2021
October
04
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 04, 2021
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How do you “see” silence?

For photographer Pete McBride, who has documented the world’s remotest spots, it’s about understanding that a place derives its beauty as much from its soundscape as from its visual power – something we caught glimpses of amid pandemic quiet.

Mr. McBride’s focus is “natural silence” – what emerges when the human cacophony doesn’t drown out birdsong, or the rush of wind and water. It’s about “exploring ... the importance of natural sounds ... which in many places we’re sadly losing, as we’ve created such a noisy planet,” he told the radio show “1A” in an interview about his new collection of photos and essays, “Seeing Silence: The Beauty of the World’s Most Quiet Places.”

It’s widely accepted that natural sound informs our sense of well-being. But it’s increasingly scarce. In 1984, “audio ecologist” Gordon Hempton found 21 places in Washington state that had no human-made noise for 15 minutes or more at a stretch. By 2007, he found three. Today, he says such spots are rare across the United States and Europe.  

Then came COVID-19 lockdowns, producing what Science magazine called “the longest ... global seismic noise reduction in recorded history.” Cities were less clamorous. Sparrows, no longer needing to “shout,” famously began to sing more operatically.

Will those monastery-like moments have staying power? Last year, Quiet Parks International recognized the world’s first urban quiet park, in Taiwan. As Mr. McBride puts it, “I hope these photos can serve as reminders of what the natural world has to tell us – if we listen.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Is the law really the law, if changes in personnel result in dramatic change? That’s the question Americans are grappling with as a momentous Supreme Court term opens this week.

Dane Rhys/Reuters
Construction workers install actuators for tilting panels at the Duette solar site, which is being developed on previously agricultural land in Bowling Green, Florida, March 24, 2021. Solar and agricultural land use can overlap, but there is rising demand for flat, open properties where solar panels can feed power to U.S. electric grids.

Can you "farm" solar power? Across the United States, more farmers are looking with fresh eyes at their flat, sunny land and shifting their answer toward “yes.”

Points of Progress

What's going right
Staff

A preschooler and a Jazz Age icon are two symbols of progress in this week’s roundup. Their families argued for recognition and against discrimination – and won.

Staff
Courtesy of Zikra Initiative
A Jordanian woman takes part in the harvest of wheat grown in western Amman, Jordan, through the Al Barakeh wheat project in the summer of 2021.

Jordan’s “wheat is a blessing” initiative seeks to revive cultivation of a hearty ancient wheat. At stake are food security, self-sufficiency, and appreciation for a fast-disappearing pastoral culture.


The Monitor's View

AP
President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen speaks while on a visit to six Western Balkan countries in September.

Leaders of the European Union say they want to “step up” the EU’s role in the world. Some seek “strategic autonomy” from the United States. Yet at a summit Wednesday, the 27-nation bloc will try to patch a big hole in its own efforts to create a unified Continent. It will again consider whether to admit six states in the western Balkans, perhaps within the next decade.

That southeast corner of Europe remains a hotbed of ethnic and religious nationalism, or exactly why the EU was created after World War II. In a tour of the region last week, the president of the EU’s executive arm, Ursula von der Leyen, told local leaders the main reason for a delay in the promised membership – a promise made 18 years ago:

“It is clear that the region has to build the most important bridge of all – and that is the bridge of reconciliation. We count on you to cross this difficult, but so beautiful, so necessary bridge of reconciliation. We owe it to the victims of the past conflicts that have torn this beautiful region, and we owe it to the youth that have a European dream.”

Balkan nations have made some progress to integrate with the EU project. Slovenia and Croatia have already joined. Three others – Albania, Serbia, and North Macedonia – pledged in July to bolster economic integration among themselves by ending border controls in 2023. Kosovo, Bosnia- Herzegovina, and Montenegro still have problems, such as corruption, that hold them back.

The EU itself is divided over admitting new members. It has yet to recover from Britain’s exit or a financial crisis more than a decade ago. Yet it places long-term security in a Europe united around ideals of freedom and equality, something still missing in parts of the Balkans. It also eyes Russia’s attempts to influence the region toward its model of authoritarian rule.

In a report last year, the EU said that a “credible enlargement policy is a geostrategic investment in peace, stability, security and economic growth in the whole of Europe.” The Oct. 6 summit is an opportunity to make good on that investment. The EU’s power of attraction provides a strong incentive for the people of the Balkans to finally reconcile their differences.


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 it can seem that our ability to productively and meaningfully contribute to society is at the mercy of factors beyond our control. But the realization that we all have a God-given purpose and identity opens the door to fresh opportunities and capabilities.


A message of love

Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
A lake in the shape of a heart is seen surrounded by autumn-colored trees outside Balashikha, Moscow region, Russia, Oct. 4, 2021. The picture was taken with a drone.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow, in addition to perusing your Daily, please join us for a free, online conversation titled “Overcoming adversity: How the pandemic revealed resilience.” Register for the Oct. 5 discussion, at noon ET, at www.CSMonitor.com/resilience. We look forward to seeing you there!

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2021
October
04
Monday

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