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Amazing photos show how playgrounds differ around the world
Amazing photos show how playgrounds differ around the world
Harrison JacobsApr 24, 2015, 02:40 IST
When photographer James Mollison looked back on his childhood, he was struck by how many of his memories revolved around the school playground. "It had been a space of excitement, games, bullying, laughing, tears, teasing, fun, and fear," Mollison writes in the afterword of his latest book, "Playground."
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Mollison traveled all over the world to capture the wildly different school playgrounds. The diversity of children's experiences fascinated Mollison, and it shows in the photographs, which record playground life with an anthropologist's detail.
Because of the high cost of land in Tokyo, this playground was constructed on the roof of this school. The children are allowed to play only with soft balls, in case one lands on pedestrians on the streets below. The playground has a retractable roof that plays music as it closes. Every two days, the children clean the school; the principal says it's important they learn to clean up after themselves.
The Kroo Bay Primary School in Sierra Leone was once used as an army base. There's no sanitation or garbage collection, and the school must close from July to September because of floods from the Crocodile River. Teachers rely on fees paid by parents.
Inglewood High is a public school in Los Angeles. Mollison took this photo before a pep rally.
This high school in Tel Aviv is affiliated with the Israeli air force. Almost all students will be drafted into the force as computer engineers, electronics specialists, and mechanics. The tables are for chess and ping-pong.
The ancient Dechen Phodrang Monastery overlooks Thimphu, the capital of Bhutan. Living conditions at the school are basic: Children sleep on mats on the floor, and infections, lice, and scabies are common. Most boys are sent to the monastery because their families cannot afford to feed them.
The school is in the Aida refugee camp near Bethlehem. Battles during the First Intifada were close by, and walls were thickened to protect students. Outside the entrance is the Israeli security wall. When soldiers aren't looking students throw stones at them.
The Valley View school in Nairobi, Kenya, is in the Mathare slum. The classrooms are concrete blocks with corrugated metal roofs. When it rains classes stop. The classrooms are so crowded that students have to climb over desks to get out.