Merry Christmas from all at OZY! Today we bring you a raft of good news. At a time of global turbulence, it’s all the more important to highlight incredible people, places and ideas, from a burgeoning restaurant scene in Syria, to the revival of eco night trains and a Mexican American ambassador in the NFL (pictured).

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From the editor | December 25

Merry Christmas from all at OZY! Today we bring you a raft of good news. At a time of global turbulence, it’s all the more important to highlight incredible people, places and ideas, from a burgeoning restaurant scene in Syria, to the revival of eco night trains and a Mexican American ambassador in the NFL (pictured).

Fay Schlesinger, OZY Managing Editor

Opinion

OZY Takes You Ahead of the Curve in Good News

OZY was first to report on these uplifting stories of people making their corner of the world a little bit better.

Happy holidays! At OZY, we take it as our mission to bring you stories that inspire as well as inform — and in doing so, we try to be the first to deliver those stories. And this year, perhaps more than others in the recent past, it hasn’t always been easy to focus on the stuff that’s uplifting when much of the world is facing major challenges (including the world itself as climate change grows ever more alarming). So today, we’ve chosen to remind you that there are countless positive things happening around the globe — by publishing 10 of our favorite pieces about people doing good, fighting for change and giving us all reason to hope for better tomorrows.

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True Stories

Unapologetic: Cutting Away at Wig Tradition

Zelda Volkov’s wig business is booming thanks to her newer approach to the traditional Orthodox Jewish wig. 

If you ever find yourself in Brooklyn’s Crown Heights neighborhood, you may notice the approximately 40 synagogues and many yeshivas. You’ll see bearded men in black coats and modestly dressed women with short brown hair following the traditional appearance called for by the Chabad-Lubavitch movement. What you may not notice, though, is what many women in this community, and in many other Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods, are wearing: wigs.

Zelda Volkov, a Crown Heights native, used to wear a traditional sheitel. Today she strives to offer great-looking wigs to other Orthodox women.

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The New + the Next

He’s the NFL’s Breakout Mexican American Ambassador

Undrafted, unheralded, undaunted cornerback Michael Davis sees big things for this season

Around the World

Europe Revives Night Trains — to Fight Climate Change

Europe’s network of night trains collapsed in the face of low-cost airlines. Now it’s making a comeback. 

Around the World

Can These Youths in Red Berets Take Down Uganda’s Dictator?

An unlikely movement of young Ugandans is shaking Yoweri Museveni’s regime like never before. 

Around the World

Damascus Says Bon Appétit Amid Brutal War

An urban prison, the Syrian capital is seeing an explosion of restaurants and cafés — as outlets for war-weary residents. 

Around the World

Conservative Pakistan’s Transgender Rising

Criminalized and victimized for more than a century, Pakistan’s transgender community is now fighting — and winning — like never before. 

The New + the Next

Team USA’s Hockey Star Has a Higher Goal: Equal Pay

Hilary Knight is one of the greatest women’s hockey players ever. Now, she’s leading the charge for equitability in sports. 

True Stories

Kenya’s Two-Fisted Fatuma Zarika and the Fight of Her Life

The fact that Fatuma Zarika, 33, got to fight for the WBC bantamweight belt is not nearly as amazing as how she won it. 

The New + the Next

America Begins Capping Freeway Scars of the Past

A series of freeway lid caps are being proposed and built across American cities saddled with aging urban highways.

 one last thing 

How the 1999 US Women’s Soccer Team Nearly Lost

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