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Technology helps some students with disabilities excel. Now it’s leaving schools : NPR

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Some students with disabilities rely on assistive technology to learn, and they worry it could be swept up in the movement to get screens out of schools.

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CONCORD, Calif. — Ninth grader Soraya Martin is a bubbly, social teenager who recently found a new passion.
“I’m a very creative writer, I love to write stories for fun,” she says.
Stories come naturally to Soraya, but reading and writing don’t. That’s because she has dyslexia. “Academically, school has always been a really big challenge for me.”
Then last school year, she started using technology that allows her to do a number of things: dictate her writing rather than type, listen to books rather than read them on a page and take photos of notes on the board.
“I started getting really good grades,” she says. “It made me feel like … I’m not stupid, I have so much to say and it just made me like ‘I can do this, I can do school and I can be good at it.”
This, her mom, Heather Martin, says, is the kind of promise screens hold for students like her daughter — students she worries are being forgotten in the nationwide backlash against screens in schools. Screens are increasingly being blamed for getting in the way of student learning: More than 30 states have banned cellphones in school. Some states have gone further with proposals or policies to entirely remove screens like ltops and tablets from classrooms. In late May, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services issued a surgeon general’s advisory warning of the “harms of screen use,” citing its effects on children’s health and educational outcomes.
Much of the pivot away from screens in schools has come from parents who are concerned screen use is getting in the way of their children’s learning — an argument Heather Martin hears in her own community in Concord, 30 miles northeast of San Francisco. She shares some of those concerns, but says, “Never once in the conversation has there been a discussion, except for me bringing it up with the other parents, about kids with disabilities.”
Advocates worry those students are also being left out of the national conversation.
Screen-time policy proposals are often “a blunt instrument”
Students with disabilities make up a quickly growing share of students in this country — there are more than 8 million of them. Many rely on assistive technology to get through the school day, including for note-taking, reading and writing. For example, blind and low-vision students may use screen reading or magnifying software to read. Others, like Soraya, use speech-to-text and audiobooks.
States including Alabama, Tennessee and Utah already have laws limiting screens that take effect as early as July.
“My concern is that that’s a really fast period of time for this to hpen,” says Lindsay Jones, CEO of the Center for plied Special Technology (CAST), an education research nonprofit that focuses on making learning environments accessible.
Jones points out that some of these laws do make exceptions to restrictions on screens for students with disabilities — often a line in the text mentions assistive technology. But she says that should be the bare minimum and worries many policy proposals are “a very blunt instrument.”
“They’ve moved so fast that we’ve really left our educators and our communities of people with disabilities this summer to figure it out,” she says. Perhs with more time and input from disabled people, policies would better protect their rights, Jones adds.
Beyond concerns about state- and school-level bans on cellphones and screens, disability advocates point out that the shrunken U.S. Department of Education is far less equipped to enforce civil rights. Those rights include access to assistive technology for students with disabilities. The Trump administration also recently delayed a long-expected digital accessibility rule for public institutions, including schools.
“For some kids, the screen is their accessibility tool”
At Soraya’s high school in northern California, this past school year was the first that students’ phones were locked up in pouches for the entirety of the school day — as they are in many schools across the country. Heather Martin worries the phone ban could open the door to a broader ban on screens at her daughter’s school.
“A completely screen-free environment feels like it’s throwing the baby out with the bathwater,” she says. “It’s not looking at ‘screen free’ versus ‘accessibility free.’ And for some kids, the screen is their accessibility tool.”
As she talks about the change at her school, Soraya tenses up. “I hate them,” she says of the locked pouches. She says her phone isn’t just a distraction, it’s a safety net to call her parents if she has a panic attack, for example. And she feels singled out when she has to ask to get her phone out of its locked pouch for note-taking.
Soraya’s individualized education program (IEP), a legal document that outlines the accommodations and modifications she is supposed to receive at school, says she can use her phone for note-taking, along with other assistive technology. But because the cellphone ban is new, her teachers are still adjusting. Because she has several different classes and teachers throughout the day, she says it’s easy for some teachers to be unfamiliar with her accommodations.
This is the kind of “unintended consequence” Jones worries about as she considers a near future in which more schools move away from technology that she says has been game-changing for people with disabilities. When technology is used intentionally, she says, it can “actually allow us to create much more flexible environments, and those are really needed for people with disabilities.”
Jones’ organization, CAST, invented an educational framework called Universal Design for Learning that encourages educators to design their classrooms to account for the different ways students learn. For instance, a teacher might give a math lesson using blocks, a diagram and a video to help impress the same lesson upon diverse learners. Or perhs class reading is provided as an e-book so students with low-vision can magnify the text, while those with dyslexia can listen.
As screen limits ripple through the nation’s schools, Jones hopes people with disabilities aren’t forgotten. “We need educators, we need people with disabilities, we need assistive technology providers,” to weigh in on how such policies are implemented in the classroom, says Jones. “That is going to be the best way forward for everyone to achieve their goals without trampling on people’s rights.”
For Soraya, using these kinds of tools has led her to embrace her learning differences. In fact, she just finished researching and writing a series of essays exploring how people with dyslexia learn. She has straight As for the first time in her life, but more importantly, she says she can express herself in a deeper, more meaningful way.
“I have so much more to say … It made me feel more confident in myself.”

Source: NPR

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Ben Affleck’s visit to Luna’s Mexican Grill in Swarthmore sends business soaring

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Cristina Luna Ramirez’s restaurant runs on family and the flavors of northern Mexico. Her current success comes after years of hard work, practice, and adtability.

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When Ben Affleck visited a Swarthmore restaurant in March, he was just looking for lunch. To Cristina Luna Ramirez, owner of Luna’s Mexican Grill on Park Avenue, it was so much more than that.
A picture of the actor sitting at a table eating a burrito quickly went viral, and that was all it took for Luna’s to more than make up for lost sales frozen by a harsh winter.
The restaurant had seen a little bump from a review by TikToker @Delco_jawnn the week before, but it was already starting to die down. Affleck’s March 27 visit made business blow up overnight. Ramirez called it a godsend.
I don’t think celebrities understand how much value they bring to a mom-and-pop shop like this, said Ramirez, 52.
» READ MORE: Ben Affleck stopped by this Swarthmore restaurant for lunch
The story Ramirez heard later from a staffer at Swarthmore College was that Affleck and his teenager, Fin, a prospective student, arrived on campus early that morning for a visit. The tour didn’t start until the afternoon, and the pair found themselves with time to kill and stomachs to fill. The staffer directed them to Luna’s.
Ramirez missed Affleck in her restaurant (by a minute and 37 seconds, according to her security cameras, she says) but caught up with the actor at Dunkin’ a few doors down and was able to chat with him and sn a selfie.
The next day, Luna’s was open two hours later than usual because they were so busy. Ramirez said customers were coming by hoping to get a glimpse of Affleck, thinking he might be shooting a movie in town.
It was next level, Ramirez said. I was making three to four times what I was making the week before.
Suddenly, she needed 120 to 175 pounds of steak per week instead of the usual 60 to 80, and 40 pounds of fish instead of 20. One case of tequila would last two to three weeks before Affleck’s visit. Now she needed two cases for a single week.
‘What did you just do?’
Luna’s success comes from more than a cameo by a famous actor. It took hard work, practice, and adtability.
Ramirez lived in Texas for most of her life. She spent 10 years as a teacher, another 10 years as a librarian, and she was on her way to becoming a principal when she decided she was done.
Ramirez decided to move to the Philly area to be closer to her daughter, Amanda Paez, and grandchildren. She immediately fell in love with this little corner of Southeastern Pennsylvania and took a year off from working to figure out her next move.
The only time I’m not bored is when I’m cooking, Ramirez said. Although she was hesitant to take the le to open a restaurant, she was already getting rave reviews. Ramirez had been cooking for Paez and her friends, who praised her talents.
One day I just drove up with a food truck hitched to my pickup truck, she said. My daughter was like, ‘What did you just do?’
She started selling tacos in ril 2024 in front of the Sharon Hill Grocery Outlet, which her daughter owned at the time. By summer, she was getting booked for festivals.
People were calling me at all hours of the day, Ramirez said. After her mother had a stroke, she flew home for two weeks, and the calls didn’t stop. Everyone wanted to know where the taco lady was. She retired the food truck and knew it was time to find a brick-and-mortar location.
It just so hpened Village Vine owner John Hearn was selling his Swarthmore restaurant to fund IVF treatment for his wife, as well as find a job a little less demanding for a soon-to-be father. Ramirez tried to meet his asking price, but it was too steep.
When she called me the first time when the deal fell through, you could tell that she was just absolutely devastated that it wasn’t going to hpen, Hearn said. It just stuck with me.
After a few months, Hearn had gotten another offer, but he reached out to Ramirez. He said he believed her restaurant was the best fit for the space.
You have to be there 24-7 and put your passion and soul into it, Hearn said. I really believed that she could do well there and I knew she was going to put the time and effort into it that it needed.
Hearn cut the sale price by $40,000, Ramirez said. He even helped her meet her new neighbors. In a video posted to social media announcing Village Vine’s closure, Hearn also invited Ramirez to introduce herself and her restaurant.
Swarthmore is such a local community that that stuff matters, Hearn said.
Luna’s officially opened on March 17, 2025. Ramirez calls it the best decision of her life.
Luna’s is built on family
Ramirez has never been to culinary school — she just loves cooking. She says her mother, Consuelo Gilliland, taught her how to cook with the flavors of northern Mexico, but she still gives some credit to her father, Catarino José Luna.
I have my father’s patience in the kitchen and my mother’s ingenuity, she said. The way I put my cuisine together is inspired by my parents.
Her mother was the oldest of 10 children and learned to cook for her siblings at a young age. When Ramirez’s aunts come in, they taste her mother’s influence in the food.
Ramirez is still working to perfect longtime family favorites. In recent weeks she finally recreated her mother’s pasta, made with tomato sauce, garlic, onion, and a ton of cheese, after trying different combinations over the years.
While she credits her mother with her recipes, her father had plenty of cooking experience in the U.S. Army. It wasn’t until after he died that Ramirez found out he was a chef while enlisted.
On Father’s Day, she’ll serve her own spin on a meal known as SOS (the unabbreviated name can’t be repeated in polite company) in honor of Luna’s military service.
Ramirez and her sisters all kept Luna in their names when they got married, and the restaurant is named in their honor. She also has help from the next generation: Her son, Matthew, works at Luna’s, too.
Giving thanks
Just as she’s honored her family in the name of her restaurant and the food she serves, Ramirez has paid tribute to her famous, unintentional benefactor. A small picture of Affleck hangs on the wall above the table where he sat.
Ramirez is grateful to the actor, as well as for her staff for all the hard work they’ve done since business took off.
I would love to say thank you to him, Ramirez said. Affleck could not be reached for comment.
After they met at Dunkin’, Ramirez had one parting request for Affleck.
I didn’t want to say, ‘Hey, bring me Matt Damon and George Clooney and Brad Pitt,’ you know, because they’re all best friends, Ramirez said. But I was like, ‘Give me some more business.’
That business was already on its way.

Source: The Philadelphia Inquirer

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Lebanese Americans Open Their Wallets and Hearts as War Rages Back Home

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CANTON, Mich. () — Every week, Mirvet Makki sets aside earnings from her catering business to help people in Lebanon displaced by the war between Israel and Hezbollah militants.

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CANTON, Mich. () — Every week, Mirvet Makki sets aside earnings from her catering business to help people in Lebanon displaced by the war between Israel and Hezbollah militants.
Makki, 47, who cooks Lebanese dishes like couscous stews and traditional kibbeh balls in the Detroit suburb of Dearborn Heights, immigrated to Michigan in 1990. But her heart never left her childhood village of Bint Jbeil, now one of the hardest-hit areas in southern Lebanon.
Nearly every Lebanese American has felt the impact of the latest round of fighting, which has displaced more than 1 million people — roughly one in every six Lebanese — and killed more than 3,500 people. It’s Israel’s deepest invasion into Lebanon in more than a quarter-century.
I was thinking, ‘What can I do for other people?’ Makki said. So I used my business.
Even with the rising cost of living in the U.S., she said, the money I can spare personally, I’ve been sending it to family.
In areas like metro Detroit, where Arabic signs adorn restaurants, coffee houses and bakeries on bustling suburban avenues, a sense of grief has blanketed the war-weary community as they watch the crisis unfold thousands of miles away.
Like Makki, many grple with guilt and hopelessness. It’s not easy to help loved ones who are unwilling or unable to leave their country and face a worsening economic crisis.
Honestly it’s hard. Like, what do you say? Makki said. They’re going to ask me what I’m doing. Let’s say I’m at work. They lost their jobs. Let’s say I tell them I’m home. They lost their homes.
The global diaspora has shed Lebanon
Lebanese immigration to the U.S. dates to the late 1800s. Roughly 625,000 Lebanese Americans live here now, according to census data, though some estimates put the number closer to 1.4 million.
Opinions about the Lebanese government, Hezbollah and Israel vary among the diaspora as they do in Lebanon, where views are heavily influenced by religious affiliation. The population there is about equally split between Sunni Muslim, Shiite Muslim and Christian denominations, along with a smaller Druze community.
Despite their differences, the global diaspora remains deeply connected to their home country, in part through billions of dollars sent back each year.
There is really no Lebanese homeland without the Lebanese diaspora, Edward Curtis, director of Arabic Studies at Indiana University, said.
A population who relies on each other
Lebanese Americans often rally around common causes, like during the 2024 U.S. presidential election for the uncommitted movement protesting U.S. support for Israel’s war in Gaza, or to condemn the Michigan synagogue attack carried out by a Lebanese man in March.
When they see suffering in Lebanon, people’s immediate reaction … is for the community to come together, raise funds, raise money, and try to help everybody as much as they can, Akram Khater, director of Lebanese Diaspora Studies at North Carolina State University, said.
Most rely on one another, rather than looking to Washington for help.
Curtis said many Lebanese Americans have grown disillusioned with U.S. politics, instead seeking to celebrate Lebanese life when other peoples are threatening its death.
Maya Attoui, whose parents still live in Beirut, is organizing a metro Detroit fundraiser to support Lebanon and raise awareness about the conflict. She said she doesn’t have enough money to spare to support her numerous relatives, but hopes an event with activities and speakers will generate far more funds.
We don’t feel like talking, we don’t feel like cooking in our houses, Attoui said. We’re just 24/7 on the phone or on the news. Our heart is really melting and breaking because of whatever we see.
A financial lifeline
Although people send remittances to countries all over the world, Lebanon is particularly dependent on its vast diaspora. The country’s economy has been shredded in recent years, to the point where the U.S. dollar is gradually becoming the de facto currency.
Makki visited Lebanon in February and saw how much prices had risen. Where $200 used to cover a car rental and a hotel room, this time it barely paid for a dinner out.
Some people crowdsource funds online. There are established relief organizations, but most prefer to send money directly to loved ones.
Makki doesn’t want to send more than $10,000 in total, to avoid pearing suspicious. After that, she laughed, Maybe take it there myself?
Nadia Bryant, 37, of Troy, Michigan, has been sending money to her half sisters in Lebanon, who are in temporary housing after their village of Ayta ash-Shab was invaded by Israeli forces.
Rather than spending the money on themselves, Bryant said, her sisters used it to help orphaned children.
They’re such righteous people, Bryant said. They are not even trying to take the money and get themselves a better house or anything. They’re like, ‘Oh, we have shelter, but this person needs a mattress.’
Over Whatsp, her sister sent her a photo of a steaming teot over a fire amid the strewn debris of what had been their home. The ction read: Best cup of tea since 9 october 2023.
I don’t even ask, ‘How are you?’ That feels so stupid to me, Bryant said. I ask, you know, ‘What does today look like,’ or ‘Where are you today?’
Attoui, the fundraiser organizer, has tried to convince her family to move to the U.S. multiple times since she came in 2006. They don’t want to leave. Regardless, the U.S. stopped processing immigrant visas to Lebanese nationals in late January.
I have all my aunts and my cousins over there, she said. So like, how many people can you bring here?

Source: U.S. News & World Report

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Netanyahu Faces Plunging Support in North Israel as Voters Demand Tougher Lebanon Stance

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By Emily Rose
KIRYAT SHMONA, Israel, June 4 () – Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces plunging support in the electorally vital ⁠north where ⁠Hezbollah rocket fire has been heaviest, a new poll has shown, ⁠putting pressure on him to take a more hawkish stance as elections loom.
Wednesday night’s ceasefire agreement between Israel and Lebanon – whether it holds or not – may ​not be what northern voters have in mind.
The May poll by Agam Labs at Israel’s Hebrew University, shared exclusively with , showed residents in the north abandoning Netanyahu’s Likud more quickly than voters elsewhere and faulting him more harshly over the ‌war in Lebanon.
With Iran demanding an end to Israel’s military campaign ‌as part of any peace deal it agrees with the United States, the poll shows how Netanyahu is increasingly caught between domestic electoral considerations and the diplomatic efforts of his allies in Washington.
NORTHERN VOTERS WANT END TO HEZBOLLAH THREAT
The general ⁠election due by October could ⁠tip Netanyahu’s governing coalition from power, risking his long record as Israel’s arch political survivor.
While his government is widely seen as ​the most right-wing in Israeli history, many northern voters want a tougher military stance, unfettered by U.S. pressure to end the conflicts in the Middle East.
For residents of the northern city of Kiryat Shmona, where some half of voters backed Likud in the last election, ending the threat from Hezbollah and its near-daily rocket and drone attacks is the biggest issue.
When sirens start to wail, they have only seconds to seek shelter and voters there told they want the war against Hezbollah pursued until the group ​is dismantled.
“All night there are loud explosions,” said Kiryat Shmona resident Moshe Yifrah, 45, adding that he does not believe a ceasefire with Hezbollah would protect his family. “Who would we make it with? Murderers ⁠who ⁠want to kill us?” he said.
Hezbollah began ⁠firing into Israel after the Hamas attack of October ​7, 2023, and Israel waged an intense armed campaign in Lebanon, killing most of the group’s leaders and forcing it to accept a ceasefire.
However, Hezbollah fired again after Israel and the ​United States launched a war on Iran on February 28, prompting ⁠Israel to renew its assault and seize swathes of south Lebanon.
More than 50 civilians have been killed by Hezbollah fire in north Israel since October 2023, according to Tel Aviv University’s Institute for National Security Studies.
In Lebanon, more than 7,500 people have been killed by Israeli military action since October 2023, statements by Lebanese officials that do not distinguish between civilians and combatants show.
Many northern voters, like Yifrah, want Israel to intensify its campaign, which continued despite an ril truce, but believe Netanyahu is buckling to pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump to agree a ceasefire.
“I’m not ashamed to say that I voted for this government, but it turns out that the one managing it is President Trump,” said Yifrah.
Trump, who wants ⁠a deal with Iran, said on Monday that Israel and Hezbollah had agreed to de-escalate hours after Netanyahu ordered new strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs.
Netanyahu’s electoral ⁠rivals almost immediately accused him of compromising on national security – adding to his political difficulties months before the election is due.
“Everywhere Hezbollah is deployed it must be struck and the hands of the IDF should not be tied,” said former military chief of staff Gadi Eizenkot, a prime ministerial hopeful, in a speech on Monday.
Then on Wednesday evening, a new truce agreement was struck requiring Hezbollah to leave south Lebanon.
Netanyahu said soon afterwards that despite the ceasefire military operations would continue for now.
ELECTION RIVALS TARGET NORTH
The Agam Labs poll showed only 23% of voters in the north saying they would back Likud in the next election, down from the 35% it gained in the last election in 2022. Support for the wider right-wing bloc that makes up Netanyahu’s coalition has fallen yet further in the north, the poll showed.
The drop in support for Likud is around three times greater in the north, home to around a fifth of the electorate, than elsewhere in Israel and around 70% of the voters surveyed there said they disproved of the handling of the war in Lebanon – more than elsewhere in Israel.
“We see a dramatic shift,” said Nimrod Nir of Agam Labs.
“It’s almost a mirror image of what ⁠we saw regarding the past elections, with two thirds intending to vote for the anti-Netanyahu bloc,” he added.
The chairperson of Kiryat Shmona’s Likud branch did not respond to a request for comment on the party’s reduced support in polls or agree to an interview.
Nestled amid lush green mountains, Kiryat Shmona had been a prosperous centre of tourism and farming but residents now describe it as a ghost town with many residents having left.
Shops were shuttered and a playground was empty during a visit this week.
Netanyahu’s main rivals are trying a hawkish message in the north, with Eizenkot visiting more ​than 15 times in recent weeks. Netanyahu has stayed away.
“He should come visit,” said Yisrael Cohen, 40, who previously backed Likud but will not in the next election. “The government ​needs to see us.”

Source: U.S. News & World Report

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Victor Ortiz Wants Bare Knuckle Fights With Canelo Alvarez and Terence Crawford

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Former boxing champ Victor Ortiz is making his Bare Knuckle Boxing debut next month … and he tells TMZ Sports it would be a dream come true to handle business and then face off with massive names like Terence Crawford and Canelo Alvarez next!!

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Former boxing champ Victor Ortiz is making his Bare Knuckle Boxing debut next month … and he tells TMZ Sports it would be a dream come true to handle business and then face off with massive names like Terence Crawford and Canelo Alvarez next!!
We ran into the 39-year-old fighter at the Humble Warrior Gym in Beverly Hills on Wednesday … and he explained why he decided to join forces with BKB ahead of his July 18 bout with Dominic Salcido.
Ortiz said after prayer, a three-week fast, and looking over the offer, God told him it was the move … and here he is, gearing up for a big night at the Novo in DTLA.
Don’t call it a comeback, though — Ortiz explained he never left combat sports, but feels like boxing has changed dramatically recently … and all people care about is making millions while protecting undefeated records.
When we asked Ortiz — who fought superstars like Floyd Mayweather, Marcos Maidana and Andre Berto in the ring — if there was anyone from that world he’d like to bring over to BKB … he said, respectfully, Canelo and Bud!!
Ortiz revealed why he’d love to get bloody with those two … while also opening up on a great sparring session with Oscar De La Hoya recently — but no chance at a real fight there, ’cause he said that would be like Jake Paul and Mike Tyson all over again.

Source: TMZ

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Dalai Lama, 90, to Seek Knee Treatment in New Delhi

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NEW DELHI, June 4 () – The Dalai ⁠Lama ⁠will receive medical treatment ⁠on his left knee in New Delhi this ​month, his office said on Thursday, as the 90-year-old deals with a ‌series of health issues.
The ‌spiritual head of Tibetan Buddhists is due to travel to ⁠the Indian ⁠cital on Friday from his home-in-exile in the Himalayan ​town of Dharamshala. His followers, concerned about his health in recent years, typically hold elaborate prayers ahead of any planned medical procedures.
“He will undergo ​medical treatment on his left knee, the Dalai Lama’s office ⁠said on ⁠X, adding that he ⁠was ​expected to travel to India’s Ladakh region by the end of June ​for an extended ⁠stay.
The Nobel Peace Prize winner had surgery on the same knee in New York in 2024, though he told months later it was “nothing serious”, despite walking gingerly with the help of ⁠aides. He now uses a golf cart for longer distances within ⁠his compound.
The 14th Dalai Lama said last year he hoped to live beyond 130 years, extending his earlier prediction, and has reassured followers that he will be reincarnated after his death.
The longest-serving head of Tibetan Buddhism has lived in Dharamshala since fleeing Tibet in 1959 following a failed uprising against Chinese rule.
China, which seeks to consolidate its control over ⁠Tibet, regards the Dalai Lama as a separatist and says it must prove his successor, citing a centuries-old ritual. The Dalai Lama has urged his followers to reject anyone ​chosen by Beijing.
(Reporting by Krishna N. Das in New ​Delhi; Editing by Kate Mayberry)

Source: U.S. News & World Report

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