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In 2021, We Were There: The YearтАЩs 14 Most Popular Dispatches

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As the world reopened cautiously in 2021, our correspondents seized the chance to venture out in search of stories that would astonish, delight, provoke and enlighten. We went from the heights of a Himalayan ski slope to the ocean depths off the Philippines where amiable giants dive, and from a rugged island where a whistling language is still used to an Italian atelier where robots carve the sculptures.

If the pandemic often kept our reporters confined to urban settings in 2020, this year afforded them the chance to explore deep into the countryside. We observed a (bogus) diamond rush in rural South Africa and accompanied Indigenous hunters in Taiwan. We trekked to CanadaтАЩs beaver dams, swam in a contested stream in northern Israel and returned home to a Tuscan village sliding back in time.

Many dispatches arrived from places difficult to access even in the best of times, from ancient ruins in Syria now housing the desperate and displaced to an island off New Guinea full of war relics and human remains. We also made it to Babylon, Suriname, Kaliningrad, Saudi Arabia, Albania and тАЬTrump LakeтАЭ in Kosovo.

Cities demanded attention, too: We put CairoтАЩs glorious and glitchy elevators (and its Tahrir Square) in the spotlight, along with the giant murals transforming S├гo Paulo into an open-air art gallery. Our stories stretched from an empty Louvre to RioтАЩs dive bars to Hong KongтАЩs newly crowded nature spots. Kolkata merited two dispatches: on its fairy tale trams and its cafes, where itтАЩs all about the conversation.

As India in April suffered the worldтАЩs worst coronavirus crisis, our correspondent described the fear of living amid a disease spreading at such scale and speed: тАЬCrematories are so full of bodies, itтАЩs as if a war just happened. Fires burn around the clock. Many places are holding mass cremations, dozens at a time, and at night, in certain areas of New Delhi, the sky glows.тАЭ

тАФ By Jeffrey Gettleman, photographs by Atul Loke

For many Afghans, unassuming white high-top sneakers with green-and-yellow trim evoke only one emotion: fear. ThatтАЩs because theyтАЩre beloved by Taliban fighters as a status symbol, and the shoes have become synonymous with violence.

тАФ By Thomas Gibbons-Neff and Fahim Abed; photographs by Jim Huylebroek

An ecologically minded experiment to make Paris a cycling capital has led to a million people now pedaling daily тАФ and to rising tensions with pedestrians. тАЬItтАЩs chaos!тАЭ exclaimed Sarah Famery, a 20-year resident of the Marais neighborhood, shaking a fist at a swarm of bikes. тАЬItтАЩs becoming risky just to cross the street!тАЭ

тАФ By Liz Alderman; photographs by Dmitry Kostyukov

On the weekend that VeniceтАЩs ban on cruise ships took effect, some tourists were surprised to be docked hours away from the cityтАЩs famous sights. тАЬItтАЩs not exactly as charming as Venice,тАЭ said the honeymooning Vittoria Comparone, as she looked out from her shipsтАЩ cabin тАФ not over St. MarkтАЩs Square, but at towering cranes.

тАФ By Jason Horowitz; photographs by Giulia Marchi

The cows donтАЩt have to produce milk. The pigs sleep late. Their only purpose is to live peacefully тАФ and provoke questions about how we eat. тАЬWe need to think about how we can live differently, and we need to leave animals in peace,тАЭ said Karin M├╝ck who helps run an ex-dairy farm in Germany turned into an animal retirement home.

тАФ By Melissa Eddy; photographs by Lena Mucha

A Times correspondent who grew up in the Afghan capital returned just before the TalibanтАЩs victory, taking in the end of one era and the fearful start of another: тАЬIn the hours before the Taliban walked into Kabul, and the two-decade quest to build a democratic Afghanistan tumbled into fear and uncertainty, I left my parentsтАЩ home to take a bus around the city. This was not a reporting outing. It was personal.тАЭ

тАФ By Mujib Mashal; photographs by Mr. Mashal and Jim Huylebroek

The earthquake and tsunami of March 11, 2011, wiped away the ancient Japanese village of Kesen. In the past decade, a small group of survivors has valiantly tried to rebuild the community, but a grim reality has set in: This emptiness will likely last forever.

тАФ Photographs by Hiroko Masuike; written by Russell Goldman

With borders closed because of the pandemic, crowds of Russian tourists have traded tropical beaches for Lake BaikalтАЩs icicle-draped shores. WhatтАЩs the appeal, especially when the temperature is subzero? тАЬThe assault on the senses is otherworldly,тАЭ writes our correspondent. тАЬThe silence around you is interrupted every few seconds by the cracking underneath тАФ groans, bangs and weird, techno-music twangs. Look down, and the imperfections of the glass-clear ice emerge as pale, shimmering curtains.тАЭ

тАФ By Anton Troianovski; photographs by Sergey Ponomarev

Groups of boars have become an unavoidable presence in Haifa, Israel, charming some while scaring others. тАЬIt became like an everyday thing,тАЭ said a chef who lets his dog play with the boars that putter around city parks. Bumping into one is тАЬlike seeing a squirrel.тАЭ

тАФ By Patrick Kingsley; photographs by Dan Balilty

Belief in the benefits of the cure, a type of folk medicine that interweaves home remedies with superstition, religion and a sprinkle of magic is still a way of life in pockets of Ireland. тАЬThat we donтАЩt believe in miracles doesnтАЩt mean we donтАЩt hope for them,тАЭ a professor of Irish folklore said.

тАФ By Megan Specia; photographs by Paulo Nunes dos Santos

A cave complex at a temple in Thailand has long drawn tourists, pilgrims and guano collectors. Now, scientists have arrived, looking for links to the coronavirus. тАЬIтАЩm worried that one day bats will only be a legend here,тАЭ said a monk at a nearby temple. тАЬIf we lose our bats, we lose what makes us special.тАЭ

тАФ By Hannah Beech; photographs by Adam Dean

An artist and an innkeeper have enlisted the help of a burro in their effort to rescue the traditions of SpainтАЩs ancient pilgrimage route from mass tourism (and selfies). тАЬLosing these traditions, itтАЩs like what if we lost the pyramids?тАЭ said one of the pilgrims. тАЬWe put a lot of value on monuments, but less on the small things.тАЭ

тАФ By Nicholas Casey; photographs by Samuel Aranda

Milk is a favorite drink in Rwanda, and milk bars serve it up in abundance, fresh or fermented, hot or cold. тАЬWhen you drink milk, you always have your head straight and your ideas right,тАЭ a patron said.

тАФ By Abdi Latif Dahir; photographs by Jacques Nkinzingabo

One countyтАЩs plan to help older, carless citizens stuck in remote villages proved wildly popular and has been copied across South Korea, revolutionizing public transportation in the countryside. тАЬI probably know more about these old folks than anyone else because I drive them two or three times a week,тАЭ said one of the a 100-won (9 cent) taxi drivers.

тАФ By Sang-Hun Choe; photographs by Jean Chung

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