2018
February
23
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 23, 2018
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Even the strongest cultural markers can evolve with continuous rethinking.

Consider Germany and Das Auto. Long before Henry Ford there was Gottlieb Daimler. His work (and that of others, including Karl Benz) fueled a homegrown industry so supercharged with innovation and precision that it became a global industry’s aspirational standard.

Germany is now within days of a ruling on whether to ban diesel cars from its big cities. (Yes, Rudolf Diesel was German, too.) In 2016 the German government passed a nonbinding resolution to make all newly registered cars “zero emission” by 2030. The Bundesrat got a hard nudge from the 2015 US testing scandal involving Volkswagen and particulate emissions.

All of this means sacrifice, workforce disruption, cultural transformation. (It’s hard to imagine the Autobahn as anything other than a showcase of internal combustion in its thoroughbred forms.)

But it’s also possible to discern an underlying sense of pride in leadership, of adjusting to the times. Germany is not alone, even on the automotive front. How universal is that kind of thinking – how transferable – as other nations struggle with how to evolve on other issues?

Said Sen. Marco Rubio (R) of Florida this week at a town hall meeting on an American crisis: “American politics is the only part of our lives where changing your mind based on new information is a bad thing.”

Now to our five stories for your Friday, highlighting protection at schools and outreach that’s familial, local, and extended across old national divides. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The inclination of good teachers is to nurture, prepare, and empower. Whose role is it to protect the environment in which they work – and in ways that don’t introduce new grounds for insecurity?

Cara Anna/AP
The cast of 'Black Panther' arrives at the film’s South Africa première Feb. 16 in Johannesburg.

In this piece, our continent-roaming Africa bureau chief explores African perspectives on the blockbuster film set in a fictional nation there. When asked about what delighted her, she noted the powerful Senegalese score. Then she went all Fulbright scholar on us: “The Dora Milaje, the king’s all-female cadre of bodyguards,” she enthused in an email, “are based on a 17th-century group of female warriors from the Dahomey civilization in Benin.”

Giovanni Auletta/AP
US alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin shares a smile with her mother, Eileen, at the end of a women's World Cup slalom competition in Lienz, Austria, in December. (Shiffrin won first place, and has won a medal at the Winter Games in South Korea.)

From the bobsledding niece of a pro baseball player to the daughter of Olympic rowers, a number of this year’s Winter Olympians were influenced by athletically accomplished family members. Perhaps surprisingly, that doesn’t always translate to added pressure.

The social and political divide between Estonians and the Russian-speakers in their midst dates back to World War II. But today, as Estonia celebrates the centennial of its independence, efforts to bridge that gap are emerging amid a rising sense that disunity is self-defeating. “We’re too small a country,” says one Estonian politician, “for us to be divided into smaller communities.”

Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Difference-maker

This last piece is kind of meta: It’s a difference-maker profile of a woman whose work is all about telling the stories of the difference-makers around her.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Internally displaced Congolese receive food aid at a Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) centre in Bunia, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo Feb. 16.

Despite the media attention on them, neither the Syrian civilians who have fled war in the Middle East nor the Rohingya Muslims who have fled repression in Myanmar are the world’s largest group of displaced people. That record goes to 4.1 million people dislodged in Congo.

The little-noticed crisis in the heart of Africa has worsened over the past year to the point that the European Union and the United Nations announced this week that they are seeking to double foreign aid to the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is four times as large as France. An estimated 7 million Congolese are considered to be “food insecure.” Only 1 in 7 earns more than $1.25 a day. Last October, the UN refugee agency declared a Level 3 emergency in parts of Congo, the highest possible ranking.

The country’s woes stem from two major conflicts less than two decades ago that have left a governance vacuum. Some 120 rebel groups are fighting either for ethnic dominance or to control the country’s vast mineral wealth, which is estimated at $24 trillion.

Yet the biggest crisis is whether President Joseph Kabila, who has ruled for 16 years and remains very unpopular, intends to hold elections and step down as he has promised. In recent months, his forces have killed nearly a dozen people in peaceful protests called by the Roman Catholic secular leaders. Another protest is called for Feb. 25. (Also this week, Switzerland imposed sanctions on 14 allies of Mr. Kabila who might have stashed ill-gotten wealth in Swiss banks.)

Both the political crisis and the violence of the militias make it difficult for foreign groups to reach the millions of people in need. The situation in Congo is not the image that Africans want to project to the world just when they are hailing the version of a fictional and wise African nation, Wakanda, in the Marvel movie “Black Panther.”

In recent weeks, the continent has seen two democratic successes with the ouster of corrupt presidents in Zimbabwe and South Africa. Now it may be Congo’s turn. Its people have a strong national identity and a desire for duly elected leaders. With more foreign assistance, they might be able to be the next success story in Africa.


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.

Today’s contributor shares how her grief “vanished like fog in the sunshine” when she gained a fuller understanding of the immortal, spiritual nature of life created by God.


A message of love

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Teacher Michelle Castillo Salazar moves among her fourth-grade students in Donna, Texas. Ms. Salazar is also a mother of three and a homeowner. When the Monitor first met her 17 years ago, such a future was anything but certain. The then-17-year-old was a third-generation migrant, traveling twice yearly with her farmworker father, mother, and two sisters between Illinois and Texas. School counselors guided Salazar into an internet-based federal program designed to put migrant teens on track for college, and she worked – with some detours – toward her degree in education. “Every obstacle I faced, every step I took, it was all to get to the life that I have today,” she says. For a gallery of images and more of her story, click the blue button below.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks, as always, for being here today. As we look to next week, we're talking with our Mideast writers about the assault by Syrian government forces on rebel-held Eastern Ghouta, outside Damascus, as civilian casualties there rise sharply. On Monday we’ll also look at how more than a few Germans want to disrupt political coalition-building in Berlin in order to fend off growing disillusionment with the political establishment.

More issues

2018
February
23
Friday

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