2020
June
22
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 22, 2020
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

It’s another week in which the national conversation will swivel between public health and social justice, against a backdrop of political drama.

What have been some personal approaches to fighting racism? 

Some go all in. Last week, when NBA players were working through how to balance their careers with social justice advocacy, a few observers suggested that attention might also be paid to Maya Moore, a star who decided, pre-pandemic, to sit out the WNBA season to pursue criminal justice reform

Some assist others’ growth. Jeremiah Swift and Ryun King, tattoo artists in Murray, Kentucky, recently began offering a free body-art modification service to patrons who wore inked expressions – symbols, slogans – that no longer reflected who they were. 

“Having anything hate related is completely unacceptable,” Mr. King told CNN. “We just want to make sure everybody has a chance to change.”

Conversations about race are useful, and are now more frequent. But all of us can do more than just talk, says Rhonda Magee, a law professor trained in sociology. In her 2019 book “The Inner Work of Racial Justice,” she prescribes “[staying] in our discomfort long enough to deepen insight,” to bring transformation and healing. 

“We can do better,” she tells Daily Good. “The invitation to mindfully turn toward those things we’ve been trained to think we can’t handle, with confidence and compassion, is how we’ll get there.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Corey Torpie/AP
Jamaal Bowman, a first-time candidate who helped found the Cornerstone Academy of Social Action in 2009, is endorsed by Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in his primary-race challenge to U.S. Rep. Eliot Engel, a 16-term incumbent representing parts of New York City.

A rising challenge to the status quo that cuts across America’s racial, generational, and ideological lines provides a lift for some Black congressional candidates. How will shifts in thought affect voting in a number of districts tomorrow?

Hassene Dridi/AP
Protesters hold posters during a demonstration in Tunis, Tunisia, June 6, 2020, to protest against police violence and the recent killing of George Floyd, an African American who died in police custody in Minneapolis after being restrained by police officers.

Sometimes it takes events abroad to make a society confront its own flaws. Our Middle East correspondent shows how a regional urge to support U.S. racial justice protesters has stirred such an awakening.

Tatyana Makeyeva/Reuters
People watch penguins at the Moscow Zoo on the first day of its reopening, after restrictions to prevent the spread of COVID-19 were eased June 16, 2020.

Here’s another perspective story: Russia’s grappling with the push-pull on how fast to reopen as COVID-19 lingers looks familiar to onlookers from other nations. What’s become clearer in this case: cracks in the political power structure.

A deeper look

The stories within this next story – anchored in New York’s most diverse borough – color a powerful look at mutual-aid work that’s about nothing less than the restoration of human dignity.

Points of Progress

What's going right
Staff
Places where the world saw progress, for the June 29, 2020 Monitor Weekly.

Finally, a survey of some news with uplift. We found examples of real social progress, from a renewed push against anti-Semitism in an old Nazi refuge to architecture in Egypt that reduces the need for electricity-powered cooling. And, yes, scientists shake loose some apple diversity thought to have been lost.

Staff

The Monitor's View

AP
Evony Lloyd of Hagerstown, Md., reads to her 3-year-old daughter during the 21-Day Read Aloud Challenge, March 2. The challenge encourages parents to read to their children for 15 minutes every day for 21 days.

For teachers around the world, one of the unexpected lessons of the COVID-19 lockdown has been that schoolchildren stuck at home in virtual learning love to hear books read aloud. With no physical classrooms for the last nine or so weeks of the school year, kids missed the close interaction with classmates and teachers. Whether in hearing books read to them or in reading books together over a video link, younger students felt the bonds of belonging and the magic of spoken literature.

That lesson in learning is now playing out during the summer break and perhaps the next school year.

This summer, for example, West Virginia plans to distribute 200,000 books to children entering first and second grade while also providing an online reading of the books. Numerous authors have relaxed copyright permissions for teachers to read their books online. Libraries have created YouTube channels for book readings. And many popular authors of children’s books have posted read-alouds online.

The importance of these innovations cannot be overstated. In the United States, the latest survey shows the average reading scores for fourth and eighth graders have dropped since 2017. Children’s literacy should not suffer during what is called the “COVID-19 slide” in education. In Florida, the governor has announced an additional $64 million in spending for teaching reading skills with the goal of having 90% of students be proficient readers by 2024.

Reading is often viewed as a solitary exercise. But for children, the reading of books aloud is an intimate social experience. Its effect on later success is now widely recognized. The percentage of parents reading aloud during a child’s first three months is up nearly 50% since 2014, according to Scholastic’s latest Kids & Family Reading Report.

Books are “imaginative rehearsals for living,” stated novelist George Santayana. They are also a great equalizer in a diverse society. Book reading helps prepare a child for mental liberation from ignorance, fear, and falsehood. With their hunger to listen to books during the pandemic, students have taught educators a valuable lesson.


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.

It can be discouraging when progress seems to be at a standstill. But as a woman experienced when faced with an unrelenting skin condition, the power of God to heal and lead us forward is unstoppable.


A message of love

Raisan Al Farisi/Antara Foto/Reuters
A visitor carries a rainbow umbrella at the White Crater tourist attraction as the government eases restrictions amid the coronavirus outbreak in Bandung, Indonesia, June 22, 2020.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Come back tomorrow. We’ll look at a pair of trends triggered by the pandemic – farms dumping food, and record levels of hunger – and highlight the ingenuity and heart being applied to addressing both problems at once.

Also, a reminder: To see some fast-moving stories that we’re following, visit our regularly updated First Look page.

More issues

2020
June
22
Monday

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