2020
December
01
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 01, 2020
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How can we reduce the friction in our politics? In his book “Divided We Fall,” David French recommends embracing three ideals: justice, mercy, and humility.

The conservative intellectual speaks from experience. After he and his wife adopted a girl from Ethiopia in 2010, they noticed how others in their Tennessee community occasionally treated their African American daughter differently from their two biological children. (Read our story today about other transracial adoption experiences.) Moreover, when Mr. French publicly refused to support Donald Trump during the 2016 election, alt-right agitators sent his family racist images – including one of their daughter inside a gas chamber. He went from someone who touted the tremendous progress that America has made on race relations to someone who believes we still have some ways to go

“Between slavery and Jim Crow – 345 years of legally enforced racial discrimination defended by violence – it’s going to take a long time to unwind the effects of that,” says Mr. French in a phone interview.

But, he adds, it’s easy to claim to know exactly how to do that and then arrogantly spurn those who disagree with your approach.

“The quest for justice, untempered by civility and untempered by mercy, can tear us apart,” says the writer. “Walking into a public policy debate with humility and knowing that you don’t have all the answers is going to foster a degree of mercy and kindness. And that doesn’t mean that you back away from the quest for justice. ... It just means you’re approaching it from the proper mindset.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The arrival of any new presidential administration often brings talk of “pivots” and “resets” in foreign policy. But what might foreign policy look like after Jan. 20? The president-elect’s choice for secretary of state offers some clues. 

Elijah Nouvelage/Reuters/File
Attendees wear pro-Trump clothing and accessories at President Donald Trump's Black Voices for Trump Coalition rollout event in Atlanta on Nov. 8, 2019. Mr. Trump's gains with Black voters in 2020 revived questions of whether Democrats have lost touch with America's working class.

For decades, Black communities have allied themselves with the Democratic Party. But in this year’s election, Republicans made notable gains with Black voters. Our reporter explores which messages resonated with them and what it means for American politics.

A deeper look

Courtesy of April Dinwoodie
April Dinwoodie (third from the left) gathers with her parents at their New England home in the summer of 2019, along with her brother and sister, their spouses, and her nieces and nephews.

Amid a nationwide debate over the motives and ethics of transracial adoption, our reporter talked to Black adoptees and white parents. She found stories of extraordinary love, and painful struggles to fit in.

The Explainer

Parler, a relatively recent social media startup, touts itself as a platform for free speech. It’s gaining momentum as a haven for conservatives who don’t feel welcome on Twitter and Facebook. What will be the impact of a new conversational silo? 

Books

From “Wild Symphony” Copyright © 2020 Dan Brown; Illustration by Susan Batori

Did you know that Dan Brown, author of “The Da Vinci Code,” has written a book for kids? Our roundup of the best new story-time reads includes several books about embracing outsiders. 


The Monitor's View

AP
A Tigrayan woman who fled the conflict in Ethiopia prays at a church in a refugee camp in Sudan, Nov. 29.

Just in the past decade, the number of international migrants has risen nearly sixfold, a global mixing of people unlike any time in recent history. All the more reason then to watch a new civil war in one of the world’s most diverse nations – Ethiopia. The future of democracies depends increasingly on how such countries hold together their multiethnic societies.

The monthlong conflict between Ethiopia’s government and a rebellious minority, the Tigrays, threatens its long-term attempts at political harmony among 10 ethnic regions. It also threatens stability across the Horn of Africa as tens of thousands of civilians have fled the fighting.

How the war ends will determine if Ethiopia can hold together as a country. Many foreign governments are pushing for a negotiated settlement. For now, the war is more about how it began and whether opportunities to keep the peace were missed.

On Nov. 4 the well-armed leaders of the predominantly Tigray ethnic state, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), allegedly attacked a national military base near the region’s capital, Mekelle. Just weeks before, they also held an election in defiance of central authorities. Faced with such belligerence, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed chose to deploy the military – rather than any peaceful alternative – to quell the rebellion.

Mr. Abiy came into office in 2018 vowing to form a more united democracy. An ethnic Oromo, his ascent marked a power shift away from the Tigrayans, who make up 6% of the population but held an outsize grip in the nation’s capital for nearly three decades. Tensions have been rising since Mr. Abiy systemically displaced Tigrayans from political positions and the military.

The prime minister treats the Tigrayan rebellion as an illegal attack on Ethiopian sovereignty. His predecessor, Hailemariam Desalegn, underscored the futility of dialogue with the TPLF in an essay in Foreign Policy last week. He argued that Tigrayan leaders – his erstwhile colleagues – provoked the conflict to manipulate international mediation in an effort to regain influence through peace talks.

In seeking a decisive military victory, Mr. Abiy has stoked already escalating ethnic tensions elsewhere. In recent months, an estimated 2.5 million Ethiopians have been displaced by violence. Three days before the Tigray rebellion, at least 54 people were killed in a schoolyard in Oromia, another ethnostate.

Mr. Abiy’s harsh response surprised many people. He won the Nobel Peace Prize a year ago for negotiating an end to a 20-year military stalemate with Eritrea. Ethiopian troops serve in U.N. peacekeeping missions. As the war nears a resolution, Ethiopia must look for fresh solutions in other African countries that have erupted in inter-ethnic warfare. South Africa, Rwanda, Burundi, Nigeria, and Mozambique have all faced similar challenges. Each in its own way grappled with building what Mr. Abiy himself calls a “social compact” that creates a “just, egalitarian, democratic, and humane society.”

If he sees the conflict in Tigray as a necessary step to protecting that vision, victory under arms requires a corresponding strength: the wisdom and courage to forge an identity beyond ethnic difference that embraces all Ethiopians in peace.


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.

On Giving Tuesday, a global generosity movement, this article highlights our innate ability to express selflessness and love toward others – and the blessings that doing so brings to all involved.


A message of love

Global Animal Welfare Organization/Reuters
Kaavan the elephant touches trunks with another elephant at a sanctuary in Oddar Meanchey Province in Cambodia, Dec. 1, 2020. It was Kaavan’s first contact with another pachyderm in eight years. Dubbed “the world’s loneliest elephant,” he had languished in a zoo in Islamabad, Pakistan, until animal rights advocates and Cher helped find him sanctuary. Tuesday was his first day in his new home.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for reading today’s package of stories. Tomorrow we’re going to introduce you to the 17-year-old who launched a unique philanthropic startup. His 250 volunteers are teaching computer skills to hundreds of students. 

More issues

2020
December
01
Tuesday

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