2019
August
06
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 06, 2019
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In today’s edition, our five handpicked stories explore GOP solutions (to mass shootings), justice (rape in Sierra Leone), relationships (U.S.-China, human-sea gull), and innovation (jet-engine hoverboard).

But first, let’s look at Toni Morrison’s legacy. The first African American woman to win a Nobel Prize in literature (1993) died Monday. Her novels lyrically and unflinchingly plumbed slavery, sisterhood, racism, justice, sexual abuse, rage, guilt, and liberty. She’s “a national treasure ... ,” wrote former President Barack Obama today, “a challenge to our conscience and a call to greater empathy.”

She leaves an indelible mark on America and a generation of black writers. I asked Monitor culture critic Candace McDuffie what Ms. Morrison means to her. 

“Toni Morrison made me feel valued and seen in a genre where we are usually neglected,” writes Candace in an email. “In white American literature, black women are either completely ignored or reduced to racist tropes. We are not docile Mammys, nor are we hypersexual Jezebels or inexplicably angry Sapphires. We are multidimensional and beautiful beings whose experiences run deep. Morrison managed to embody our complexities through works that showcased our humanity and wholeness.”

Candace respects that Ms. Morrison “never jeopardized her artistic integrity. ... Topics like slavery and racism and colorism and black feminism dominated her works and were powerful and revelatory because Morrison prioritized black authenticity over white comfort. And because of this, she will always be one of the most important writers of our time.”

Ms. Morrison will be missed. But her unique expression of dignity, defiance, and cultural honesty endures. As Mr. Obama wrote, “time is no match” for her works.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Our reporters look at how Republicans are shifting their approach to dealing with the problem of mass shootings motivated by hate.

Alex Pajunas/The Daily Astorian/AP/FILE
Commercial fisherman Richie Williams unloads spring salmon from his boat on the docks at the Astoria Yacht Club in Astoria, Oregon, in 2010. Fishermen in the Pacific Northwest have been hit hard by the U.S.-China trade war.

A rocky relationship between Washington and Beijing means salmon fishermen in the Northwest make less money. Our reporter looks at their response. 

Top-down decrees send a powerful message. But that may be only the start of changing attitudes and behavior, especially when combating violence against women and girls.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff/File
Sea gulls stand on a car roof in Tasmania, Australia. Renowned for their aerial acrobatics, gulls are also known for leaving their mark on car roofs and hoods.

Gulls are ingenious, and often a source of collateral damage. Our reporter looks at how that relationship between humans and birds is progressing.

Yves Herman/Reuters
French inventor Franky Zapata takes off on a Flyboard Air in Sangatte, France, on Aug. 4, in his second (and ultimately successful) attempt to cross the English Channel.

Humankind has been solving the problem of flight for centuries. Now, a French inventor has an innovative approach that could be a battlefield tool.  


The Monitor's View

AP
Mozambique President Filipe Nyusi, right, and Renamo leader Ossufo Momade hug after signing a peace accord to end years of hostilities.

Mozambique is not only one of the world’s poorest countries; it also has been home to one of the world’s longest-lasting rebel conflicts. On Tuesday, however, the southern African nation claimed a much better distinction. A final peace pact was signed in the capital, Maputo, but one that differs sharply from similar agreements in other war-torn places: Key elements of the accord were already in the works before the signing.

International mediators had applied a key lesson from attempts to end other world conflicts: Good-faith intentions about a cease-fire, forgiveness of past atrocities, or national reconciliation must first be made concrete by actions. Trust but verify, as Ronald Reagan once famously said. Mozambique needed this lesson, given its record of previous peace pacts breaking down.

The signing ceremony was preceded by the start of a disarmament of the former rebel group Renamo. The ruling Frelimo party, meanwhile, had amended the constitution to decentralize power and allow gubernatorial elections. In addition, the parliament passed an amnesty bill last month that exempts forces on both sides from prosecution for crimes committed since 2014.

“Here in Mozambique, there has been implementation of 90% of the issues before the actual signing,” said negotiator Mirko Manzoni, the Swiss ambassador to Mozambique and the personal envoy of the United Nations secretary-general.

Such steps are also necessary because the country faces an election in October. If the voting process is relatively clean and free of violence, Mozambique will have passed a critical test. And it will have joined other African countries, such as Kenya, that have relied on mediators for political reconciliation to end violence. In fact, many leaders from other democracies in Africa attended the signing in Mozambique. An average 75% of Africans say they want to choose their leaders through “regular, open and honest elections,” a recent poll found.

Mozambique still faces issues in how to reintegrate the former rebels. It also has a small Islamist insurgency in the north. But with foreign help, it has so far applied the lessons of peacemaking and defied a destiny of endless conflict.


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.

It’s possible to know God as an active, protecting presence in our lives, as one young man experienced when attacked by a stranger on a city street.


A message of love

Kyodo/Reuters
A girl releases paper lanterns on the Motoyasu River facing the gutted Atomic Bomb Dome in remembrance of atomic bomb victims on the 74th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, Aug. 6, 2019.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about how El Paso, Texas, residents view their safety after the Walmart shooting. 

More issues

2019
August
06
Tuesday

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