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From chess to a medical mystery: Great global reads from 2025 you may have missed

Clockwise from top left: Rohingya refugee children find a place to play amid the construction at the refugee camp outside of Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. The classroom at a chess club in Chennai, India, is set up and ready before students arrive. A new kindergartener in Maryland waves goodbye to his parents. The milestone gave his dad a flashback to his own start of school in Uganda. Sandals outside a brothel on the Uganda-Kenya highway. Among the many losses in Uganda after the U.S. aid cuts: free condoms and PrEP for sex workers.
Clockwise from top left: Danielle Villasanal; Viraj Nayar for NPR; Joanne Cavanaugh Simpson for NPR; Ben de la Cruz/NPR
Clockwise from top left: Rohingya refugee children find a place to play amid the construction at the refugee camp outside of Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. The classroom at a chess club in Chennai, India, is set up and ready before students arrive. A new kindergartener in Maryland waves goodbye to his parents. The milestone gave his dad a flashback to his own start of school in Uganda. Sandals outside a brothel on the Uganda-Kenya highway. Among the many losses in Uganda after the U.S. aid cuts: free condoms and PrEP for sex workers.

The Goats and Soda blog publishes hundreds of stories each year about global health news, about fighting poverty, about daily life in the Global South. Some of these posts attract a slew of readers. Then there are stories that people clearly connect with — time on page is excellent! But let's call them underappreciated in total viewership.

We asked our writers and editors to nominate stories that meant a lot to them and that they wish could find a bigger audience. In the waning days of 2025, it's not too late to catch up with these great reads.

My son loved his first day of kindergarten. It brings up my own bittersweet memories
When his son began kindergarten this week, educator James Kassaga Arinaitwe flashed back to his own initiation into school, growing up in Uganda under far humbler circumstances.

Guess who inherits it all? The origins of a surprising tradition
When parents die, sibling tensions can arise over inheritance. In many traditions, the oldest child used to get it all. In a part of Pakistan, there's a surprise twist: The youngest is the chosen one.

With makeshift jump ropes and hide and seek, kids play to cope with crisis
From Gaza to Ukraine to South Sudan, children play to deal with the stress — and find a moment of joy.

One country's survival guide in the wake of U.S. aid cuts
Uganda is one of the countries that's greatly affected by the reduction of U.S. foreign aid. Here's how the health care system is responding — with trepidation, innovation and resilience.

Scientists are trying to understand how Ebola hides inside the bodies of survivors
Congo is suffering from an Ebola outbreak, but even when the virus is contained there remains a risk. Scientists are trying to understand how it can hide out inside the bodies of survivors.

India (and its kids) are out to conquer the world of chess
Chess is seeing a global resurgence, sparked by The Queen's Gambit and the pandemic impact on leisure time. India is an emerging power player, with 85 grandmasters and intense chess schools for youth.

Copyright 2025 NPR

Marc Silver

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Federal funding is gone.

Congress has eliminated all funding for public media.

That means $2.1 million per year that Connecticut Public relied on to deliver you news, information, and entertainment programs you enjoyed is gone.

The future of public media is in your hands.

All donations are appreciated, but we ask in this moment you consider starting a monthly gift as a Sustainer to help replace what’s been lost.

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