As adoption demands grow, Indian families look beyond castes and religion
NEW DELHI — On a dusty lane too narrow for a car to fit through, the Delhi Girls’ Home sits shrouded by the minarets and residential houses that litter Delhi’s outer suburb of Burari. It’s a cavernous three-story building, housing 15 young Indian girls.
At the end of poorly lighted hallways, the girls’ rooms are packed with metal bunk beds; the walls are covered with Winnie the Pooh, Cinderella and Christian messages.

Ishant, 2, peers through a gate at the PALNA adoption center in New Delhi. The center is a part of the Delhi Council for Child Welfare, a nongovernmental organization established in 1952 to care for children displaced during the riots that followed the partition of India.
(Benjamin Gottlieb for The Washington Post)
The girls living at the Delhi Girls’ Home represent the complicated relationship Indians have with adoption. Their families, who are from a mix of Christian, Hindu and Sikh backgrounds, were unable to care for them and sent their girls to the Christian faith-based home for a chance at a better life.
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08:41 AM ET, 05/16/2012 |
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After days of silence, a phone call from Chen Guangcheng
BEIJING -- The call came in at 3:19 p.m., from a cell phone in Beijing.
“This is Gary, Gary Locke,” the ambassador said.
I wasn’t expecting the call, and I fumbled around to see if I had a notebook and pen anywhere near at hand.
For days, reporters trying to get any information out of the U.S. Embassy on the status of dissident Chen Guangcheng had been met only with a wall of silence. Maybe, I thought, the Chinese-born U.S. ambassador was finally willing to share some tidbits on the whereabouts of the man who was currently China’s most famous activist, the blind lawyer jailed and then confined to his house for years because of his outspoken advocacy on behalf of women forced to have abortions in support of China’s one-child policies.
What I was not prepared for was when Locke said, “I’m here with Chen Guangcheng. Do you speak Chinese? Hold on.”
And then passed the phone over.
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09:05 AM ET, 05/02/2012 |
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Sachin Tendulkar nominated to Indian parliament
NEW DELHI — For hundreds of millions of cricket-crazy Indians, 39-year-old Sachin Tendulkar is a god. And on Thursday, this god was nominated as a member of parliament.
“God Has a New House”, declared India’s leading daily, The Times of India on Friday about the entry of the reigning superstar of world cricket into the Rajya Sabha, or the House of Elders, one of two Houses in the Indian parliament.
As fans celebrated the elevation of the soft spoken, curly haired “master blaster”, TV shows, twitterati and analysts asked one sobering question: Will this god clean up India’s politics? Or will the corrupt cesspool of Indian politics muddy the unblemished hero?
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09:31 AM ET, 04/27/2012 |
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What will the Roots play when President Obama appears on “Fallon?”
Which song will they pick?
Last time Jimmy Fallon had a presidential candidate on his late night TV show, his house band, the Roots, sparked outrage by performing Fishbone’s “Lyin’ A-- B----” for Republican White House hopeful Michele Bachmann. Tonight, “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon” airs from the University of North Carolina with another candidate scheduled to drop in: President Obama.
Back in 2009, we profiled Roots leader Questlove to find out how he and the band decide on the walk-on tunes they perform for each guest. But which song they’ll pick tonight is anyone’s guess. Will Roots frontman Black Thought tip his fedora to Obama’s crooning abilities with “Let’s Stay Together?” Will the band pick a tune from the president’s campaign mix on Spotify? The folks over at Vulture have some suggestions, too. But after the outrage over that Fishbone tune, our money’s on the safest of safe bets: “Hail to the Chief.”
“Late Night With Jimmy Fallon” airs Tuesday night — technically Wednesday morning — at 12:35 a.m. on NBC.
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04:23 PM ET, 04/24/2012 |
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Bahrain deports British journalist attempting to cover F1 race
A team of British journalists made a hasty exit from Bahrain Sunday, after police discovered they were in the country on a tourist visa, chased them down and deported them, the team’s TV station reported.
Jonathan Miller, of Channel Four News, and his crew were denied journalism visas by Bahrain, Channel Four News reported, but the group continued to film protests without official accreditation. The 14-month-old uprising in Bahrain had heated up before the Formula One Grand Prix race.
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12:50 PM ET, 04/23/2012 |
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