2019
April
22
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 22, 2019
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As Sri Lankans take stock of the weekend terrorist attacks on Catholic churches and popular hotels, they are starting to remember those killed: the celebrity chef, the Indian and American executives, the Japanese volunteer, the three children of a well-known Dane.

As questions swirl around the domestic jihadist group the government blames as well as intelligence failures, Monitor reporter Simon Montlake, who covered Sri Lanka’s civil war and its aftermath, will be following developments.

The attacks, coming on a weekend of deep significance for Jews and Christians, point to the global need to more actively confront a slew of violence targeting not only synagogues and churches, but mosques as well, most recently in Christchurch, New Zealand. But the weekend also evoked the strength repeatedly displayed by faith communities under intense pressure.

Marnie Fienberg, whose mother-in-law was killed in an attack on a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, synagogue last October, started “2 for Seder” to battle anti-Semitism. More than 730 families in 41 states and Canada invited non-Jewish guests to share a Passover meal. “That’s how education works ... how good ideas spread,” she said.

In Opelousas, Louisiana, the Greater Union Baptist Church has been meeting in temporary quarters since its 100-year-old edifice, along with two other black churches, was torched in alleged hate crimes. No one can overlook the ugly history of black church burnings. But donations have recently poured in.

On Easter Sunday, the Rev. Harry Richard honored members for not being consumed by anger, and encouraged prayers for the suspect: “I don’t care what the world might do to you. You never give up on love.”

Now to our five stories, which address gender issues in politics, persistence, and giving credit where credit is due.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Gerald Herbert/AP
Sen. Kamala Harris of California speaks at the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority South Central Regional Conference in New Orleans April 19. Though a leading fundraiser, media coverage of Senator Harris’s campaign lags behind that of her male competitors.

Much has been made of the surge of women candidates. But media coverage – and entrenched assumptions about what makes a strong candidate – may not have caught up with the dramatic shift. 

President Donald Trump’s embrace of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi – even as the U.S. ally slides further into authoritarianism – symbolizes a shift in U.S. policy across the Arab world, away from supporting democracy and toward stability.

A deeper look

Alfredo Sosa/Staff
Immigration attorney Marty Rosenbluth Skypes with a client at the Stewart Detention Center from his home office on March 5 in Lumpkin, Georgia. Though the detention center is only one mile down the road, sometimes Skype is the easiest way to meet his clients.

Few lawyers choose to represent migrants at Stewart Detention Center, which rejects more than 90% of applicants. Marty Rosenbluth has made defending those who may have a right to stay his lifework. 

Appreciation, or appropriation? Too often, artists and activists say, Western brands’ use of African designs is the latter. A new collection aims to get real collaboration right.

Books

Our critics recommend an excellent history of the Apollo 11 mission, a history of baseball through the squinty eyes of a pitcher, and Alexander McCall Smith’s foray into the Scandinavian crime novel genre.


The Monitor's View

AP
Staff at a school in Ahmadabad, India, pray for the victims of Sunday's blasts in Sri Lanka.

On Tuesday, the tear-shaped island nation of Sri Lanka will hold a day of mourning for the victims of the suicide bombings on Easter Sunday. The government was wise to bring together a country of such diversity to remember the nearly 300 people killed in three churches and three hotels. It shows Sri Lanka, which remains trapped in competing national identities, still seeks reconciliation a decade after the end of a violent civil war.

Four years ago, the South Asian nation’s path to reconciliation seemed off to a good start. Voters had elected a new president, Maithripala Sirisena, who came out of the Buddhist majority yet did not seem to reflect its tendency toward supremacism over minorities, especially ethnic Tamils (who are mainly Hindu) as well as Muslims and Christians. He promised to address abuses of the 26-year-long war against a Tamil separatist group with a mix of truth, accountability, and forgiveness, all in the name of social healing. Most of that work remains unfulfilled.

The suicide bombings, which the government attributes to a local jihadist group, serve as a reminder that Sri Lanka cannot afford a slow pace toward reconciliation. The motives behind the attack are still unknown. And few had imagined violence by one minority on another. Yet the attacks reveal in a dramatic way the widespread fears and divisions that need to be addressed in the nation of 21 million people.

Last year Mr. Sirisena did set up a process for finding the truth about the thousands still missing during the war. He also set up an office for reparations, although the Buddhist elite opposes the idea of compensating Tamils. Yet he opposes a call by the United Nations for a hybrid court to deal with allegations of war crimes and human rights abuses.

Forging a common identity among Sri Lankans requires that the various groups deal with either the reality of past victimization, especially for Tamils, or the false narratives about becoming victims, especially among Sinhalese Buddhists. The country has a long history of ethnic and religious harmony to build on. It is also Asia’s oldest continuous democracy, which can play to either the forces of division or to those ready to restore social harmony.

Old grievances can be overcome by truth and forgiveness. The Easter bombings show why Sri Lanka must step back onto its recent path of reconciliation.


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.

On this Earth Day, today’s contributor explores how discerning the spiritual nature of our environment can bring safety and healing.


A message of love

Al Drago/Reuters
A child poses in front of a miniature briefing room podium during the 2019 White House Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington April 22.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Tomorrow, we’ll turn again to Sudan. Taylor Luck reports on how Gulf Arab states and Egypt are supporting the military in opposition to public demands for thorough regime change and greater democracy.

More issues

2019
April
22
Monday

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