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A 55-year-old housewife in the Central Java province of Indonesia Pasija, every morning wakes up to the voice of the sea. If this sounds empty but it’s something.
The house is the only one in this part of a small village in the northern village, which is in the northern village in the northern village, which is once in the dry land, but in the northern shore of Java.
Over the past few years, Pasija’s neighbors have left their homes, vegetables and rice areas, but there are no plans to leave their family and family.
“I have every intention to stay here and my feelings of this house remains,” he said.
Wet your feet around the walls of the house of Pasija’s house for 35 years, when you step outside.
The closest land, two kilometers (1.24 miles), the nearest city, remember, still in the level of 19 kilometers (11.8 miles). The only way to go there by boat.
Indonesia has about 81,000 kilometers of the archipelago of thousands of islands, which is sensitive to the sea and erosion.
Marine levels increased by an average of 4.25 millimeters (0.16 inches) each year in recent years since 1992, Meteorology, Climate and Geophysical Agency in 2024.
“One of the symptoms of climate change is the growing sea level,” he added that some small islands disappeared.
Karsah also pointed out the growing pump of groundwater, which increased the landing of lands on the northern coast of Java. The problem is bad in Jakarta, the house of 10 million people in Jakarta, Indonesia.
The Indonesian authorities, Banten and Eastern Java provinces, 700 kilometers (434 miles), which will be located along the northern coast, applied for a solution for a solution.
Meanwhile, Pasijah and his family turned into nature.
About 15,000 mangrov wats have been planted a year in the last 20 years.
Every day, a new sapling plants to reduce the blue-gray into a boat, which can be higher than a blue plastic barrel to tend to ties and build a new sapling.
“Floods come to the waves, gradually, not at once,” said Pasijah. “I realized that after the rise in the rise of water, he needed to plant mangrove trees to spread and protect the house from the wind and waves.”
He and his family lives by selling the fish caught by their sons in the nearest market. They say they will stay as far as they can save the tide.
“Since I decided to stay here, I have not worried about how I feel about my attitude to the insulation, so we will get an obstacle at a time,” said Pasijah.