Throwback to that time a few years ago when I spent Christmas in Puerto Rico
You'll never go hungry in Madrid
After Spain left its colony of #WesternSahara in 1975, Morocco and Mauritania invaded, and nearly half of the native #Sahrawi population (an estimated 90,000 to 175,000 people) fled across the border into Algeria, where they remain to this day. Life in the refugee camps is really difficult, but unlike the Sahrawi people who continue to live under Moroccan occupation, at least the people here can freely display their flag, speak their language, and practice their culture and traditions.
Throwback to the New Year my brother and I spent in Ecuador, where guys dressed in drag traditionally roam the streets, supposedly as widows mourning their deceased “husband,” the Año Viejo (old year).
While people here in the US were busy heading to the polls, Peruvians were commemorating El Dia de los Defuntos, the day at the beginning of each November when they remember their deceased relatives. On the latest episode of Far From Home, I visit one of the world’s largest cemeteries on the outskirts of Lima, Peru as thousands of people flock to their loved ones’ graves to eat, drink, and listen to music! Listen wherever you get your podcasts or at farfromhomepodcast.org
As much as I love traveling, living through COVID-19 has given me an appreciation for home as a shelter from the scary and potentially dangerous world, a place of safety, familiarity, and comfort. But what if you no longer have a home to go to? That’s what happened to Sophie Johnson and 800,000 other displaced New Orleanians in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. We just passed the 15th anniversary of the storm, so on the latest episode of Far From Home, I revisit some reporting I did and listen back to people’s stories. Check it out wherever you get your podcasts or at farfromhomepodcast.org
In light of the recent political developments that briefly brought the US and Iran to the brink of war, I’m re-releasing a story from the first season of Far From Home about the time my brother Drew and I drove with our friends across Iran and met the friendliest people in the world! Listen wherever you get your podcasts or at http://www.farfromhomepodcast.org
In case you missed it, check out the latest episode of Far From Home, where I re-visit a reporting trip I took to Haiti, 8 months after the deadly 2010 earthquake that devastated Port-au-Prince. Here’s what the streets looked like back then, as people went about their daily lives amid the rubble. Listen wherever you get your podcasts or at https://farfromhomepodcast.org/news/0209