2020
May
26
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 26, 2020
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Sometimes, all you need is a daughter’s love – and a bike – to carry you home.

The coronavirus lockdown in India has forced millions to flee the cities to their home villages, where family networks offer a safety net. But one father-daughter journey home – a tale of courage and persistence – has captivated the nation. 

Fifteen-year-old Jyoti Kumari pedaled a secondhand bicycle some 700 miles with her dad, Mohan Paswan, riding on the back. He’d injured his foot, so they couldn’t walk. They had no money. They slept by the road and relied on the kindness of strangers for food. 

The father was mocked by passersby, reported The Wire, for letting a girl carry him. After 10 days, they arrived home exhausted. But wait, there’s more. As their fame spread, Jyoti was invited to try out for India’s national cycling team. “I’m elated, I really want to go,” she told The New York Times.

One reporter compared her to Shravan Kumar, a character in the Ramayana epic. A pilgrimage to holy sites in old age, says Hindu belief, purifies the soul. But Shravan Kumar, the tale goes, was broke. So, he put each of his parents in a basket tied to either end of a bamboo pole that he carried over his shoulder.

The analogy works, Mr. Paswan told The Tribune. “The journey back home has been nothing short of a pilgrimage. Having arrived feels like salvation.” 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Patrik Jonsson/The Christian Science Monitor
People visiting Tybee Island, Georgia, on May 25, 2020, appear to be maintaining social distancing guidelines even as executive orders have expired. But masks are few and far between. Personal behavior and the weather will be two keys to the shape of the pandemic recovery, experts say.

Georgia’s rapid reopening one month ago had health officials predicting a new wave of COVID-19 cases. So far that hasn’t happened. Our reporter looks for clues the state may hold for the rest of the U.S.

Navigating uncertainty

The search for global bearings
Ryan Lenora Brown/The Christian Science Monitor
During a break between classes, children play in the courtyard of the primary school in Salahley, a village near the Somaliland capital of Hargeisa. The school was constructed by an NGO called Garoodi, which receives money directly from Somalilanders in the diaspora.

“Going it alone” means one thing to nationalist leaders bucking global trends – and quite another in Somaliland. We go there for lessons on self-sufficiency and nation building. Part 8 in our global series “Navigating Uncertainty.”

Jacob Turcotte/Staff
SpaceX/AP
NASA astronaut Robert Behnken poses in his spacesuit at SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, California. On May 27, 2020, he and Douglas Hurley are scheduled to board a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and, equipment and weather permitting, shoot into space.

Wednesday’s launch is not simply the return of Americans going to space from U.S. soil. We’re also witnessing a new era in private space flight, and an inspiring testament to the continuity of scientific progress.

Our next story offers a snapshot of minority-run businesses in one neighborhood: how some are creatively surviving, and how much the second round of paycheck protection funds are helping.

Difference-maker

When someone takes a risk to help others, what motivates him? We spoke to a Hindu monk and social activist who says his work to stop bonded labor and religious intolerance has been inspired by his own spiritual transformation. 


The Monitor's View

AP
Officials in Lincoln, Neb., prepare mail-in ballots for the state’s May 12 primary.

The warm weather of an election year has arrived in the United States without the usual pageantry of democracy. Bus tours, rallies, and rope lines are all on hold. The party nominating conventions are in doubt. That may be welcome news to some. Opinion polls in recent years have shown that two-thirds of voters think elections last far too long. The first candidate entered the current presidential race 1,194 days before Election Day – twice as early as the first candidate four years ago. In Japan, campaigns are limited by law to 12 days.

The pandemic’s disruption of normal campaign activity has further sharpened the partisan tenor of the contest. It also has raised concerns about the integrity of the November ballot. The once-normal and healthy encounters between candidates and voters, played out in passion and poignancy, humor and gaffes, have given way to exaggerated barbs on social media and in political advertising. The prospect of mail-in voting has divided Republicans and Democrats in Washington even as some governors from both parties embrace it.

Beneath all that, the coronavirus crisis has underscored the resilience of many democracies at a time when the ideal of self-government appears to be faltering around the world.

A report published by Cambridge University in January, based on 3,500 country surveys from 1973 to the present, found that popular dissatisfaction with democracy had reached a global high by the start of 2020, particularly in developed democracies. Then the pandemic hit, and the contrasting reactions by governments have accentuated the same factors that affect how people view democracy. The Cambridge report found high public satisfaction with political institutions that are transparent, responsive, and free of corruption during a period of shock.

In Europe, Switzerland, Denmark, and the Netherlands stand out. The list extends to most Asian democracies, which saw strong public confidence in how government responded to COVID-19. Such countries met the pandemic with institutional capacity, science, transparency, and compassion. The key factor, writes scholar Francis Fukuyama in The Atlantic, is “whether citizens trust their leaders, and whether those leaders preside over a competent and effective state.”

That lesson should not be lost in the U.S. during an election campaign shaped by the challenge of COVID-19. A recent Pew survey found nearly 3 out of 4 voters feel that low trust in government – and in one another – makes it harder to solve urgent public problems.

Even without the usual rituals of campaigning, the 2020 election still provides an essential opportunity to affirm the tools that strengthen American democracy and heal a public health crisis. How the election is held may be as important as who wins.


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.

Especially in light of efforts to contain the coronavirus through physical distancing, it can seem that we’re being cut off from means of support and comfort. But as one woman found during a time of uncertainty about her future, we can always turn to God for comfort and guidance that light the way forward.


A message of love

Loren Elliott/Reuters
Children return to Homebush West Public School in Sydney May 25, 2020 for the first day back for New South Wales public schools. Some 86% of students were in class the first day schools reopened after a two-month shutdown to battle the coronavirus. Australia, with a low death toll of just over 100 people, has been lauded for its handling of the pandemic.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow. We’re working on an inspiring story about a sidewalk tenor in Seattle. 

Here’s a window on some of the faster-moving headline news that we’re following. 

More issues

2020
May
26
Tuesday

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