2021
September
16
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 16, 2021
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Once you see the word, you start seeing it everywhere: resilience. If 2020 was the year of turmoil, 2021 might well be the year of resilience. There’s the need for individual resilience amid the pandemic or natural disasters, and there’s a push to build a broader resilience in communities and countries – helping them weather climate change, political dysfunction, or economic shocks.

In that spirit, this week we launch our newest project, Finding Resilience. It seeks out where resilience is operating and chronicles how people are finding it in themselves and their neighbors. In doing so, we’re also making a statement: Resilience is not about teeth-gritted willpower. Nor does resilience accept the tragic or unjust conditions that kindle it. Resilience is essential to progress. 

In some cases, maybe a solution emerges. In others, the challenges might remain. But resilience is about finding growth and meaningful victories even amid tribulation. It is the beginning of change. Take our recent stories about seniors finding renewal and the Bronx leaning on a deep sense of community during the pandemic. Or our “Stronger” podcast on women who reinvented themselves despite the pandemic’s disproportionate economic impact. Today, former Monitor Editor Marshall Ingwerson weighs in with a column on collective resilience after Hurricane Ida. 

Our founder, Mary Baker Eddy, said the Monitor must “bless all mankind.” In Finding Resilience, we hope to offer evidence that the strength and confidence to move forward is already in all of us. You can find our Finding Resilience stories in the weeks ahead here


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

What is Sen. Joe Manchin thinking? The Democrat holds the fate of President Joe Biden’s signature bill in his hands. But don’t expect that to faze him – or influence him.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff/File
Afghan girls study at school, before the Taliban regained power last month. The U.S. will not abandon efforts to export its values, say experts, even in the wake of failure in Afghanistan and Iraq. But Washington will likely not back such projects with major military force.

After Iraq and Afghanistan, nation building as a U.S. military enterprise is out of favor. But the desire to export democracy and social norms is deeply rooted.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff/File
Children eat a porridge made of rice, marrow, dried shrimp, carrots, oil, and iodized salt during a nutrition class for mothers by local nonprofit Asa Soa, on May 30, 2017, in Antsirabe, Madagascar. Nearly half of all children in Madagascar are chronically malnourished.

Climate-related drought has pushed Madagascar to the brink of famine, serving as a global warning. How Madagascar handles its crisis could be a model of adaptation.

Finding Resilience

Chris Granger/The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate/AP
Donrell Breaux, center, helps roofing contractors install a temporary roof on a home in New Orleans East, Sept. 8, 2021. FEMA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are overseeing this Blue Roof program to help homeowners recover from the damage cause by Hurricane Ida.

We know the power of individual resilience in the face of difficulty. But Hurricane Ida revealed how New Orleans has become more resilient collectively. It’s a more common story than you might think.

Essay

Linda Bleck

The most valuable lessons in school may not be what’s in the curriculum, but what one learns along the way.


The Monitor's View

AP
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron attend a ceremony in Paris on Nov. 11, 2018.

When the leaders of France and Germany hold a working dinner tonight at Elysée Palace in Paris, much of what the European Union stands for will be on the table. For German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the dinner will be her last official tête-à-tête with French President Emmanuel Macron. She steps down after the Sept. 26 elections in Germany. During her 16 years in office – and after consulting with four different French presidents – Ms. Merkel has made sure the bloc’s two most powerful economies work in tandem to protect Europe’s postwar project of peace.

The future of the 27-nation union so depends on French-German consensus that two of the leading candidates to replace Ms. Merkel in Berlin visited Mr. Macron in recent days to show their pro-EU credentials. And she has done such a good job at keeping the EU unified during difficult crises that a plurality of the French would choose her as EU president over Mr. Macron, according to a recent poll.

Yet the same poll also found most Germans do not see their country as the EU’s leading power. It is precisely this odd-couple harmony between Europe’s two giants that helps the EU remain a beacon for democratic values.

France, especially under Mr. Macron, has had a strong vision for Europe’s future, such as his idea of a military force to match the United States’. Germany, especially under Ms. Merkel, seeks to simply defend and solidify the EU against internal rifts, such as Brexit and the euro crisis. The two leaders have accepted a co-responsibility to overcome their differences, resulting in their nickname “Merkron.”

Their respect toward each other and ability to speak as one reflect the very qualities that have suppressed the kind of militant nationalism that led to two world wars and then the need for the EU. Their dinner tonight will focus on a few tough issues, such as Afghanistan and a terrorist threat in North Africa. Tackling those issues will be made easier by leaders who practice active peacemaking between their countries.


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.

Willingness to go beyond a surface-level view of existence and seek God’s truth opens the door to treasures of inspiration and healing.


A message of love

Sakchai Lalit/AP
Miniature gardens sit on unused taxis parked in Bangkok, Sept. 16, 2021. Taxi fleets in Thailand are giving new meaning to the term “rooftop garden,” as they utilize the roofs of cabs idled by the coronavirus crisis to serve as small vegetable plots and raise awareness about the plight of out-of-work drivers.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when Scott Peterson looks at what it’s like to be a journalist under the Taliban. Many have left, but some have stayed, risking beatings and worse to tell Afghans’ stories.

More issues

2021
September
16
Thursday

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