2020
May
11
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 11, 2020
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Amelia Newcomb
Senior editor

Today, we look at a Chinese disinformation campaign in Europe, a contact-tracing app in India, grandmothers taking on Poland’s right-wing government, a grocery worker’s account of life in the aisles, and inspiring global points of progress. First, a nod to other uplifting activities we’ve seen in recent days. 

You can’t help but be inspired by the many ways people express their determination to sustain their fellow beings in trying times.

Some offer succor with food, like Sikh members of the Guru Nanak Darbar gurdwara in the U.K. who make 850-plus meals daily for National Health Service workers.

Others deploy color. Friends who recently took ownership of a tulip farm in their Washington hometown were undaunted as the pandemic upended local Mother’s Day sales and a tulip festival. They brought the beauty to their fans instead, shipping blossoms and live-streaming the vibrant tulip fields at sunset.

There’s humor: Last week, a Belgian mother and daughter wanted a McDonald’s meal – but lacked a car for the drive-thru-only. So they built a cardboard version. Fellow motorists, including police, cheered as they “drove” through. “It’s nice if we have done something to make people laugh,” said mom. “We need that.”

And there are love notes. Mothers in a Vancouver, British Columbia, nursing home got those Sunday from offspring who paraded outside with flowers, balloons, and a bagpiper. On V-E Day in Dumfries, Scotland, Edna Wells got a video call from actor Joanna Lumley to ask about her World War II work in the Women’s Royal Naval Service. Ms. Lumley asked her to walk outside. There Ms. Wells found Capt. Chris Smith, with drummer and piper and cheering neighbors, ready to award the medal she had never collected. Her voice wavered as she saluted and said, “Thank you for making this the best day of my life.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Mauro Scrobogna/LaPresse/AP
People clap their hands as the Italian, top, and European Union flags hang from windows, in Rome, March 14, 2020. A video purported to show a similar scene of Italians cheering from their balconies for China, in gratitude for the country's aid in the pandemic. But it was a fake.

Disinformation campaigns are a growing concern in the West. While Russia has sometimes been made out as a major source of such activity, evidence suggests that China is actually the more active threat.

Manish Swarup/AP
An Indian police officer and paramilitary forces request people get inside their houses after a three-hour relaxation of restrictions to buy essential items in the old quarters of New Delhi, April 25, 2020. Officials are looking to ease restrictions, in part by using a contact tracing app.

‘There’s an app for that’ may sound good to help rein in COVID-19. But what if it also might be used to infer things about people’s political leanings or demographic information? 

A deeper look

Dominique Soguel
Hanna Pietkiewicz-Sałdan (foreground, left) and other members of the Polish Grannies hand out leaflets in central Warsaw. The women, as well as a few men, protest against the rise of hate speech, far-right groups, and the polarization of society under a right-wing government.

Do you have causes you'd take to the streets to defend? These retired women want young Poles to understand as well as they do that freedoms are not a given.

Essay

Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Perhaps you're not thinking the cereal aisle might present just the right opportunity to display the better angels of your nature. Lee Dean, who wrote this next piece, can help with that. 

Points of Progress

What's going right
Staff

Here are some points of concrete progress from around the world. Take a few inspiring moments to catch a dancing star, seen from Chile, and celebrate new work opportunities for deaf women in Ethiopia. 


The Monitor's View

AP
People enjoy the beach of Kavouri suburb near Athens May 10. Greece has begun gradually lifting its restrictive measures after a lockdown to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

During the world’s last full-blown crisis – the financial meltdown of a decade ago – Greece was an example of a country not to follow. Its economy had been so mismanaged it needed three international bailouts. Only last year, after experiencing extreme austerity and reform, did it begin to see success; the Greek stock market, for example, performed the best in the world.

Even more, in March as the coronavirus pandemic began to strike, its people were well prepared to spring into action. Early on, Greece shuttered much of its society and citizens diligently followed government officials in honoring the rules of a lockdown. The resiliency that Greeks had built up was put to good use. The country has one of Europe’s lowest death rates per capita from COVID-19, a result of new social discipline and better faith in institutions. “We have matured,” Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis told Kathimerini newspaper.

As Greece carefully now opens its economy, it will need to draw on its renewed civic trust and its ability to adapt and learn. The country is highly dependent on foreign tourism, an industry that may be among the slowest to recover. It must again deal with high unemployment.

Still, because of their success against the coronavirus, Greeks now display a unity and confidence that will help them tackle the new challenge. Much of Europe is watching Greece, not as a black sheep but as a strong example.

Resiliency is more than bouncing back to the status quo after a disaster. It is the ability to adopt new ideas and practices that strengthen a person or a community. Former World Trade Organization Director-General Pascal Lamy says resiliency is a reflection of society’s religious and cultural attributes, or what he calls “mental representations.” These traits are the hidden shock absorbers during a crisis. Merely being efficient in either business or government is not enough, he says.

Communities that thrive after a disaster have already built up strong social ties. Strangers are ready to help strangers. Trials are not seen as a matter of chance but as opportunities to grow. Individuals often expand their thinking about their purpose. Like Greece, societies that gain in maturity are able to take on each new crisis.


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.

After experiencing the largest lockdown in Europe, Italy recently announced plans to begin easing restrictions on social interactions and to slowly reopen its economy. Here’s an article by a woman who shares how certain universal, spiritual ideas have helped her find peace amid the coronavirus pandemic.


A message of love

Aly Song/Reuters
The Shanghai Disneyland park reopened Monday after a three-month closure, the first Disney theme park to do so in the world. Tickets for opening day sold out in minutes. Above, a visitor takes a selfie at Shanghai Disney Resort May 11, 2020.

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Tomorrow, in the next installment of our Navigating Uncertainty series, we’ll look at people continuing to push for rights in countries where the Arab Spring feels like a distant memory.

Finally, we’re working on a project highlighting personal stories for Memorial Day. Tell us about your loved one by filling out our form or emailing us at engage@csps.com. We’d love to hear from you. 

More issues

2020
May
11
Monday

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