Tag: Harvard World Media

  • Nation & World

    Mexico: Illuminating the Past

    Harvard archaeologists from the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology have been working in the Maya city of Copán Ruinas, Honduras, for years, unearthing the secrets of the civilization that once built pyramids there. In recent years, these archaeologists began digging at a new site, Rastrojón, perched on a mountainside where it would be visible…

    1 minute
  • Nation & World

    Talking terror

    The two men sit close, knees almost touching, in a mud-walled hut in the Congolese village of Katokota.

    15 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Looking horror in the face

    Imani was just 15 when soldiers from the rebel group Interahamwe found her on the road in a remote region in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

    11 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Eastern Congo nexus for many conflicts

    Unrest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s (DRC) eastern border region stems both from what the nation has and from what it lacks.

    4 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Local partners critical to HHI’s work

    Denis Mukwege has his hands full. So do Justin Kabanga and Maria Bard. The three each have leadership roles in nonprofits engaged in meeting the needs of people caught up in the fighting along the Rwandan border in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

    4 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Michael VanRooyen: Rebuilding places that peace abandoned

    “When they put the gun in my mouth, I decided it wasn’t so ridiculous after all.”

    9 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Jocelyn Kelly: Seeking the whole picture of Congo violence

    Jocelyn Kelly stood alone at the airport in Rwanda’s capital city of Kigali, wondering whether anyone would meet her.

    8 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Jennifer Scott: Being there for atrocity’s survivors

    Jennifer Scott worked hard to become a doctor. But when she faced the ills of women in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, she realized her technical skills weren’t enough.

    9 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Cutting in on the AIDS-TB death dance

    On a hill in South Africa’s KwaZulu Natal province, near the hall where Nelson Mandela delivered his last speech before prison and the station where Mahatma Gandhi was tossed off a train to begin his life’s work, stands Edendale Hospital.

    10 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Three hours at Nohana

    “I just want to see how bad things are in the clinic,” Jennifer Furin said. “It’s a ‘doctor fear’ that someone is bleeding out while I’m standing here eating chocolate.”

    15 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Attacking the ties that bind poverty, illness

    Jim Yong Kim remembers the drive home from the airport with his father, a dentist in the small Iowa city where Kim was raised. His dad asked Kim, who was on a break from Brown University, what he’d decided to study.

    9 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Confronting tuberculosis

    In the shadow of a hill where lepers once lived, a tuberculosis hospital designed for those infected with deadly, drug-resistant strains of the disease is giving hope to a new generation of medical pariahs in the tiny African nation of Lesotho.

    12 minutes
  • Nation & World

    After years of talk, time for action

    It was a tough assessment for a health clinic, and Jim Yong Kim was standing in the middle of one when he made it. “A lot of these are known as places where you go to die.”

    8 minutes
  • Nation & World

    A pandemic’s front lines

    Jim Yong Kim walked out of the small cinder block room where an underweight boy of 5 lay, his heart rate down to 115 from the dangerous 150 beats per minute at which it had been racing moments earlier. Kim stripped rubber gloves from his hands. “That was incredibly gutsy,” he said flatly…

    15 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Shelter amid a health care storm

    South Africa’s Valley of 1,000 Hills is a broad and breathtaking natural contradiction, an enormous valley whose floor is crowded with hills large and small, as if nature wasn’t quite sure what it was making.

    6 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Fighting AIDS now and in the future

    In the heart of the South African AIDS epidemic, at a medical school named for the nation’s legendary anti-apartheid leader, a fight against a different sort of oppression is being waged.

    6 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Students see AIDS up close

    While her classmates in Cambridge were shivering through a New England February, Sandy Bolm was sweltering in the heat of a Botswana summer, staring her future in the face in the labs of the Botswana-Harvard Partnership.

    5 minutes
  • Nation & World

    AIDS: Finding answers

    Ampheletse Medupe’s headaches just wouldn’t go away. Living in her small, neat home outside the African nation of Botswana’s capital, the mother of four kept on as best she could until sores broke out on her face.

    9 minutes
  • Nation & World

    AIDS and hope

    The man and woman grin down from the large billboard overlooking the road to the hospital in Mochudi, a small town outside Botswana’s capital of Gaborone.

    5 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Paul Farmer: One patient at a time

    Paul Farmer remembers his patients and the lessons they’ve taught him, even the hard ones.

    9 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Haiti clinic makes real gains

    “13 October 2003.” Saintyl Louistess remembered the exact date she found out she had AIDS.

    10 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Louise Ivers: A higher purpose

    It was January 2008 and the baby – the youngest of four children – had been brought into the clinic Ivers heads at Boucan Carré, Haiti, after a period of vomiting and not eating well.

    9 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Hospital brings hope to Haiti

    A hospital opened in January where a year earlier cows grazed. There were banners and bands that bright day in the tiny community of Lacolline, Haiti.

    7 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Web of care

    Lake Peligre fills the valley floor, its dark blue waters a relief to the eye after hours winding through central Haiti’s hot, treeless hills on the dusty, potholed road that passes for National Route 3.

    15 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Peabody teams will scan other endangered monuments

    By January, the Peabody Museum’s Corpus of Maya Hieroglyphic Inscriptions Program hopes to be in Copán, Honduras, scanning the imposing but fragile hieroglyphic stairway, the longest inscription in the New World.

    4 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Corpus team overcomes scanning snags

    A multicolored tent made of tarps and rope and tree branches and duct tape rose above Yaxchilan’s unique pinkish stalactite stela. On the last day of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology’s expedition to the ancient Maya city of Yaxchilan, team members were doing something at which they had proven themselves adept: improvising.

    6 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Mexico: Expedition to Yaxchilan

    Harvard scholars travel to Central America in their mission to preserve ancient Maya hieroglyphic inscriptions and iconography.

    1 minute
  • Nation & World

    Mexico: Ian Graham, explorer

    As an explorer, archaeologist, draftsman and photographer, Graham has devoted his life to making the ancient comprehensible.

    1 minute