2019
May
22
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 22, 2019
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No matter who triumphs in the National Basketball Association playoff game between the Milwaukee Bucks and Toronto Raptors tomorrow, there will be a clear winner: Africa.

On one side is the Bucks’ Giannis Antetokounmpo, the Greek-born son of Nigerian immigrants who is rapidly becoming the best basketball player on the planet. On the other are rising Raptors star Pascal Siakim of Cameroon and General Manager Masai Ujiri, a Nigerian seen by many as one of the game’s shrewdest executives.  

The NBA’s connection with Africa is growing. The league now frequently plays a preseason game in Africa, and another of the league’s transcendent young talents is Cameroon’s Joel Embiid. Mr. Ujiri says there are “10 Embiids walking around” Africa waiting to be discovered.

That effort begins in earnest next year, when the NBA launches a pan-African professional league of 12 teams. The benefits for the NBA are obvious. But the symbol for Africa is potentially even more potent. The continent is still struggling to overcome lingering colonial views of its art, justice, people, and economy. The NBA venture can be the reverse, a mutual investment in the promise of Africa’s future.

“This new league could be the most important lens through which Africa’s history of vibrant talent, culture, history and beauty is celebrated,” write a Kenyan lawyer and his colleague in the Toronto Star. “It might just be the world stage Africans have long dreamed of, and patiently waited for.”

Our five stories for today include a look at one of the paradoxes of hyperpartisanship, a first-person account of what it’s like to vote with nearly a billion friends, and why fashion’s repeated cultural faux pas are eminently avoidable.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Jane Barlow/PA/AP
Election staff member Scott Russell carries one of hundreds of polling station signs being dispatched ahead of the European Parliamentary election in Edinburgh, Scotland, May 22.

The vote for the European Union parliament this week is one of the most consequential in the organization's history. At issue is the spirit of Europe's post-World War II identity. 

It can be hard for Congress to pass legislation when there are sharp partisan differences. But on infrastructure, there’s actually plenty of agreement. Turns out, these days, that can be a problem, too.

A deeper look

Paradise, California, is a portrait of what happens long after TV cameras leave following a disaster. What residents are finding is that emotional recovery, like rebuilding itself, takes care and patience.

A letter to

My children

Many fear that the rise of Hindu nationalism has tied ‘Indianness’ to religion. But being Indian also means taking part – every day – in the largest democratic experiment on earth.

SOURCE:

*Election Commission of India, Scroll.in

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Karen Norris
Ann Hermes/Staff
Brandice Daniel, founder and CEO of Harlem’s Fashion Row, poses for a portrait in her home on May 10 in New York. Harlem’s Fashion Row highlights and promotes multicultural fashion designers.

Sometimes fashion designers make dreadful decisions, inadvertently mocking entire groups of people. But the answer is easy: more diversity in the design room. And often it is a financial boon, too.


The Monitor's View

In an era of strongman rule from Egypt to China, it is refreshing to see a new leader on the world scene who tries not to act like a personal hero but operates with compelling modesty. On Monday, Volodymyr Zelenskiy was sworn in as the elected president of Ukraine. One of his first requests? Don’t hang his picture in government offices.

“The president is not an icon, not an idol. Put there [on the walls] photos of your children, and look into their eyes before taking every decision,” said the father of two in an address to the Ukrainian people.

The novice politician won a landslide victory based on his popularity in a TV show in which he plays a humble schoolteacher comically elevated to the presidency. As a real-life president, he continued the theme of humility by walking to his inauguration, refusing an honor guard, and eschewing the haughty ways of the oligarchy that has dominated one of Europe’s poorest country. “People must come to power who will serve the public,” he said.

Whether Mr. Zelenskiy can resist the temptations of personal power, secrecy, and unaccountability remains to be seen. He promised “fewer words and more action” to end both deep-seated corruption and Russia’s hold on parts of Ukraine. Tough decisions must be made. And he faces tough opponents in Parliament. His humility could easily be taken as weakness.

Still, by its claim to openness, self-reflection, and denial of taking credit, humility is a great way to learn. Today’s autocrats pretend they are all-knowing, which leads them to make critical mistakes and demand personal rule without checks and balances. They practice certitude over kindness, ruthlessness over listening. Opponents are to be exploited or crushed, not seen as worthy of respect.

In many ways, Ukraine’s new leader resembles Joko Widodo of Indonesia, the world’s fourth most populous nation. He officially won a second term as president on Tuesday. Even his opponents see this common man, once a furniture maker, as clean, honest, and humble. “My government is about harmony and opposing extremism,” he told a reporter.

His folksy, humble style is much admired by people in Asia living under dictatorships. In the same way, Russians are noting how much Mr. Zelenskiy differs from their president. In his inauguration, some in Russian media noted, Vladimir Putin arrived in a bulletproof car with the streets of Moscow cleared of people.


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.

With European Parliament elections just around the corner, today’s contributor explores how seeing others the way God made them can help us keep our cool and foster harmony even in contentious situations.


A message of love

Marko Drobnjakovic/AP
Richard Browning (r.), the inventor of the Gravity jet suit, and an associate fly over a lake in Belgrade using Browning’s invention May 22. Browning, CEO of Gravity Industries, did a presentation ahead of the World Minds conference held in the Serbian capital May 23.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Tomorrow our Beijing staff writer, Ann Scott Tyson, will look beyond the United States and China to explore how the trade war between the two countries is touching far more of the globe.

More issues

2019
May
22
Wednesday

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