December 16, 2014 edition
The sound of children's laughter wafted out of the house on Jalan Soekarno Hatta in East Alok subdistrict, Sikka regency. Twenty children were sitting around a large table. Katerina Dua Yovin, 16, straightened up and raised her hand. The other children fell silent.
Yovin, as she is known, began with a story about her neighborhood in Alok, where there were still many parents who beat their children for not doing their homework. "Have you experienced the same thing?" she asked. Alvira Novitasari raised her hand. "I did," she said. "The child is naughty, so he must be beaten."
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More Outreach articles in other editions
January 1, 1970 edition
Fighting corruption is nothing new in Indonesia. But the battle fought by people in rural areas may be something that is little known by the general public. According to Zainal Arifin Mochtar, Director of the Center for Anti-Corruption Studies at Gadjah Mada University, efforts by villagers to fight corruption have to be considered significant, because so far, awareness about fighting it is mostly present amongst the middle classes in urban centers.
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January 1, 1970 edition
Sulaeman does pretty well for himself. The 49-year-old employs four workers on his one-hectare oil palm estate in Sengeti village, about an hour-and-a-half's drive from his home in Tahtul Yaman village. Income from the harvests paid for his three children's college tuition, and for his motorbike.
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November 18, 2014 edition
November 11, 2014 edition
The Perfect Sweetsop
A civil servant from Buleleng, Bali, self-taught himself how to crossbreed superior seeds. His influence has spread through Java and Bali.
No ordinary sweetsops hung on the trees at the Superior Fruit nursery in Singaraja, Bali. The skin of the fruit was a striking dark red, not green like the usual sweetsops (annona squamosa) found in Indonesia, and neither was it covered in bumps. Instead the surface was smooth with little dots. When it was broken open, the texture of the flesh was more like a common sweetsop, clear white in color. The taste was sweet and creamy like ice cream.
A civil servant from Buleleng, Bali, self-taught himself how to crossbreed superior seeds. His influence has spread through Java and Bali.