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  • Spotlight on Asia
  • Awake!—2015
  • Subheadings
  • Similar Material
  • Education Protects Children
  • Post-Typhoon Mortality
  • Suicide Among the Elderly in South Korea
  • Living Through Dramatic Changes in Korea
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  • Caring for the Aged—A Growing Problem
    Awake!—1991
  • Korea’s Family Reunions—A New Beginning?
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  • How to Protect Your Children
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Awake!—2015
g 5/15 p. 3
A little girl and her mother in Asia

WATCHING THE WORLD

Spotlight on Asia

Asia is the world’s most populous continent. China and India alone are home to over one third of earth’s inhabitants. What challenges do Asian nations face in educating and protecting their citizens?

Education Protects Children

Children are at greater risk of abuse when their parents fail to teach them about sex at an early age, according to Chinese legal experts. Prosecutors in China handled some 8,000 accusations of child sexual abuse in a recent four-year period. Children “are vulnerable and easily become targets,” says a law professor at Beijing Normal University. “Education is the key to preventing sexual assaults.”

WHAT THE BIBLE SAYS: Wise parents teach their children how to protect themselves “from the man speaking perverse things.”​—Proverbs 2:1, 10-12.

Post-Typhoon Mortality

According to one study, the average number of infant girls in the Philippines who die in the year after a typhoon outnumbers by about 15 to 1 the number of people reported as killed by the storm itself. Possible factors include unemployment after a storm, the cost of rebuilding, and the way resources are allocated to infant females, including nutrition and health care.

WHAT THE BIBLE SAYS: ‘Share your bread with the hungry, bring the poor and homeless into your house, clothe someone naked when you see him.’​—Isaiah 58:7.

Suicide Among the Elderly in South Korea

During 2011, more than a quarter of all suicides in South Korea were committed by people 65 years of age and older. Some researchers blame changing attitudes toward care of the elderly and economic factors​—almost 50 percent of South Korean seniors live in relative poverty. Less than half of the people in South Korea now think that children should support their aging parents.

WHAT THE BIBLE SAYS: “Honor your father and your mother.”​—Ephesians 6:2.

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