2020
July
27
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 27, 2020
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It’s amazing how life-altering – and far-reaching – a modest effort to break pandemic ennui can be.

Take the young man who, while browsing recently in the ReMARKable Cleanouts warehouse in Norwood, Massachusetts, asked if he could play a piano – and charmed shoppers with Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin’.” A worker posted the moment to Facebook, and soon a much larger audience was smiling, some offering to buy him the piano. ReMARKable owner Mark Waters decided to gift an even better one – if he could figure out who the player behind the face mask and hoodie was. He did a local news interview – and John Capron came forward.

“I didn’t know I affected so many people,” mused Mr. Capron, an architecture student and self-taught pianist. Mr. Waters couldn’t stop smiling: “If you can bring [a piano] into somebody else’s life and bring it back to life, God bless America,” he told WCVB Channel 5. “That’s what life’s about.”

Or take Chang Wan-ji and Hsu Sho-er, whose dry cleaning business in Taichung, Taiwan, slowed amid the pandemic. Their grandson, Reef Chang, convinced them to model abandoned clothing items on Instagram to buoy their spirits – and what started as a playful diversion has delighted a global audience who send messages, and local customers who visit more. Chang Wan-ji says he hopes to inspire his fellow octogenarians to be active.

And his grandson? “Lately, whenever we eat together,” he told The New York Times, “I can tell they’re elated.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Spying accusations and consulate closures speak to an accelerating deterioration of relations. Some experts say action over Chinese spying in the U.S. is long overdue, and a result of new U.S. willingness to confront Beijing.

Eric Gay/AP/File
Terry's Texas Rangers cavalry monument, a regiment of Texas volunteers for the Confederate States Army assembled by Colonel Benjamin Franklin Terry in August 1861, is silhouetted against the Texas State Capitol in Austin, Texas on Aug. 21, 2017.

Sometimes finding a way forward means first confronting the past. In Texas, national scrutiny of law enforcement and historic racism has shined a focused lens on the bloody past of the Texas Rangers.

A letter from

Colorado

In a crisis like COVID-19, where do you turn for help, let alone hope? Amid the pandemic, Pakistani neighbors “watch out for each other the best way we know how,” this writer reflects. And sometimes, no words are needed.

Heidi Levine/Special to The Christian Science Monitor
Arab Israeli politician Iman Khatib Yassin at her home in Yafa an-Naseriyye, outside Nazareth. She is the first Islamic headscarf-wearing woman to be elected to the Israeli parliament.

New Israeli Knesset member Iman Khatib Yassin, a devout Muslim, knows her hijab is eye-catching. But before she became religious, or political, she was a feminist motivated against injustice.


The Monitor's View

Photo by Melanie Stetson Freeman/The Christian Science Monitor
Trees are absent in front of row houses in a low-income neighborhood in Baltimore, Maryland, last year.

In a few U.S. cities, street protests against racial inequities have escalated in the two months since the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. In that city, however, people are trying something else. From pastors to politicians, according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune, they are “working to quell community tensions and exploring new strategies to combat racial injustice.”

One particular effort focuses on bringing people together to reshape the urban landscape – literally. In the city’s racially diverse northern neighborhoods, for example, volunteers and local residents have been working the land since June – planting trees, creating gardens – as an act of social healing.

This urban regreening “is about putting Black, brown, Indigenous, white hands in the soil together,” Jordan Weber, artist-in-residence at the Walker Art Center, told Minnesota Public Radio.

According to various studies, people who live in communities with trees and gardens tend to be closer to one another. A canopy of trees in summer can prevent “heat islands” that drive people off the streets. With more trees, people tend to be outside more where they can meet neighbors. Shared gardens not only root useful plants but also a community. With more natural greenery around them, neighbors have a stake in protecting their environment.

Places without such leafy cohesion have “tree inequity,” according to American Forests, the nation’s oldest conservation organization dedicated to protecting and restoring U.S. forests. Since 2018, the group has launched a campaign to plant trees in marginalized communities.

“A map of tree cover in virtually any city in America is also a map of income and, in many cases, race in ways that transcend income,” writes Jad Daley, president and CEO of American Forests. By 2030, the group wants every neighborhood in the 100 largest cities to reach tree equity, based on a score that combines three indicators: tree canopy, climate projections, and public health data.

Racial inequities have many causes and thus many solutions. Changes are needed, for example, in schools, housing, and police. In Minneapolis, residents are showing an additional route to racial equity – in the shared love and respect of their trees and gardens.


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.

Each of us has a God-given ability to let go of fear, prejudice, and self-justification that would keep us from knowing and doing what’s right.


A message of love

Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution/AP
Justin Mayes spreads rose petals representing blood shed on the Edmund Pettus Bridge for the final crossing of Rep. John Lewis over the bridge, site of the historic 1965 voting rights marches, on July 26, 2020, in Selma, Alabama.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Tomorrow, correspondent Doug Struck will look at an issue that has been on many people's minds: What's happened to recycling amid the pandemic? We hope you'll join us. 

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2020
July
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