资讯

If you’re old enough to remember the slogan “War is Not Healthy for Children and Other Living Things,” then you’re old enough to remember that activists for peace can end a war.
She studies children living in war zones. ZLATINA KOSTOVA: Generations of children in our societies who can't really escape those memories of horrors, generations like mine, for example.
“War is not healthy for children and other living things,” reads a poster titled “Primer” created by the late artist Lorraine Schneider for an art show at New York’s Pratt Institute in 1965.
“The war puts a huge pressure on children with special educational needs,” said a deputy education minister, Yevheniya Smirnova. “There are studies showing that even the sounds of the sirens ...
Children living in war-torn countries not only suffer from poor mental health outcomes, but war may cause adverse biological changes at the DNA level, which could have lifelong health impacts ...
Even for children in remission, like Anna Viunikova, the war has complicated ongoing care. Anna, 10, received a bone-marrow transplant and chemotherapy for leukemia before the war, and her dark ...
Every winter, the volunteers travel to heavily damaged cities to deliver gifts and ensure that, despite the war, Ukrainian children can celebrate the holiday season just like their peers around ...
Of those, about 1,200 have been children, according to the Defense for Children International — Palestine on Wednesday. Here's why the population skews so young, what it means for this war, and ...
OPINION I know what happens to children of war I speak from experience. One day when I was 5 years old, there came a moment when I couldn’t remember my name.
“War is a very complex topic,” said Treviño. “Especially, when we are talking to children. It is always very important to understand and assess where they are at.” ...
Russia’s war has taken a heavy psychological toll on Ukrainian children, with 43% showing psychosocial distress. This is especially true for frontline places like Kharkiv.
The sight of an assault rifle perched in front of a ball pit filled with squealing toddlers is incongruous but not uncommon these days in Israel. Its owner, attending to his crying 5-year-old, is a… ...