2020
August
24
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 24, 2020
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These are not easy times when it comes to education. But a group of Chicago teens just got a crash course in the power of connection, commitment, and vision to spur positive change – and aced it.

Today, they are officially opening the Austin Harvest pop-up food market on the site of a former liquor store in their underserved West Side neighborhood. Spurred by the protests over the killing of George Floyd, they grappled with how to make a difference while participating in listening circles hosted by By the Hand Kids Club. They homed in on a long-standing problem: poor local access to good food that worsened after looting temporarily shuttered the few local groceries.

The undertaking received $500,000 in backing from current and former pro athletes in Chicago, as well as from By the Hand Kids Club. The Hatchery Chicago helped with the business plan.

Azariah Baker, one of the teens, told Pascal Sabino, who covers Austin for Block Club Chicago, that Austin Harvest was proof of what residents could accomplish when connected with the right resources. And others are starting to more intentionally recognize the importance of that link. In New York, for example, 27 CEOs just launched the New York Jobs CEO Council. Led by Dr. Gail Mellow, former president of LaGuardia Community College, the council has committed to supporting traditionally underserved young New Yorkers with apprenticeships and other pathways to good careers in their firms.

As Ms. Baker noted enthusiastically, “The amount of opportunities that we are creating for ourselves is incredible.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Chris Carlson/AP
Delegates begin to arrive for the first day of the Republican National Convention on Aug. 24, 2020, in Charlotte, North Carolina. The gathering has been scaled down due to the coronavirus.

Most voters disapprove of how the president has handled the virus. His reelection may hinge on whether he can change that – favorably contrasting his approach to COVID-19 and the economy with that of Democrats.  

Once seen as a force for the disenfranchised, Hezbollah is now seen as central to Lebanon’s woes, a target of protesters’ fury in the wake of a devastating explosion in Beirut Aug. 4. 

Q&A

Noah Berger/AP
Matt Nichols sprays water while trying to save his home as the LNU Lightning Complex fires tear through Vacaville, California, on Aug. 19, 2020. Fire crews across the region scrambled to contain dozens of wildfires sparked by lightning strikes as a statewide heat wave continues.

In this next story, we speak to three wildfire experts about California. They told him what’s needed are not more preventive plans – but agreement on preventive action.

Difference-maker

Lori King/Courtesy of IWMF
Mona Al-Hayani displays signs for the international festival that she started 13 years ago in one of Ohio’s most culturally diverse schools, the Toledo Early College High School, Jan. 24, 2020.

Battling human trafficking effectively means getting the respect of the community. That’s what this Ohio teacher did – starting in classrooms and reaching out from there. 

Books

Summer travel may be limited this year, but a trove of book offerings promises to transport readers to far-flung destinations – and time periods. Our reviewers’ picks for August feature rousing historical fiction, a quirky travelogue, a searing exposé, and the biography of a controversial government figure. 


The Monitor's View

AP
Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, former candidate for the Belarus' presidential elections, listens during a news conference in Lithuania, Aug. 21.

One tool for a country to express soft power in the world these days is through hospitality toward endangered pro-democracy dissidents. The welcoming kindness can change the course of events, not to mention save lives.

The latest example of hospitality as diplomacy comes from Germany. Last week it provided a medical rescue for Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny after he was poisoned in Siberia. (France also offered to take him in.) He joins other prominent democrats-in-exile in Berlin, such as the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei.

The United States is now providing a haven for Cai Xia, a former teacher in the Chinese Communist Party’s ideological school. Last week, she was expelled from the party and stripped of her pension after referring to party leader Xi Jinping as a “mafia boss” and for advocating for democracy. “I’ve regained my freedom,” says Ms. Cai, who has also gained a safe base from which to advocate for reform in China.

Spain is providing a home for Venezuela’s would-be president, Leopoldo López, at its embassy in Caracas. Several European nations are offering a base for Syria’s pro-democracy leaders. Taiwan, Britain, and Canada have become popular destinations for Hong Kong’s fleeing democrats. After Beijing imposed a national security law on the territory in July, the U.S. Congress took up a bill that would fast track asylum applications for people from Hong Kong.

Hospitality among freedom-loving countries provides a moral counterpoint to the brutal suppression of dictatorships. “I’ve forgotten what a normal life is like,” said Hong Kong dissident Tyrant Lau after arriving in democratic Taiwan.

In Belarus, the current repression of protests by strongman Alexander Lukashenko after a rigged election has led Lithuania and Poland to open their borders to escaping democratic leaders.

“We appreciate the Polish government, Poland itself for your hospitality, for letting us in and for supporting us in this difficult time,” said Belarusian opposition activist Veronika Tsepkalo, who has joined her husband in exile.

Tiny Lithuania, with a population of 2.8 million, has become a place of refuge for Belarusians in exile. The most famous is schoolteacher Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, the presumed winner of the Aug. 9 election. She fled after the election and now uses her base in Lithuania to guide a democratic revolution in Belarus.

This type of open-handed acceptance among democracies befits the original meaning of hospitality in Greek – “taking care of strangers.” Nations have been set free because of it. As a tool for soft power, kindness can have real power.


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.

Sometimes circumstances may seem so overwhelming that we feel the pull of hopelessness or despair. But as a woman found when a tornado went through her town, God’s love is right here to comfort, calm, and guide us forward.


A message of love

Mike De Sisti/Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel/AP
Protestors confront Kenosha County Sheriff's deputies outside the Kenosha Police Department in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Sunday, Aug. 23, 2020. Kenosha police shot a man Sunday evening, setting off unrest in the city after a video appeared to show the officer firing several shots at close range into the man's back.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Please join us again tomorrow, when staff writer Francine Kiefer will look at what's being done to improve online learning for the new school year. 

More issues

2020
August
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