition since that golden age of footloose exploration.<\/p>\n<p>Or have they?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>The United Nations estimates that more than a billion people\u2014one in seven humans alive today\u2014are voting with their feet, migrating within their countries or across international borders. Millions are fleeing violence: war, persecution, criminality, political chaos. Many more, suffocated by poverty, are seeking economic relief beyond their horizons. The roots of this colossal new exodus include a globalized market system that tears apart social safety nets, a pollutant-warped climate, and human yearnings supercharged by instant media. In sheer numbers, this is the largest diaspora in the long history of our species.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>I pace off the world at 15 miles a day. I mingle often among the uprooted.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>In Djibouti I have sipped chai with migrants in bleak truck stops. I have slept alongside them in dusty UN refugee tents in Jordan. I have accepted their stories of pain. I have repaid their laughter. I am not one of them, of course: I am a privileged walker. I carry inside my rucksack an ATM card and a passport. But I have shared the misery of dysentery with them and have been detained many times by their nemesis\u2014police. (Eritrea, Sudan, Iran, and Turkmenistan have denied me visas; Pakistan ejected me, then allowed me back in.)<\/p>\n<p>What can be said about these exiled brothers and sisters? About the immense shadowlands they inhabit, paradoxically, in plain sight?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Hunger, ambition, fear, political defiance\u2014the reasons for movement are not truly the question. More important is knowing how the journey itself shapes a different class of human being: people whose ideas of \u201chome\u201d now incorporate an open road\u2014a vast and risky tangent of possibility that begins somewhere far away and ends at your doorsill. How you accept this tiding, with open arms or crouched behind high walls, isn\u2019t at issue either. Because however you react, with compassion or fear, humankind\u2019s reawakened mobility has changed you already.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"image parbase section\">\n<figure id=\"media-image-i7gzgldl\" class=\"image media-image media--medium left \">\n<div id=\"i7gzgldl\" class=\"standalone-linked\" data-pagewide-presentation-disabled=\"false\">\n<div class=\"placeholder-image-wrap\">\n<div class=\"picturefill\" data-pestle-module=\"PictureFill\">\n<figure class=\"modules-images modules-images--box-logo modules-images--low-rez-placeholder modules-images--no-aspect-ratio modules-images--natural modules-images--large-placeholder\">\n<div>\n<div class=\"low-rez-image\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"LazyLoad is-visible\"><picture><source srcset=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.133.1.jpg 133w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.152.1.jpg 152w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.162.1.jpg 162w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.210.1.jpg 210w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.224.1.jpg 224w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.225.1.jpg 225w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.280.1.jpg 280w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.352.1.jpg 352w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.470.1.jpg 470w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.536.1.jpg 536w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.590.1.jpg 590w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.676.1.jpg 676w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.710.1.jpg 710w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.768.1.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.885.1.jpg 885w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.945.1.jpg 945w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.1190.1.jpg 1190w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-man-remains.adapt.1900.1.jpg 1900w\" sizes=\"730px\" \/><img alt=\"Picture of human remains on stony pass.\" \/><\/picture><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"media__caption \">\n<div class=\"media__caption--text\">The remains of a man who perished in the Ardoukoba lava field lie where he met his death.<\/div>\n<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div data-pestle-module=\"CaptionTruncation\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p><b>The first migrants <\/b>I encountered were dead. They lay under small piles of stones in the Great Rift Valley of Africa.<\/p>\n<p>Who were these unfortunates?<\/p>\n<p>It was difficult to know. The world\u2019s poorest people travel from many distant lands to perish in the Afar Triangle of Ethiopia, one of the hottest deserts on Earth. They walk into these terrible barrens in order to reach the Gulf of Aden. There the sea is the doorway to a new (though not always better) life beyond Africa: slave-wage jobs in the cities and date plantations of the Arabian Peninsula. Some of the migrants\u2019 graves doubtless contained Somalis: war refugees. Others likely held deserters from Eritrea. Or drought-weakened Oromos from Ethiopia. All had hoped to sneak across the unmarked borders of Djibouti. They became lost. They collapsed under a molten sun. Sometimes they dropped from thirst within sight of the sea. The columns of exhausted travelers walking behind hastily buried the bodies.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>How long have we been depositing our bones like this on the desolate trails of the African Horn? For a long time. From the very beginning. After all, this is the same corridor used by the first modern humans to exit Africa during the Pleistocene.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>One day I stumbled across a group of scarecrows hiding in the scant shade of some boulders\u201415 lean Ethiopian men who seemed to pretend that if they didn\u2019t move a muscle, they would be invisible. Some were manual laborers. Most were farmers from the Ethiopian highlands. The annual rains, the farmers said, had become impossibly erratic. Sticking it out on their sun-cracked fields meant slow starvation. Better to chance the ocean of white light that is the Afar Triangle, even if you never returned. They were pioneers of sorts, new climate change refugees.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"imageGroup section\">\n<div data-pestle-module=\"ImageGroup\">\n<div id=\"image-group-23063e89-7462-4fef-be5c-3e19bce2c9e8\">\n<div class=\"image-group image media--cinematic\">\n<div class=\"image-group__content\">\n<div class=\"image-group__first-image standalone-linked image-group__first-image_gutter\">\n<figure class=\"modules-images modules-images--box-logo modules-images--low-rez-placeholder modules-images--framed modules-images--framed--horizontal\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed__external-frame\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed--centered--horizontal__outer-centerer\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed--centered__inner-centerer\">\n<div class=\"modules-images__placeholder\">\n<div>\n<div class=\"low-rez-image\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"LazyLoad is-visible\"><picture><source srcset=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.133.1.jpg 133w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.152.1.jpg 152w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.162.1.jpg 162w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.210.1.jpg 210w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.224.1.jpg 224w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.225.1.jpg 225w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.280.1.jpg 280w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.352.1.jpg 352w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.470.1.jpg 470w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.536.1.jpg 536w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.590.1.jpg 590w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.676.1.jpg 676w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.710.1.jpg 710w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.768.1.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.885.1.jpg 885w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.945.1.jpg 945w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.1190.1.jpg 1190w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-men-cell-phone-night.adapt.1900.1.jpg 1900w\" sizes=\"100vw\" \/><img alt=\"Picture of men holding cell phones above heads in moonlight on seashore.\" \/><\/picture><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<div class=\"image-group__second-image standalone-linked image-group__second-image_gutter\">\n<figure class=\"modules-images modules-images--box-logo modules-images--low-rez-placeholder modules-images--framed modules-images--framed--horizontal\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed__external-frame\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed--centered--horizontal__outer-centerer\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed--centered__inner-centerer\">\n<div class=\"modules-images__placeholder\">\n<div>\n<div class=\"low-rez-image\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"LazyLoad is-visible\"><picture><source srcset=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.133.1.jpg 133w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.152.1.jpg 152w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.162.1.jpg 162w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.210.1.jpg 210w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.224.1.jpg 224w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.225.1.jpg 225w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.280.1.jpg 280w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.352.1.jpg 352w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.470.1.jpg 470w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.536.1.jpg 536w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.590.1.jpg 590w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.676.1.jpg 676w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.710.1.jpg 710w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.768.1.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.885.1.jpg 885w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.945.1.jpg 945w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.1190.1.jpg 1190w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-women-foil-blankets-djibouti.adapt.1900.1.jpg 1900w\" sizes=\"100vw\" \/><img alt=\"Picture of women with foil blankets over shoulders and bread loafs in hands\" \/><\/picture><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<div class=\"clearfix\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"media__caption--text truncated\">\u00a0A recent World Bank study calculates that by 2050 more than 140 million people in sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and Latin America could be tumbled into motion by the catastrophic effects of climate change. Ten million climate refugees could swell the trails of East Africa alone. In Ethiopia the tide may reach 1.5 million people\u2014more than 15 times the emigrants now straggling annually through the Afar Triangle to reach the Middle East.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Inching north up the Rift, I was forced to consider the urge to leave a familiar world that was falling apart, a home where the sky itself was against you. All around me snaked the invisible battle lines of an intensifying range war between the Afar and Issa pastoralists\u2014two competing herder groups whose shallow wells were drying up, whose pastures were thinning from a relentless cycle of droughts. They shot at each other over the ownership of a papery blade of grass, over a cup of sandy water. In other words, over survival. Here was the source of our oldest travel story. Drastic climate change and murderous famines, experts say, likely helped drive the first pulses of humans out of Africa.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>How strong is the push to leave? To abandon what you love? To walk into the unknown with all your possessions stuffed into a pocket? It is more powerful than fear of death.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>In the Afar Triangle I stumbled across seven unburied bodies. They were women and men clustered together. They lay faceup, mummified atop a dark lava field. The heat was devastating. The little wild dogs of the desert, the jackals, had taken these travelers\u2019 hands and feet. My walking partner, Houssain Mohamed Houssain, shook his head in wonder, in disgust. He was an ethnic Afar, a descendant of camel herders, the old kings of the desert. His people called the recent waves of transients <i>hahai<\/i>\u2014\u201cpeople of the wind\u201d\u2014ghosts who blew across the land. He snapped a picture.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cYou show them this,\u201d Houssain said angrily, \u201cand they say, \u2018Oh, that won\u2019t happen to me!\u2019 \u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>One of the unlucky migrants had squeezed under a ledge. Doubtless he was crazed for shade. He had placed his shoes next to his naked body, just so, with one sock rolled carefully inside each shoe. He knew: His walking days were over.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"image parbase section\">\n<figure id=\"media-image-3n1nyvvp\" class=\"image media-image media--cinematic left \">\n<div id=\"3n1nyvvp\" class=\"standalone-linked\" data-pagewide-presentation-disabled=\"false\">\n<div class=\"placeholder-image-wrap\">\n<div class=\"picturefill\" data-pestle-module=\"PictureFill\">\n<figure class=\"modules-images modules-images--box-logo modules-images--low-rez-placeholder modules-images--no-aspect-ratio modules-images--natural modules-images--large-placeholder\">\n<div>\n<div class=\"low-rez-image\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"LazyLoad is-visible\"><picture><source srcset=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.133.1.jpg 133w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.152.1.jpg 152w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.162.1.jpg 162w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.210.1.jpg 210w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.224.1.jpg 224w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.225.1.jpg 225w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.280.1.jpg 280w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.352.1.jpg 352w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.470.1.jpg 470w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.536.1.jpg 536w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.590.1.jpg 590w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.676.1.jpg 676w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.710.1.jpg 710w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.768.1.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.885.1.jpg 885w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.945.1.jpg 945w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.1190.1.jpg 1190w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-refugee-picking-tamatoes-jordan.adapt.1900.1.jpg 1900w\" sizes=\"100vw\" \/><img alt=\"Picture of picking tomatoes.\" \/><\/picture><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"media__caption \">\n<div class=\"media__caption--text\">\n<p><b>JORDAN 2013,<\/b> <b>ESCAPING CIVIL WAR <\/b>Refugees who fled their homes in Syria when fighting started in 2011 travel around Jordan to find work wherever they can\u2014here picking tomatoes in Gowera village, just north of Aqaba.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div data-pestle-module=\"CaptionTruncation\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"adSlotDynamic-slot bumper--bottom bumper--add-margin\">\u00a0<b>Walking the continents <\/b>teaches you to look down. You appreciate the importance of feet. You take an interest in footwear. This is natural.<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Human character, of course, is mirrored in the face. The eyes reveal sincerity, lying, curiosity, love, hate. But one\u2019s choice of shoes (or even lack of it) speaks to personal geography: wealth or poverty, age, type of work, education, gender, urban versus rural. Among the world\u2019s legions of migrants, a certain pedal taxonomy holds. Economic migrants\u2014the destitute millions with time to plan ahead\u2014seem to favor the shoe of the 21st century\u2019s poor: the cheap, unisex, multipurpose Chinese sneaker. War refugees escaping violence, by contrast, must trudge their wretched roads in rubber flip-flops, dress loafers, dusty sandals, high-heeled pumps, booties improvised from rags, etc. They flee burning cities, abandon villages and farms. They pull on whatever shoes lie within reach at a moment\u2019s notice. I first began to see such eclectic piles of footwear appearing outside refugee tents in the highlands of Jordan.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>\u201cI wake up to these mountains,\u201d cried Zaeleh al Khaled al Hamdu, a Syrian grandmother shod in beaded house slippers. Tiny blue flowers were tattooed on her wrinkled chin and cheeks. She waved a bony hand at the alien peaks around her. \u201cIt feels like these mountains, I am carrying them on my back.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Heaviness. Weight. The crush of despair. The mountainous burden of helplessness.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"image parbase section\">\n<figure id=\"media-image-9pekmlx8\" class=\"image media-image media--medium left \">\n<div id=\"9pekmlx8\" class=\"standalone-linked\" data-pagewide-presentation-disabled=\"false\">\n<div class=\"placeholder-image-wrap\">\n<div class=\"picturefill\" data-pestle-module=\"PictureFill\">\n<figure class=\"modules-images modules-images--box-logo modules-images--low-rez-placeholder modules-images--no-aspect-ratio modules-images--natural modules-images--large-placeholder\">\n<div>\n<div class=\"low-rez-image\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"LazyLoad is-visible\"><picture><source srcset=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.133.1.jpg 133w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.152.1.jpg 152w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.162.1.jpg 162w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.210.1.jpg 210w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.224.1.jpg 224w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.225.1.jpg 225w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.280.1.jpg 280w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.352.1.jpg 352w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.470.1.jpg 470w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.536.1.jpg 536w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.590.1.jpg 590w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.676.1.jpg 676w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.710.1.jpg 710w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.768.1.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.885.1.jpg 885w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.945.1.jpg 945w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.1190.1.jpg 1190w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-injured-man.adapt.1900.1.jpg 1900w\" sizes=\"730px\" \/><img alt=\"Picture of man showing his injured torso.\" \/><\/picture><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"media__caption \">\n<div class=\"media__caption--text\">Anad, 27, was injured by shrapnel when missiles landed on his village in Syria. In January 2014, the time of this photo, he was living with people from 14 families in a refugee camp in Jordan, near the Syrian border.<\/div>\n<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div data-pestle-module=\"CaptionTruncation\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"adSlotDynamic-slot bumper--bottom bumper--add-margin\">\u00a0This is the badge of the war refugee. Or so our televisions, newspapers, and mobile phones would inform us. The stock media photo of the war-displaced: columns of traumatized souls marching with heavy steps, with slumped shoulders, along a burning road. Or families jammed into leaky boats on the Mediterranean, their gazes sagging with anguish, sunk in vulnerability. But these snapshots of refugee life\u2014seen through the lens of the rich world\u2014are limited, misleading, even self-serving.<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>For weeks I walked from tent to dusty tent in Jordan. At least half a million Syrians languished there\u2014just one aching shard of some 12 million civilians scattered by the bloodiest civil war in the Middle East. War steals your past and future. The Syrians could not go back to the contested rubble of their homes\u2014to Idlib, Hamah, or Damascus. Nobody else wanted them. They were stuck. All they owned was their miserable present.<\/p>\n<p>Many toiled illegally on farms.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>They eked out another breath of life by picking tomatoes for $11 a day. When I plodded past, they waved me over. They jauntily fed me their employers\u2019 crops. (Residents of a poor nation, Jordanians spared little affection for their even poorer Syrian guests.) They poured gallons of tea with wild thyme down my throat. They shook out their filthy blankets and bade me sit and rest.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>\u201cHere, we only dream of chicken,\u201d one man joked. He\u2019d eaten grass to survive in Syria. In one tent a young woman stepped behind a hanging bedsheet and reemerged in her finest dress\u2014pink with silver stripes. She was dazzlingly pregnant, and her beauty passed in a clean hush through my chest, into the moldering tent, before blowing unstoppably out into the desert.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>What I\u2019m trying to say is this: Whatever else refugees may be, they aren\u2019t powerless.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>They aren\u2019t the infantilized victims usually featured in the political left\u2019s suffering porn. They resemble even less the cartoon invaders feared by right-wing populists and bigots\u2014the barbarian hordes coming to take jobs, housing, social services, racial identity, religion, sex partners, and everything else vital and good in wealthy host countries. (Since Neolithic times, the earliest populations of Europe have been overrun and utterly transformed by waves of immigrants from Central Asia and the eastern Mediterranean. Without such interbreeding, modern \u201cEuropeans\u201d wouldn\u2019t exist.)<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"imageGroup section\">\n<div data-pestle-module=\"ImageGroup\">\n<div id=\"image-group-42fc03e9-2ec8-4bd4-b73f-779effe6072f\">\n<div class=\"image-group image media--cinematic\">\n<div class=\"image-group__content\">\n<div class=\"image-group__first-image standalone-linked image-group__first-image_gutter\">\n<figure class=\"modules-images modules-images--box-logo modules-images--low-rez-placeholder modules-images--framed modules-images--framed--horizontal\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed__external-frame\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed--centered--horizontal__outer-centerer\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed--centered__inner-centerer\">\n<div class=\"modules-images__placeholder\">\n<div>\n<div class=\"low-rez-image\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"LazyLoad is-visible\"><picture><source srcset=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-boy-crying-syrian-turkey.adapt.133.1.jpg 133w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-boy-crying-syrian-turkey.adapt.152.1.jpg 152w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-boy-crying-syrian-turkey.adapt.162.1.jpg 162w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-boy-crying-syrian-turkey.adapt.210.1.jpg 210w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-boy-crying-syrian-turkey.adapt.224.1.jpg 224w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-boy-crying-syrian-turkey.adapt.225.1.jpg 225w, 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\/><img alt=\"Picture of boy crying surrounded by other children.\" \/><\/picture><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<div class=\"image-group__second-image standalone-linked image-group__second-image_gutter\">\n<figure class=\"modules-images modules-images--box-logo modules-images--low-rez-placeholder modules-images--framed modules-images--framed--horizontal\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed__external-frame\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed--centered--horizontal__outer-centerer\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed--centered__inner-centerer\">\n<div class=\"modules-images__placeholder\">\n<div>\n<div class=\"low-rez-image\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"LazyLoad is-visible\"><picture><source srcset=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.133.1.jpg 133w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.152.1.jpg 152w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.162.1.jpg 162w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.210.1.jpg 210w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.224.1.jpg 224w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.225.1.jpg 225w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.280.1.jpg 280w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.352.1.jpg 352w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.470.1.jpg 470w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.536.1.jpg 536w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.590.1.jpg 590w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.676.1.jpg 676w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.710.1.jpg 710w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.768.1.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.885.1.jpg 885w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.945.1.jpg 945w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.1190.1.jpg 1190w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-kurds-turkey-border.adapt.1900.1.jpg 1900w\" sizes=\"100vw\" \/><img alt=\"Picture of human crowd with men trying to catch a loaf of bread thrown to them\" \/><\/picture><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<div class=\"clearfix\">No. The refugees I have walked among are bearded pharmacists and girl goatherds. Shopkeepers and intellectuals. That is, supremely ordinary beings grappling with meager options. Remembering their dead, they cup their hands to their faces and weep. But often they are incredibly strong. And generous.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>\u201cPlease come, mister,\u201d a Syrian teacher whispered in Turkey, guiding me from a refugee camp classroom out into the open air. Her students had been drawing decapitations and hangings as part of their art therapy. She noticed I had fallen silent. She was worried about <i>my<\/i> emotions.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>A thousand walked miles to the east, in the Caucasus, a family of ethnic Armenian refugees from Syria hollered, \u201cDon\u2019t come in please!\u201d\u2014making me wait outside their dilapidated home while they hastily set a table they couldn\u2019t afford. They recently moved into a house that once belonged to ethnic Azerbaijanis, a local population ejected during the decades-old Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. I found the Azerbaijanis 120 miles later. They refused my money in a refugee camp caf\u00e9.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>\u201cWe have been waiting for peace so long,\u201d Nemat Huseynov, the caf\u00e9 owner, said. He had owned many sheep when the conflict began in 1988. It goes on, despite a cease-fire in 1994.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Huseynov stared at his big, work-swollen shepherd\u2019s hands splayed palm down on the worn tablecloth.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Home.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>You cannot always choose your shoes on a long walk.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>The world\u2019s refugees and migrants don\u2019t demand our pity. They just ask for our attention. Me they pitied because I walked on.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"image parbase section\">\n<figure id=\"media-image-dmtk0lzm\" class=\"image media-image media--cinematic left \">\n<div id=\"dmtk0lzm\" class=\"standalone-linked\" data-pagewide-presentation-disabled=\"false\">\n<div class=\"placeholder-image-wrap\">\n<div class=\"picturefill\" data-pestle-module=\"PictureFill\">\n<figure class=\"modules-images modules-images--box-logo modules-images--low-rez-placeholder modules-images--no-aspect-ratio modules-images--natural modules-images--large-placeholder\">\n<div>\n<div class=\"low-rez-image\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"LazyLoad is-visible\"><picture><source srcset=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.133.1.jpg 133w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.152.1.jpg 152w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.162.1.jpg 162w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.210.1.jpg 210w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.224.1.jpg 224w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.225.1.jpg 225w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.280.1.jpg 280w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.352.1.jpg 352w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.470.1.jpg 470w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.536.1.jpg 536w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.590.1.jpg 590w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.676.1.jpg 676w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.710.1.jpg 710w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.768.1.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.885.1.jpg 885w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.945.1.jpg 945w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.1190.1.jpg 1190w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-tents-camp.adapt.1900.1.jpg 1900w\" sizes=\"100vw\" \/><img alt=\"Picture of what tents under rain clouds.\" \/><\/picture><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"media__caption \">\n<div class=\"media__caption--text\"><b>TURKEY 2014, STRANDED BUT SHELTERED <\/b>Rain clouds cast a shadow over Nizip 1, a camp where more than 30,000 Syrian refugees make do in tents provided by a Turkish governmental aid agency. Each unit has a small kitchen, bedding, and a TV. People share toilets and showers.<\/div>\n<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div data-pestle-module=\"CaptionTruncation\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"adSlotDynamic-slot bumper--bottom bumper--add-margin\">\u00a0<b>\u201cMay I practice <\/b>my English?\u201d<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>It was the teenage boys and girls of Punjab. Last year. Mile 7,000 of my slow journey. The scalding back roads of India\u2019s breadbasket.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Five, 10, 20 youngsters a day emerged from their houses, jogging to catch up after I slogged past. Sweating, puffing, unused to exercise, they unlimbered their English vocabulary and syntax for a few hundred yards before peeling off. They were studying for the International English Language Testing System exams. High scores were essential to meet the English-proficiency standards required for visas to New Zealand, Australia, the United Kingdom, Canada, and the United States. There was nothing lighthearted about these exchanges that were as old as the Stone Age\u2014\u201cWho are you?\u201d \u201cWhere do you come from?\u201d \u201cWhere are you going?\u201d\u2014because it was homework.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Faridkot was a town marooned in a sea of wheatgrass. About 100 private English-language schools there were preparing tens of thousands of young Indians to abandon their homeland. The fields of Punjab were already taken. There was little future in farming. Successful students aimed to join the 150 million migrant laborers who vault frontiers to find work. Punjab was undergoing an evacuation.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>\u201cThe only ones who stay behind are those who can\u2019t afford it,\u201d said language-school owner Gulabi Singh, looking startled at his own information. The average cost of emigration: $14,000, or 23 times the annual median income in India.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"image parbase section\">\n<figure id=\"media-image-68hcngis\" class=\"image media-image media--cinematic left \">\n<div id=\"68hcngis\" class=\"standalone-linked\" data-pagewide-presentation-disabled=\"false\">\n<div class=\"placeholder-image-wrap\">\n<div class=\"picturefill\" data-pestle-module=\"PictureFill\">\n<figure class=\"modules-images modules-images--box-logo modules-images--low-rez-placeholder modules-images--no-aspect-ratio modules-images--natural modules-images--large-placeholder\">\n<div>\n<div class=\"low-rez-image\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"LazyLoad is-visible\"><picture><source srcset=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.133.1.jpg 133w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.152.1.jpg 152w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.162.1.jpg 162w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.210.1.jpg 210w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.224.1.jpg 224w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.225.1.jpg 225w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.280.1.jpg 280w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.352.1.jpg 352w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.470.1.jpg 470w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.536.1.jpg 536w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.590.1.jpg 590w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.676.1.jpg 676w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.710.1.jpg 710w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.768.1.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.885.1.jpg 885w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.945.1.jpg 945w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.1190.1.jpg 1190w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-uzbek-men-praying-russia.adapt.1900.1.jpg 1900w\" sizes=\"100vw\" \/><img alt=\"Picture of men sitting along roadside and praying.\" \/><\/picture><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"media__caption \">\n<div class=\"media__caption--text\"><b>UZBEKISTAN 2017, ON THE MOVE FOR WORK <\/b>Men driving from their homes in Uzbekistan to seek jobs in Russia pause to pay homage to Daud-Ota, revered in tradition as a patron and guardian, who is buried in a nearby necropolis.<\/div>\n<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div data-pestle-module=\"CaptionTruncation\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"adSlotDynamic-slot bumper--bottom bumper--add-margin\">I had just arrived from Central Asia. A walking partner in Uzbekistan slipped regularly into Kazakhstan to work without papers at construction sites. He carried scars from police encounters. In Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, I met migrants who flew to Moscow to punch cash registers or inhale poisons at nightmare chemical plants. The Afghans along my route were eyeing every continent to flee the war. And so on.<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Yet here is the secret of this epic of human restlessness: It is probably the people who stay behind who will change the world.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Internal migrations\u2014rural-to-urban stampedes\u2014sweep up 139 million citizens within India. In China the figure approaches a quarter billion. In Brazil, Indonesia, Nigeria, Mexico, everywhere, the trend is the same. Three-quarters of the humans now stumbling across the planet are circulating within their own borders. New middle classes are being born. Old political dynasties are tottering. Megacities are exploding\u2014and imploding. Stunning innovations collide with colossal disappointments. Entire systems of knowledge (traditional farming), accumulated over millennia, are being jettisoned. Urbanization is cracking apart old gender and religious norms. Environmental resources are in free fall. Chaos, longing, violence, hope, tearing down, building up, experimentation, astonishing successes and defeats. Nothing can stand in the way of this unprecedented force of yearning. By comparison, the hysteria in the global north over international migrants seems a pale sideshow.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Walking India, I joined human torrents streaming along roads. I saw them jamming bus stands. Packed atop trains. The hardworking poor ceaselessly coming and going. Sooner than later, the world must learn to harness the extraordinary energy behind such mass aspiration.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"imageGroup section\">\n<div data-pestle-module=\"ImageGroup\">\n<div id=\"image-group-fdc938e1-5790-4c33-9db0-b5d59e30e7ac\">\n<div class=\"image-group image media--cinematic\">\n<div class=\"image-group__content\">\n<div class=\"image-group__first-image standalone-linked image-group__first-image_gutter\">\n<figure class=\"modules-images modules-images--box-logo modules-images--low-rez-placeholder modules-images--framed modules-images--framed--horizontal\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed__external-frame\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed--centered--horizontal__outer-centerer\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed--centered__inner-centerer\">\n<div class=\"modules-images__placeholder\">\n<div>\n<div class=\"low-rez-image\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"LazyLoad is-visible\"><picture><source srcset=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-indian-women-manufactury-bangalore.adapt.133.1.jpg 133w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-indian-women-manufactury-bangalore.adapt.152.1.jpg 152w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-indian-women-manufactury-bangalore.adapt.162.1.jpg 162w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-indian-women-manufactury-bangalore.adapt.210.1.jpg 210w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-indian-women-manufactury-bangalore.adapt.224.1.jpg 224w, 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https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-indian-women-manufactury-bangalore.adapt.945.1.jpg 945w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-indian-women-manufactury-bangalore.adapt.1190.1.jpg 1190w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-indian-women-manufactury-bangalore.adapt.1900.1.jpg 1900w\" sizes=\"100vw\" \/><img alt=\"Picture of women in traditional Indian dresses going through doorway with clear plastic curtain.\" \/><\/picture><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<div class=\"image-group__second-image standalone-linked image-group__second-image_gutter\">\n<figure class=\"modules-images modules-images--box-logo modules-images--low-rez-placeholder modules-images--framed modules-images--framed--horizontal\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed__external-frame\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed--centered--horizontal__outer-centerer\">\n<div class=\"modules-images--framed--centered__inner-centerer\">\n<div class=\"modules-images__placeholder\">\n<div>\n<div class=\"low-rez-image\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"LazyLoad is-visible\"><picture><source srcset=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-bangalore-woman-english-test.adapt.133.1.jpg 133w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-bangalore-woman-english-test.adapt.152.1.jpg 152w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-bangalore-woman-english-test.adapt.162.1.jpg 162w, 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470w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-bangalore-woman-english-test.adapt.536.1.jpg 536w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-bangalore-woman-english-test.adapt.590.1.jpg 590w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-bangalore-woman-english-test.adapt.676.1.jpg 676w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-bangalore-woman-english-test.adapt.710.1.jpg 710w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-bangalore-woman-english-test.adapt.768.1.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-bangalore-woman-english-test.adapt.885.1.jpg 885w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-bangalore-woman-english-test.adapt.945.1.jpg 945w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-bangalore-woman-english-test.adapt.1190.1.jpg 1190w, https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/content\/dam\/magazine\/rights-exempt\/2019\/08\/paul-refugees\/paul-refugees-bangalore-woman-english-test.adapt.1900.1.jpg 1900w\" sizes=\"100vw\" \/><img alt=\"Picture of young woman sitting on bed reading papers\" \/><\/picture><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<div class=\"clearfix\">The migrant steering the course of our species\u2019 destiny this century saw me coming from afar. People always do. She couldn\u2019t have been 18. This was in a village of stray cows in Bihar, one of India\u2019s poorest states. I was bound for Myanmar. She strode up and boldly shook my hand.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>\u201cThis place is very, very boring,\u201d the Bihari girl declared within a minute. \u201cMy teachers are boring. What do I do?\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>I laughed.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p>Ambition and intelligence shone in her eyes. Soon enough she would be shouldering her way into one of India\u2019s metastasizing cities, testing her mettle against hundreds of millions of other dislocated villagers. There would be no wall high enough to contain her.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: center;\">\n<p class=\"article-controller__last-paragraph\" style=\"text-align: left;\">Where will she end up? Where will we? Nobody knows. The important thing on this road we share is to keep walking. And not be afraid. The way ahead may be uphill. I suggest doing your homework. Her shoes were sturdy.<\/p>\n<p class=\"article-controller__last-paragraph\" style=\"text-align: left;\"><em>Follow National Geographic Fellow Paul Salopek\u2019s walk around the world at <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.org\/projects\/out-of-eden-walk\/\">OutofEdenWalk.org<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"article-controller__last-paragraph\"><strong>. . .<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"article-controller__last-paragraph\" style=\"text-align: left;\">AMONG THE UPROOTED<\/p>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-2\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle1\">Since starting his trek out of Africa in 2013, Paul Salopek has traversed 16 countries [see illustration at link to article], all marked by large-scale movements of people. Millions of them are international migrants, traveling from one country to another, mostly to find work and improve their lives. Many others, though, are refugees, forced to leave homelands ravaged by war or environmental disaster.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-3\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle2\">Avoiding catastrophe<\/p>\n<p>War has driven millions from their homes into neighboring countries. Syrians have fled to Turkey and Jordan, Afghans to Pakistan and Iran, and South Sudanese and others to Ethiopia.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-4\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle3\">Migration magnet<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-pstyle4\">The strong economies of Arab countries in the\u00a0Persian Gulf have made the region a top destination for migrant workers. Gulf states host\u00a0nearly 14 percent of the world\u2019s foreign labor.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-5\" class=\"g-Layer_40 g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle5\">NUMBER OF MIGRANTS, <span class=\"g-cstyle0\">2017<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-6\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle6\"><span class=\"g-cstyle1\">Total migrants<\/span>, % of country\u2019s total population<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-7\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle7\">Refugees<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-8\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle8\"><span class=\"g-cstyle2\">Ethiopia <\/span>1.2 million, <span class=\"g-cstyle3\">1.2%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle4\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">889,397<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-9\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle9\">Djibouti <span class=\"g-cstyle6\">116,089, <\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle7\">12.1%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle8\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">17,548 <\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-10\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle10\"><span class=\"g-cstyle2\">Saudi Arabia <\/span>12.2 million, <span class=\"g-cstyle3\">37%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle4\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle9\">148 <\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-11\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>Saudi Arabia doesn\u2019t accept refugees, but migrant workers drawn to domestic service and construction jobs make up nearly 40 percent of the population.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-12\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle8\"><span class=\"g-cstyle2\">Jordan <\/span>3.2 million, <span class=\"g-cstyle3\">33.3%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle4\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">2.9 mil.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-13\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle8\"><span class=\"g-cstyle2\">Israel <\/span>2 million, <span class=\"g-cstyle3\">23.6%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle4\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">25,637 <\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-14\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle8\"><span class=\"g-cstyle2\">Cyprus <\/span>188,973, <span class=\"g-cstyle3\">16%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle4\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">9,745 <\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-15\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle8\"><span class=\"g-cstyle2\">Turkey <\/span>4.9 mil., <span class=\"g-cstyle3\">6%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle4\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">3.5 mil.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-16\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>Syrians make up more than 98 percent of Turkey\u2019s refugee population.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-17\" class=\"g-Layer_40 g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle9\">Georgia <span class=\"g-cstyle6\">78,200, <\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle7\">2%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle8\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">2,069 <\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-18\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle9\">Azerbaijan <span class=\"g-cstyle6\">259,241, <\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle7\">2.6%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle8\">;<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle5\"> 1,115 <\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-19\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle8\"><span class=\"g-cstyle2\">Kazakhstan <\/span>3.6 million, <span class=\"g-cstyle3\">20%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle4\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">602 <\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-20\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>Kazakhstan has seen an influx of migrants to work in its booming construction industry.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-21\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle8\"><span class=\"g-cstyle2\">Uzbekistan <\/span>1.2 million, <span class=\"g-cstyle3\">3.6%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle4\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">20<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-22\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle9\">Kyrgyzstan <span class=\"g-cstyle6\">200,294, <\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle7\">3.3%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle8\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">334<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-23\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle9\">Tajikstan <span class=\"g-cstyle6\">273,259, <\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle7\">3.1%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle8\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">2,516 <\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-24\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle9\">Afghanistan <span class=\"g-cstyle6\">133,612, <\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle7\">0.4%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle8\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">75,927 <\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-25\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle8\"><span class=\"g-cstyle2\">Pakistan <\/span>3.4 million, <span class=\"g-cstyle3\">1.7%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle4\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">1.4 mil. <\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-26\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs g-aiPointText\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle8\"><span class=\"g-cstyle2\">India <\/span>5.2 mil., <span class=\"g-cstyle3\">0.4%<\/span><span class=\"g-cstyle4\">;<\/span> <span class=\"g-cstyle5\">197,122 <\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"g-ai0-27\" class=\"g-TEXT g-aiAbs\">\n<p class=\"g-pstyle11\" style=\"text-align: left;\"><em>TAYLOR MAGGIACOMO AND RYAN WILLIAMS, NGM STAFF SOURCES: UNHCR; UN DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL AFFAIRS; INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION; INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR MIGRATION.<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"g-pstyle11\" style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong>. . .<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"g-pstyle11\" style=\"text-align: left;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/magazine\/2019\/08\/we-all-are-migrants-in-the-21st-century\/\">&#8220;In the 21st century, we are all migrants&#8221;<\/a><\/p>\n<p class=\"g-pstyle11\" style=\"text-align: left;\">By Mohsin Hamid, National Geographic Magazine, August 2019 Issue.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-pstyle11\" style=\"text-align: left;\"><em>Humans are in motion across time as well as geography. Why must we be divided, the migrant versus the native?<\/em><\/p>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span class=\"smartbody__lead-in\"><b>ALL OF US<\/b><\/span> are descended from migrants. Our species, <i>Homo sapiens,<\/i> did not evolve in Lahore, where I am writing these words. Nor did we evolve in Shanghai or Topeka or Buenos Aires or Cairo or Oslo, where you, perhaps, are reading them.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>Even if you live today in the Rift Valley, in <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/magazine\/2018\/04\/race-genetics-science-africa#content_image\">Africa, mother continent to us all<\/a>, on the site of the earliest discovered remains of our species, your ancestors too moved\u2014they left, changed, and intermingled before returning to the place you live now, just as I left Lahore, lived for decades in North America and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/culture\/2019\/07\/first-europeans-immigrants-genetic-testing-feature\">Europe<\/a>, and returned to reside in the house where my grandparents and parents once did, the house where I spent much of my childhood, seemingly indigenous but utterly altered and remade by my travels.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>None of us is a native of the place we call home. And none of us is a native to this moment in time. We are not native to the instant, already gone, when this sentence began to be written, nor to the instant, also gone, when it began to be read, nor even to this moment, now, which we enter for the first time and which slips away, has slipped away, is irrevocably lost, except from memory.<\/p>\n<p>To be human is to migrate forward through time, the seconds like islands, where we arrive, castaways, and from which we are swept off by the tide, arriving again and again, in a new instant, on a new island, one we have, as always, never experienced before. Over the course of a life these migrations through the seconds accrue, transform into hours, months, decades. We become refugees from our childhoods, the schools, the friends, the toys, the parents that made up our worlds all gone, replaced by new buildings, by phone calls, photo albums, and reminiscences. We step onto our streets looking up at the towering figures of adults, we step out again a little later and attract the gazes of others with our youth, and later still with our own children or those of our friends\u2014and then once more, seemingly invisible, no longer of much interest, bowed by gravity.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\">We all experience the constant drama of the new and the constant sorrow of the loss of what we\u2019ve left behind. It is a universal sorrow and one so potent that we seek to deny it, rarely acknowledging it in ourselves, let alone in others. We\u2019re encouraged by society to focus only on the new, on acquisition, rather than on the loss that is the other thread uniting and binding our species.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"pullQuote parbase section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<div class=\"pull-quote pull-quote--large pull-quote--LIGHT pull-quote--double\">\n<blockquote class=\"double\"><p>We move when it is intolerable to stay where we are. We move because of environmental stresses and physical dangers and the small-mindedness of our neighbors\u2014and to be who we wish to be, to seek what we wish to seek.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>We move through time, through the temporal world, because we are compelled to. We move through space, through the physical world, seemingly because we choose to, but in those choices there are compulsions as well. We move when it is intolerable to stay where we are: when we cannot linger a moment longer, alone in our stifling bedroom, and must go outside and play; when we cannot linger a moment longer, hungry on our parched farm, and must go elsewhere for food. We move because of <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/magazine\/2019\/07\/sundarbans-mangrove-forest-in-bangladesh-india-threatened-by-rising-waters-illegal-logging\">environmental stresses<\/a> and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/magazine\/2019\/03\/el-salvador-violence-poverty-united-states-policy-migrants\">physical dangers<\/a> and the small-mindedness of our neighbors\u2014and to be who we wish to be, to seek what we wish to seek.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"promo section betaRelatedContentList\" style=\"text-align: left;\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>Ours is a migratory species. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/culture\/topics\/reference\/migration\">Humans have always moved<\/a>. Our ancestors did, and not linearly, like an army advancing out of Africa in a series of bold thrusts, but circuitously, sometimes in one direction, then in another, borne along by currents both without and within. Our contemporaries are moving\u2014above all from the countryside <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/magazine\/2019\/04\">to the cities<\/a> of Asia and Africa. And our descendants will move too. They will move as the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/environment\/climate-change\">climate changes<\/a>, as sea levels rise, as wars are fought, as one mode of economic activity dies out and gives way to another.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>The power of our technology, its impact on our planet, is growing. Consequently the pace of change is accelerating, giving rise to new stresses, and our nimble species will use movement as part of its response to these stresses, as our great-grandmothers and great-grandfathers did, as we are designed to do.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>And yet we are told that such movement is unprecedented, that it represents a crisis, a flood, a disaster. We are told that there are two kinds of humans, natives and migrants, and that these must struggle for supremacy.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"pullQuote parbase section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<div class=\"pull-quote pull-quote--large pull-quote--LIGHT pull-quote--double\">\n<blockquote class=\"double\"><p>We are told not only that movement through geographies can be stopped but that movement through time can be too, that we can return to the past, to a better past.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>We are told not only that movement through geographies can be stopped but that movement through time can be too, that we can return to the past, to a better past, when our country, our race, our religion was truly great. All we must accept is division. The division of humanity into natives and migrants. A vision of <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/magazine\/2017\/09\/proof-border-wall-united-states-mexico\">a world of walls<\/a> and barriers, and of the guards and weapons and surveillance required to enforce those barriers. A world <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/magazine\/2018\/02\/surveillance-watching-you\">where privacy dies<\/a>, and dignity and equality alongside it, and where humans must pretend to be static, unmoving, moored to the land on which they currently stand and to a time like the time of their childhood\u2014or of their ancestors\u2019 childhoods\u2014an imaginary time, in which standing still is only an imaginary possibility.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>Such are the dreams of a species defeated by nostalgia, at war with itself, with its migratory nature and the nature of its relationship to time, screaming in denial of the constant movement that is human life.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>Perhaps thinking of us all as migrants offers us a way out of this looming dystopia. If we are all migrants, then possibly there is a kinship between the suffering of the woman who has never lived in another town and yet has come to feel foreign on her own street and the suffering of the man who has left his town and will never see it again. Maybe transience is our mutual enemy, not in the sense that the passage of time can be defeated but rather in the sense that we all suffer from the losses time inflicts.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"adSlotDynamic-slot bumper--bottom bumper--add-margin\" style=\"text-align: left;\">A greater degree of compassion for ourselves might then become possible, and out of it, a greater degree of compassion for others. We might muster more courage as we swim through time, rather than giving in to fear. We might collectively be able to be brave enough to recognize that our individual endings are not the ending of everything and that <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalgeographic.com\/magazine\/2018\/03\/astronauts-space-earth-perspective\">beauty and hope remain possible<\/a> even once we are gone.<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>Accepting our reality as a migratory species will not be easy. New art, new stories, and new ways of being will be needed. But the potential is great. A better world is possible, a more just and inclusive world, better for us and for our grandchildren, with better food and better music and less violence too.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<p>The city nearest you was, two centuries ago, almost unimaginably different from that city today. Two centuries in the future it is likely to be at least as different again. Few citizens of almost any city now would prefer to live in their city of two centuries ago. We should have the confidence to imagine that the same will be true of the citizens of the world\u2019s cities two centuries hence.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\">\n<p class=\"article-controller__last-paragraph\" style=\"text-align: left;\">A species of migrants at last comfortable being a species of migrants. That, for me, is a destination worth wandering to. It is the central challenge and opportunity every migrant offers us: to see in him, in her, the reality of ourselves.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"parbase smartbody section text\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<blockquote><p><em>Mohsin Hamid is the author of four novels \u2014Moth Smoke, The Reluctant Fundamentalist, How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia, and Exit West\u2014and a book of essays, Discontent and Its Civilizations. His writing has been translated into 40 languages, featured on best-seller lists, and adapted for the screen.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p><strong>. . .<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In the 21st century, we are all migrants, National Geographic, August 2019 Issue &nbsp; This is the first day of August, a good day to focus on the new issue of National Geographic, which focuses on the subject of human migration, from the beginning to this moment. We pass on two articles, the cover story [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1001004,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[54],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7826"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1001004"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=7826"}],"version-history":[{"count":4,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7826\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":7940,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7826\/revisions\/7940"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=7826"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=7826"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/worldcampaign.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=7826"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}