2020
March
23
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 23, 2020
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Today’s stories include recalibrating capitalism, optimizing governmental (and parental) responses to pandemic, expanding the climate conversation, and reimagining protest art. First, a looming pivot for the summer games.

In a quiet act of optimism, the Olympic cauldron was lit Friday in Japan. But the 2020 summer games now appear poised to be bumped from a planned July start – perhaps to next year – as the world grapples with the coronavirus.

Truly, there are much greater logistical concerns just now. Still, the games are a recurring celebration of humankind’s oneness. That spirit is needed.

“Oneness” has a power that’s both secular and religious. Researchers have found it to be “related to values indicating a universal concern for the welfare of other people, as well as greater compassion for other people,” wrote psychologist Scott Barry Kaufman in a 2018 Scientific American story that’s now being recirculated. 

Personal triumph, too, is unifying. Stories of individual Olympians can be globally galvanizing. Teams are national, but human achievement inspires – both within and across borders. 

Here’s one preview. Hend Zaza is 11 years old. That’s young even for her sport, table tennis. With a shy smile and a ponytail that whips when she plays, she qualified for Tokyo with a win at a tournament this month in Jordan.

Consider that Hend’s homeland, Syria, has been locked in war for all but one year of her life. Consider how the ravages of another war, the one against the coronavirus, are also being overlaid on the grinding Syrian experience. 

Waiting for the games – waiting however long – may mean deferring those tales of triumph until a collective fight is more in hand. But the pieces are in place. The stories are at the starting line.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Navigating uncertainty

The search for global bearings
Lucas Jackson/Reuters
A man cleans up on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange, following traders testing positive for coronavirus, March 19, 2020.

What happens when a system built on personal productivity and commercial connections meets a force that favors something very different? Ideally, an authentic shift in thought. Part 4 of a series.

SOURCE:

Oxfam

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

“More bureaucracy!” is perhaps not the best rallying cry. But what if streamlining means hindering work on an essential set of tasks? The current crisis highlights both sides of the issue.

Essay

Andrew Couldridge/Reuters
Teacher Wendy Couldridge teaches her daughter Milly from home in Hertford, Britain, March 23, 2020, as the spread of the coronavirus continues.

Many who work outside the home have at least temporarily lost a daytime divide between career concerns and active parenting. If that describes you, then you’ll empathize with this essayist in Paris.

Profile

Progressive young voices of warning have been raised on climate change. We profile a young conservative who wants others like him to know that they, too, have a role in the conversation.

© Shirin Neshat/Courtesy of the artist and Gladstone Gallery, New York and Brussels
Iranian American artist Shirin Neshat holds her son’s hands in the 1995 photograph “Bonding.” The inscriptions translate to “Give a hand so I can be held.”

Political art can be blatantly confrontational. It can also be more gently persuasive. Meet an Iranian exile in the U.S. whose most treasured offering is insight.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Rich Alldritt, vicar of St. Thomas Church in Oakwood, Britain, conducts an online service via Youtube March 22.

As it leads the global battle against the coronavirus, the World Health Organization has advised people to manage their mental well-being as much as their physical health. The advice is especially true for the hundreds of millions of people who have self-isolated during the pandemic. WHO suggests engaging in healthy activities to relax, eating well, and keeping regular sleep routines.

Yet WHO also knows such advice may not be enough for those people hunkered down at home with feelings of fear, loneliness, and sadness. The agency also recommends people be empathetic toward those with COVID-19, seek accurate information about the crisis, and find safe ways to help others in isolation.

“Assisting others in their time of need can benefit the person receiving support as well as the helper,” the agency stated.

In other words, one’s home is now both a sanctuary from the virus and a place to rethink the principles that ought to govern home life. Are we seeking out truthful sources of news? How can we better calm a friend with loving assurance? What new ways of expressing life might be possible during the still silence of self-isolation?

For many, the pandemic is reshuffling the notion of home as a sanctuary, or a sheltering space that allows one to anchor one’s thoughts and values. People are redefining their cords of attachment in new ways. Instead of going to religious services in person, they are worshipping online. Instead of going to parties, weddings, sporting events, or even funerals, they are holding digital gatherings. 

Adjusting to a new life of quarantine can have its rewards. “All of this can be overwhelming, but it doesn’t need to be,” wrote the leaders of the United Methodist Church in Simsbury, Connecticut, in a message to congregants. “This can be a time where we can deepen our prayer life, increase our meditation time and work to expand the peace of God around us as those near and dear grapple with heightened anxiety.”

WHO’s call for people to maintain their mental well-being is meant as a challenge. In the sanctuary of one’s home, some of the old ways of thinking about relationships, skills, and interests must be rethought. The isolation can be a gift, not a grind, especially as a new inner life leads to bettering oneself as well as the lives of others.


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.

Around the world, public gatherings have been restricted as part of efforts to contain the coronavirus. But as one man found when he fell ill in a remote area some years ago, even when we’re all alone, there’s another kind of “gathering” we can participate in – one that brings safety and healing.


A message of love

Owen Humphreys/PA/AP
Bamburgh Lighthouse shines under the night sky at Stag Rock in Northumberland, north England, March 23, 2020.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Come back tomorrow. We’ll take a deeper run at the amplified challenges suddenly facing the sandwich generation – those taking care of their elders as well as their offspring.

More issues

2020
March
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