2017
September
08
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 08, 2017
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

A chain of powerful hurricanes in the southeastern US has triggered a harried cycle of brace-and-recover.

The stories of collective spirit there are too important to miss.

But some readers have expressed frustration that South Asia’s epic flooding – renewed in August and affecting some 40 million people – has not been adequately covered. We’re working on getting a reporter to the region. Stories from there will surely show some parallels and may offer new lessons.

Vaishnavi Chandrashekhar, a former Boston-based Monitor staffer now in Mumbai, writes in an email that residents of her city, too, are well known for helping each other. She saw that spirit last Tuesday, when a monsoon rain that coincided with a high tide left many stranded.

 “Within hours, a shared Google spreadsheet of ‘rain hosts’ had been created,” she writes, “and social media hashtags spread to guide the stranded to strangers’ homes.”

(One complicating charge: The reliability of citizen actions allows authorities to skimp on measures to mitigate disaster.)

From rural India come studies in adaptation. Vaishnavi says that she spoke to a professor who has studied the way Hindu pilgrims use the Ganges riverbank near Allahabad each year. A tent city rises there and caters to millions, then comes down. Just as reliably, in flood or in drought, farmers move in to plant and harvest.  

“Studying how people adapt in this area is not only useful for other parts of India but the world,” the professor told Vaishnavi. “Because more of the world is going to look like India than India is going to look like the world.”

Now to our five Friday stories.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Henry Gass/The Christian Science Monitor
Guy Mouelet, an urban farmer and Congolese refugee, clears weeds from his farm a week after hurricane Harvey hit Houston. 'We need to work, because people need it,' he says. 'People lost everything, and they need to eat to grow strong.'

Local firms need their communities to help them thrive. In return, they can help anchor their communities when major setbacks come.

A new strain of cross-aisle dealmaking shows signs of taking hold in Washington. Does it represent a lasting shift in approach?

Hani Amara/Reuters
A member of the Libyan Coast Guard uses a pair of binoculars as he searches for migrants off the coast of Tripoli, Libya, Aug. 9.

When statistics show a crisis waning, it’s worth checking whether the measures being used to drive change are tempered by compassion. 

Perceptions of a major power’s actions matter every bit as much as the actions’ real intent. 

A hallmark of authoritarian behavior is the shuttering of a free press. One year ahead of elections, outlets in Phnom Penh are disappearing. 


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
Work continues in a Barre, Vt., neighborhood where three low-lying homes recently had been demolished to prepare for future flooding. Gov. Phil Scott and city officials highlighted the project on Aug. 26, nearly six years after Tropical Storm Irene inundated Vermont.

When hurricane Irene raced up the East Coast six years ago, the storm delivered its biggest punch to the tiny state of Vermont. Floods destroyed more than 1,000 homes, 500 miles of roads, and 200 bridges. It was the state’s worst disaster since 1927. Much of the repair work is now complete. Yet the Green Mountain State still keeps alive one special experience. Many residents have used the Aug. 28 anniversary to celebrate – and expand – both the community spirit that brought them together and the resilience for recovery and rejuvenation.

For Americans hunkered down for hurricane Irma, Vermont’s post-Irene commemorations and celebrations provide an opportunity in practical gratitude for the redemptive value of social kindness during a disaster.

In Vermont’s White River Valley, for example, a recent “resilience festival” offered food, fun, a 5K run, tree planting, and new ways for people to volunteer in the community. People that play together will bounce back better from adversity, organizers said. The town of Bethel now holds an annual “pop-up university” in which local people can teach courses. The aim is to create a more vibrant and connected community. And the state government still sells license plates that read “Vermont Strong.”

Other places have learned to reinforce qualities of character needed during a tragedy. In the rebuilding of lower Manhattan after 9/11, New York highlighted the heroic efforts of first responders. For the 10th anniversary of hurricane Katrina in 2015, New Orleans sponsored a “resilience festival” that included brass bands, dancing, singing, and plenty of official thank-yous for the thousands of volunteers who helped the city recover.

Almost every disaster offers a learning curve, usually for government in ensuring better preparation in physical infrastructure and emergency response. After the devastation of hurricane Andrew in 1992, for example, Florida vastly improved its ability to respond to storm damage and in warning residents when to evacuate. Yet often overlooked is the need to build a community’s togetherness, or the social capital that comes in handy during a major crisis.

Government cannot be the only responder. For Vermont’s 2016 commemoration of its post-Irene experience, then-Gov. Peter Shumlin said it took “endless people” with goodwill to rebuild the state and leave it in better shape. To get through a disaster, communities must have a pre-positioned social web of empathy. And one way to nurture that web is to celebrate, out of gratitude, the empathy already expressed during a previous crisis.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

The recent pictures in the news showing people left homeless by the floods in Texas, Louisiana, and India – or the winds of hurricane Irma in the Caribbean – can be discouraging. But we can find encouragement in the idea that even when circumstances seem dire, we are never left without the tender love of our Father-Mother God. Contributor Christine Driessen experienced this at a time when she was homeless and a wonderful housing solution came to light. What turned her situation around was when she responded to a friend’s request to pray for a lost cat during a major storm and flooding. Her conviction that God’s love never fails any of us inspired her to recognize how God cares for all of us. Every one of us has an inherent receptivity to God’s “angels,” which open our hearts to a sense of God’s infinite love and guide us to solutions that meet our practical need.


A message of love

Alexander Kuznetsov/Reuters
The aurora borealis (northern lights) illuminates the sky near the village of Pallas in Lapland, Finland, Sept. 8.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks so much for reading (or listening, or both!) today. For Monday's package we’re working on a story about how the North Korea crisis affects China’s global and regional ambitions, tests its influence, and illustrates its challenges. 

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2017
September
08
Friday

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