2020
March
16
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 16, 2020
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Amelia Newcomb
Senior editor

Today's issue includes trust in government and greater neighborliness amid the coronavirus crisis, deliberative democracy in the U.K., threats to Nigerian Christians, and the connection between Quidditch and more opportunity for women in Uganda. 

Reassuring gestures offer balm for anxious times. There are the dramatic ones, as when Italian air force planes took to the skies in a roaring call for national unity, streaming the green, white, and red national colors behind them. There are the charming ones, as when Italians offered the globe a moment of joy, serenading each other from their balconies. There are the more modest ones, as when a landlord in South Portland, Maine, canceled his two tenants’ April payments. “We have a system that is interdependent,” Nathan Nichols told WMTW. “Even the smallest acts help in times of trouble.”

And then there are the words that help make sense of a moment. Last week, countless college students had little time to digest events as their campuses abruptly shut down. At Yale University, the news reached a rowing team amid afternoon practice – and coach Andrew Card stepped into action.

There was the offer of one last row the next morning, which was met with deafening cheers; there were videos and photos. And then, important words offering reassurance and perspective. “I reminded them that as they go forward ... they should always take the fork in the road that allows them to take more forks,” Mr. Card wrote to parents. “So now we scatter as circumstances require, but I remain confident that one of those forks will take them all the way back [here]. And just as any good stroke is a rhythmical cycle, so too I hope that everyone ... will share once again their heartfelt comradeship.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Amid a crisis, trust is paramount. In this story, we look at how much it shapes effective communication and action among local, state, and national government. 

Alessandra Tarantino/AP
Women lean out of windows and clap their hands in the Garbatella neighborhood in Rome, March 14, 2020. Italians are showing signs of solidarity with flash mob calls circulating on social media for people to ''gather'' on their balconies at certain hours, to play music or to give each other a round of applause.

Does “social distancing” lead to acting distant? Hardly. In this next story, we meet people who are meeting heart to heart even if they can’t meet face to face. 

Navigating uncertainty

The search for global bearings

The world faces a climate emergency and voters are increasingly disenchanted with their democracies. What if these two dilemmas could be addressed with one initiative? Part 3 of Navigating Uncertainty: The search for global bearings.

SOURCE:

2020 Edelman Trust Barometer

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Nyancho NwaNri/Reuters
Women pray on Ash Wednesday inside the Church of the Assumption in Ikoyi district in Lagos, Nigeria, February 26, 2020.

Could the Trump administration’s interest in religious freedom issues outweigh what appears to be its waning interest in Africa? Nigerian Christians and their American allies are hopeful.

Difference-maker

Katumba Badru
Uganda's Quidditch team, founded by John Ssentamu, has been invited to three World Cups abroad but has not yet been able to attend.

Who knew that running around a field with a broomstick between your legs – as you do when playing the “Harry Potter” game – could give some Ugandan women a new chance to shine as equals?


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Jozef Gouwy, 93, looks at a robot in Ostend, Belgium, that allows seniors in a care facility to communicate with loved ones.

As the coronavirus scrambles the normal ties of community, the best response has been a focus on those most vulnerable. In California, homeless people are a high priority. For low-income Americans, Medicaid is easing the flow of money. Almost everywhere, school closings are safeguarding children from exposure. Yet the greatest concern is for older people, especially those living alone or in care facilities.

Perhaps the most radical show of concern for seniors is Britain’s plan to ask people over the age of 70 to stay at home for four months. “No bingo, no pubs ... BUT family visits and neighbours etc.,” tweeted the United Kingdom health secretary, Matt Hancock. More typical is Florida’s ban on certain people from visiting nursing homes and other elder-care centers.

Such social distancing has triggered a wave of empathy to socially engage older people and lift their morale. The obvious tools are digital videoing, such as with FaceTime, Duo, or Skype, all a step up from phone calls. Yet sending handwritten letters – with photos – might be better for many seniors and more memorable. Just as compassionate are offers to deliver essentials to the door, such as personal care items, or favorite foods and flowers. In many places, people are organizing to aid seniors through hashtags like #HowCanIHelp.

During this crisis, isolation may be the greatest concern of older people. Only 47% of U.S. adults over the age of 60 worry about dying from the coronavirus, according to The Harris Poll, compared with 57% of millennials.

One marker of a civilization is the humility and sacrifice expressed during times of mass illness in support of older generations. In the United States, where more than a quarter of those 60 and older live alone, the challenge is greater than in most other countries. Family and friends must find creative ways to prevent mental isolation of loved ones. They need to weave new threads of contact into a senior’s social fabric.

Especially hard for many seniors is not being able to attend religious gatherings. Yet clergy and the faithful are inventing ways to meet the spiritual desires of the oldest people who have long sat in the pews. For most religions, giving to those most vulnerable is a divine calling, a reflection of God’s infinite love.

The virus crisis is forcing people to readjust their physical ties to one another, especially with at-risk seniors. Yet the bonds of affection in a community or a family are still there. They just need new and careful forms of expression, the kind that both protect and prop up the weakest during a pandemic.


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.

Faced with the prospect of falling behind on her bills, a woman found comfort in the promise of God’s limitless care for all. This lifted her fear, and tangible evidence of that care soon emerged in an unexpected way.


A message of love

Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP
Cyclists ride along an oceanfront trail along the Venice Beach Boardwalk March 15, 2020, in Los Angeles.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Tomorrow, we'll join Moscow-based correspondent Fred Weir as he revisits the rugged Caucasus to see how the region has emerged from an era of tumult and revived local cultures.

More issues

2020
March
16
Monday

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