‘Angst in the air’: South Koreans demonstrate for and against impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol

Conflict & Justice

Judges at South Korea’s Constitutional Court get underway with a trial this week that could remove the country’s president from office. Yoon Suk Yeol sent the nation into a democratic crisis six weeks ago when he declared martial law. That got him impeached. Now, Yoon is facing an arrest warrant and he’s refusing to appear at the Constitutional Court out of concern for his personal safety.  

Migrants are increasingly taking dangerous boat journeys to reach Europe

Immigration

Migrants from Africa reaching Spain in record numbers 

Conflict & Justice

Young classical musicians join forces in Middle Eastern ensemble

Music

Ukrainian refugees make a home in neighboring Moldova

Ukraine

A Costa Rican dance against colonialism becomes a paradoxical tourist attraction

Arts, Culture & Media

Every year, in the Costa Rican village of Boruca, men dress in garish masks and costumes to reenact their ancestors’ battle against colonizers 500 years ago. In the ritual, Spaniards are depicted as bulls, while the Borucans depict themselves as devils, to reclaim a slur the Spanish once used against them.

Out of Eden Walk: South Korea’s love motels

Out of Eden Walk

National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek talks about his experience with South Korea’s so-called “love motels,” short-term rental hotels primarily used by couples for intimate encounters. In a country with a severe housing shortage, these motels provide privacy for young people who live by necessity with their parents. As Salopek discovered on his walk across the country, these budget rooms are also convenient for travelers.

Conservators scan Ukraine’s wooden churches to help preserve them

Sacred Spaces

Since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, people have been evacuating and safeguarding Ukrainian works of art and museum pieces. Now, a team of conservators and students are also creating permanent, 3D records of buildings and objects that can’t be moved in case they are damaged or destroyed.

In Japan, an automotive light bulb manufacturer pivots to growing mushrooms 

Japan in Focus

The global shift toward new automotive technologies can be difficult for companies producing parts that may become obsolete. It’s straining local economies in areas with a lot of manufacturing, like Japan’s Shizuoka prefecture. To adapt, one company specializing in automotive light bulbs has expanded into mushroom cultivation. 

‘Thank God, the nightmare is over’: A Syrian returns home to Damascus to witness celebration and struggle

Syria

Amr al-Azm, an archaeologist and former professor at Damascus University, left Syria with his family in 2006. He recently returned to witness firsthand the celebrations and struggles that followed the abrupt departure of longtime dictator Bashar al-Assad. The World’s Carolyn Beeler speaks with Azm about what it’s been like to return.

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