2021
July
09
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 09, 2021
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

That’s what 14-year-old Zaila Avant-garde was Thursday night – amazing. Also “astounding,” “incredible,” and “victorious.” She became the first African American competitor to win the Scripps National Spelling Bee, and the second Black champion in the bee’s 96-year history.

Her winning word was “murraya,” a genus of tropical trees. She got it right and then twirled happily in a rain of celebratory confetti.

Spelling is not Zaila’s only talent. She’s a world-class basketball dribbler. She can divide four-digit numbers by two-digit numbers in her head.

But the national spelling bee final is full of talented teens and tweens. That may be its defining characteristic – it’s the Super Bowl of kids who read the dictionary, the Olympics of young Scrabble fans. Like the Olympics, it is both a competition and an opportunity for participants to make friends and form a community with like-minded people.

Bee organizers have long fostered this association with group activities. Entrants have received official autograph books and been encouraged to collect as many signatures as they can, given that some among them may grow up to be celebrities.

Due to the pandemic, this year’s bee was more limited. But many participants were happy it was held at all, after cancellation in 2020.

“Thank you so much for this opportunity. ... We really needed the spelling bee this year,” said Avani Joshi, an Illinois teen, after elimination on the word “gewgaw.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Jose Luis Gonzalez/Reuters
A U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent speaks with a migrant from Central America who was previously sent back to Mexico under Title 42, in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, on June 15, 2021. The Biden administration is planning to phase out Title 42, a pandemic-related restriction that has allowed the U.S. government to turn back most migrants before they can seek asylum.

Ending Trump-era restrictions at the border while trying to chart a middle-of-the-road immigration policy, President Joe Biden has struggled to please either side.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Startling heat waves around the world have lent urgency to calls for action to slow global warming. Will they suffice to convince governments to change their fossil fuel ways?

A letter from

Colorado
Henry Nicholls/Reuters
Fans show a flag of St. George's Cross atop a bus as they celebrate England's victory over Denmark in the European Championship semifinal in London's Piccadilly Circus on July 7, 2021.

After more than a half-century, England is in a major soccer championship final, and the country is overjoyed. But for Britons like correspondent Shafi Musaddique, it’s not just about the football.

Nick Roll
The author (left) sits with his host parents Mamadou Mbodj (center) and Senabou Ndour in Dakar, Senegal, August 2020.

Young adults strive to be independent, but this author finds parents hard to escape – whether his own or host parents in Senegal. Is it love or obligation he feels? Perhaps it’s joy, too?

Watch

Worked over by pandemic, these women reach for recovery

Most accounts of the pandemic’s effect on women focus on career losses and the depth of the setback. Our new podcast centers on stories of resilience, reinvention, and hope. Watch the trailer below. 

Stronger: a podcast celebrating working women


The Monitor's View

Reuters
The Blue Nile River is seen as the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam reservoir fills near the Ethiopia-Sudan border in November 2020.

Two nations along the Nile’s waters, Egypt and Ethiopia, are preparing their militaries for what could be history’s first outright war over water. Tensions between the two are at their highest this week after Ethiopia began the second stage of filling its Grand Renaissance Dam, raising the risk of a water shortage for downstream Egyptians. The prospect of war even led to an urgent session of the U.N. Security Council on Thursday.

The United Nations was able to accomplish little. But a spokesman, Stéphane Dujarric, said, “Solutions to this need to be guided by example ... by solutions that have been found for others who share waterways, who share rivers, and that is based on the principle of equitable and reasonable utilization and the obligation not to cause significant harm.”

One good example showed up this week. On July 8, Israel sealed a deal with Jordan to sell it 50 million cubic meters of water, the largest such sale of water since the two neighbors signed a peace treaty in 1994. The agreement was finalized days after a secret meeting in Amman between Jordan’s King Abdullah II and Israel’s new prime minister, Naftali Bennett. Jordan is one of the world’s most water-deficient countries with most of its aquifers declining fast. Israel is perhaps the world’s most water-efficient nation and a leader in desalinization technology.

The pact signals more than better ties between Israel and one of its Arab neighbors. It reflects other moves in the Middle East and North Africa where climate variability and access to water supplies are increasingly seen as central to security concerns. The region is home to 6% of the world’s population, yet less than 2% of its renewable water. It is also home to 12 of the world’s most water-scarce countries.

Frequent droughts, along with population growth, have made the region much more open to collaboration than to conflict. Last year’s peace accord between Israel and a few Gulf States, for example, has led to cooperation on building desalinization plants. Some experts say a severe drought in Iran could be making it more amenable to settling disputes over its nuclear program and ending the war in Yemen.

Water diplomacy has become a necessity in the Middle East. Like water itself, it can extinguish the flames of conflict between nations – like those possibly between Ethiopia and Egypt. All that is needed are better examples of finding mutual interest in sharing a natural resource.


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 to-do lists can feel overwhelming. But God has given each of us the grace, patience, and creativity we need to accomplish what we need to.


A message of love

Samir Bol/Reuters
South Sudanese people celebrate as the country marks its 10th anniversary of independence, in Juba, South Sudan, on July 9, 2021. For a look at the role language plays in this young nation, click below to read our 2018 article "Voice of a nation: How Juba Arabic helps bridge a factious South Sudan."
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Come back Monday, when we’ll have a story on the many meanings of the Olympic Games for a Japanese town hit hard by the 2011 tsunami. 

More issues

2021
July
09
Friday

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