Children in the U.S. have begun another school year. But overseas, what are the challenges for the children who live in three of the worlds most active war zones: Gaza, Sudan and Ukraine?
Read Also
- Raising awareness on intimate partner violence in Saskatchewan
- Asia-Pacific markets set to open higher after S&P and Dow set fresh records
- Attempted prison escape in Honduras leaves 2 inmates dead and 3 injured
- Israeli soldiers pushed three apparently lifeless bodies from roofs during a West Bank raid
- Israel warned the U.S. that an operation in Lebanon was coming but gave no details, officials say
- Sword with markings of ancient pharaoh Ramses II unearthed in Egypt
- Winnipeg Jets open training camp without Cole Perfetti
- After murder of Japanese boy in China, Xi Jinping’s nationalism faces reckoning
- Dodgers star Ohtani makes MLB 50-50 history
- America through the looking glass: The crypto bros crowdfunding a new country
Latest NPR
- Retiring Later in China; Getting a Driver's License in Mexico
- An ex-CIA officer gets 30 years for drugging, filming and assaulting dozens of women
- Why Teamsters won't endorse a candidate for 2024. And, how to avoid credit card debt.
- A viral nine-month world cruise saw plenty of drama, but not the kind you'd expect
- China raises its retirement age to dull the impact of shrinking, aging economy
- Is it possible to go to school when bombs fall and your family is displasplaced?
- Is it possible to go to school when bombs fall and your family is displaced?
- Venezuela's opposition leader says he was forced to sign letter that admits defeat
- Morning news brief
- Portugal declares a state of calamity as wildfires rage out of control