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As sea levels rise, Indonesian woman turns to mangroves to keep floodwaters at bay

Pasijah’s home is the only one remaining in this part of Rejosari Senik, a small village on Java’s northern coast that is now submerged in water

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Pasijah, 55, holds mangrove seedlings as she sits in a boat in the submerged hamlet of Rejosari Senik, Demak regency, in Indonesia’s Central Java province, in February. Photo: Reuters

Pasijah, a 55-year-old housewife in Indonesia’s Central Java province, wakes up every morning to the sound of the sea. If that sounds idyllic, it is anything but.

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Her home is the only one remaining in this part of Rejosari Senik, a small village on Java’s northern coast that was once on dry land but is now submerged in water.

Over the past few years, Pasijah’s neighbours have abandoned their homes, vegetable plots and rice fields to the advancing sea, but she and her family have no plans to leave.

“I do have every intention to stay here and my feelings for this house remain,” she said in February.

Pasijah, 55, plants mangrove seedlings in the submerged hamlet of Rejosari Senik, Demak regency, Central Java Province, Indonesia, in February. Photo: Reuters
Pasijah, 55, plants mangrove seedlings in the submerged hamlet of Rejosari Senik, Demak regency, Central Java Province, Indonesia, in February. Photo: Reuters

Water laps around the walls of Pasijah’s house, where she has lived for 35 years, soaking her feet when she steps outside.

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