2020
February
19
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 19, 2020
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Our stories today examine the potential Taliban peace deal, President Trump’s pardons, Russia’s capitalist ploy, odd happenings in the night sky, and expanding opportunity in Brooklyn. But first, a look at an anniversary.

Today is a Day of Remembrance for Japanese Americans. On Feb. 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt decided to move Japanese immigrants to internment camps, and the date marks a time to consider the lessons of that legacy.

This week, California will formally apologize for its role. This follows the federal government’s own apology in 1988, along with $20,000 in reparations to everyone who had been interned.

But the importance of that apology – and California’s – goes back to the spirit of the first Remembrance Day in 1978. For decades, the Japanese community had rarely spoken of their internment, ashamed and afraid. But on that first Remembrance Day in Seattle, “parents opened up to their kids and told them about what happened to them during the war, many of them for the first time,” according to Densho, a blog about the internments.

That is why the apologies matter, Japanese Americans say. Speaking out cannot change the past, but it can shape the future.

“There is a saying in Japanese culture, ‘kodomo no tame ni,’ which means, ‘for the sake of the children,’” John Tateishi, one of the original activists, told WFDD. “It’s the legacy we’re handing down to them and to the nation to say that, ‘You can make this mistake, but you also have to correct it – and by correcting it, hopefully not repeat it again.’”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Rahmat Gul/AP
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, center, leaves the Afghan Independent Election Commission after a ceremony to receive the official certificate of his winning a 2nd term as president, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2020.

The new potential for an Afghan peace deal needs to be looked at honestly. There is such distrust and lack of unity, that any next steps will need to be small steps to build confidence.

Offering pardons is perhaps the closest thing the president has to absolute power, and in using this power Tuesday, President Trump gave glimpses of how he sees himself.

With Russia facing economic headwinds ahead of next year's election, President Vladimir Putin is trying something new. That means a surprising turn to the capitalist playbook.

Something strange is going on with one of the most familiar objects in the night sky. Now, scientists are trying to figure out what is happening in the Orion constellation.

Difference-maker

Ann Hermes/Staff
Isaiah Jordan (left) learns silk-screen printing from Peter McGouran, production manager in Reconnect Brooklyn's shop.

The value of a nonprofit isn’t always in how it “scales up,” but in how it reaches down into its community. This group helps young participants gain skills, then pass on the baton of opportunity.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A man walks over a bridge by the construction of Ethiopia's Great Renaissance Dam in Guba Woreda, in 2013.

Hot wars often get more attention than efforts to cool the passions that ignite them. This is not the case, however, in a dispute between Egypt and Ethiopia. Under the glare of media and with the help of international diplomacy, the two countries are nearing an agreement over the use of the Nile River. Rather than stumbling into a war over water, the two African nations appear ready for a peaceful settlement.

One reason for all the attention: In an era of climate change, nations need models for managing shared interests and responsibilities over natural resources, especially water.

The dispute over Nile waters began in 2011 when Ethiopia started constructing a mega-dam on the Blue Nile to provide badly needed electricity, threatening Egypt’s main source of fresh water. The two differed sharply over the duration and rate at which Ethiopia would draw water out of the Nile and what it would do in times of drought. Some officials in Egypt threatened military action. Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed responded, “If there is need to go to war, we could get millions readied.”

With Ethiopia ready to start filling the dam’s reservoir later this year, both sides finally decided to allow third-party mediation last November. They turned to the United States and the World Bank. After several negotiations, they have narrowed their differences and have acknowledged many of each other’s core interests. Egypt is paying more attention to its inefficient use of water while Ethiopia is more willing to mitigate the downstream effects of the dam. The U.S. hopes the two sides will sign an agreement in coming weeks or months.

Such a pact could have an added benefit. It might encourage cooperation among the other African nations that border the Nile and its tributaries to work more closely in managing the critical water basin.

With the aid of outside interlocutors, Ethiopia and Egypt have built up some trust and listened carefully to each other’s concerns. Not only might they avoid war, but they could be setting a precedent for preventing other potential water wars in a climate-challenged world.


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.

When a woman injured her ankle while working at a summer camp, she took a stand for her true nature as the offspring of divine Spirit – and healing followed.


A message of love

Alexander Kuznetsov/Reuters
An aurora is seen in the sky in Kilpisjarvi, Finland, Feb. 18, 2020.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Tomorrow, we’ll offer a portrait of a scientist with a fascinating lens on the world. She's studying cave slime to help us understand what life might look like elsewhere in our solar system.

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2020
February
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