2022
February
25
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 25, 2022
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I was in the fifth grade. It was recess. A friend and I were playing by the jungle gym, and for whatever reason we were talking about kitchen appliances. I distinctly remember referring to the thing you use for baking as an “oh-ven,” rhymes with “woven.” My friend laughed and corrected me. 

Apparently, it was pronounced “uh-ven,” like “lovin’.” 

My friend hadn’t been cruel about it, but I was mortified. I took pride in my English, even at that age. I had this sense, unarticulated but powerful, that if only I could get my accent right, if only I could sound American enough, I would automatically belong in my new California town – never mind that I’d been raised in the Philippines. 

In producing the Monitor’s new podcast, “Say That Again?” I’ve unearthed a bunch of memories like this: moments when I affixed a sense of self-worth to the way I spoke. They’re mostly small moments, but together they show how deeply I’ve tied my identity to how I talk.

That’s why my co-host, Jingnan Peng, and I started this podcast. We wanted to understand some of the ways that accents, languages, and voices influence how we see ourselves and one another. (Jing, who’s from China, has also thought a lot about this.) What we found were profoundly personal stories about people fighting prejudice, forging connections, and finding pride in their own voices. 

These stories have made us think about what meaningful communication looks like in a diverse world. About times when we stopped hearing what someone had to say because we were so caught up in how they were saying it. And they reminded us that there’s so much to celebrate about all the ways we talk. 

We hope you check out the podcast. You can find our weekly episodes at csmonitor.com/saythatagain.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

It is a paradox of democracy that it can seem both weak and threatening at the same time. Whatever challenges democracy is facing, a Slavic version may have appeared undesirable on Russia’s border.

SOURCE:

Freedom House

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Kevin Lamarque/AP/File
Ketanji Brown Jackson, nominated to be a U.S. circuit judge for the District of Columbia Circuit, is sworn in before a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on pending judicial nominations, April 28, 2021, on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Most Americans know the words by heart: “You have the right to an attorney. If you cannot afford one, one will be provided.” The work of a public defender is enshrined in the U.S. Constitution. Ketanji Brown Jackson could be the first Supreme Court justice to have served in that role.

Umit Bektas/Reuters
A woman and her son look out from an evacuation train to Lviv at Kyiv central train station, Ukraine, Feb. 25, 2022. As Ukraine’s commercial airspace closed with fighting intensifying, hundreds of thousands of Kyiv residents escaped the capital.

With the battle between Russian and Ukrainian troops creeping closer, residents of Kyiv face a dilemma: flee with what they can to safer territory or risk the danger in their homes.

A deeper look

Blair Gable/Reuters
Protesters hold Canadian flags, as the Canadian police work to restore normality to the capital as trucks and demonstrators occupy the downtown core of Ottawa, Ontario, Feb. 19, 2022. Ultimately, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoked the never-before-used Emergencies Act to end the blockade.

How do Canadians rebuild trust in government – and respect for each other – following the “Freedom Convoy” blockade? Understanding the protest’s root causes could be a starting point.

Listen

Illustration by Jules Struck

How two women found the courage to love their true voices

Embracing the way we speak means learning to accept ourselves – our pasts, our peculiarities, our pain. Two women show us what it takes to go down that road. Episode 1 of our new podcast series, “Say That Again?”

Episode 1: You Are How You Sound

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The Monitor's View

Reuters
Demonstrators carry Tunisian flags during a protest against President Kais Saied's seizure of governing powers, in Tunis, Feb. 13.

Eleven years after Tunisia sparked the Arab Spring democratic uprising, its own democracy seems doused by a dictator. Kais Saied, a legal scholar elected as president in 2019, has suspended parliament, granted himself almost total power, and put his main opponents under house arrest. Most importantly, he dissolved a constitutional body of peer-elected judges, lawyers, and legal experts designed to preserve judicial independence.

Justice, he said, is “not a branch of government.”

Amnesty International calls the dismantling of the High Judicial Council “the death knell for judicial independence.” Yet curiously, Mr. Saied said Feb. 24, “We have no intention – but rather we refuse – to interfere in the judiciary. Once again, power is for the people.” Faced with a refusal by many Tunisians to be intimidated by his power grab, the president appeared at least momentarily to blink.

As he spoke yesterday, hundreds of judges and lawyers gathered in Tunis along with a broad array of the general public. They chanted “Freedom! Freedom! The police state is finished” and waved placards. They declared that the dissolution of the judicial council is the destruction of the rule of law.

“Tunisians tore down the wall of fear [in 2011] and they no longer feel intimidated by any form of repression ripped from the pages of the old regime’s authoritarian playbook,” says Noureddine Jebnoun, a political scientist at Georgetown University’s Center for Contemporary Arab Studies. “Notwithstanding democratic reversal, they have already put an end to the disastrous pattern of ‘presidents for life’.”

Since the toppling of the 23-year dictatorship of the late Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali in 2011, Tunisians have consolidated a culture of democracy with successive local and national elections. They approved a new constitution and held a national dialogue about atrocities under the past regime through a Truth and Dignity Commission. In 2015 civil society leaders known as the national quartet won the Nobel Peace Prize for shepherding a consolidation of constitutional reforms.

Those gains may be more durable than the moves by Mr. Saied to roll back democracy. His attempts to consolidate power face strong resistance from frequent and often large protests. Not even police water cannons have deterred protesters in recent weeks.

Confronted by an attempt to roll back the rule of law, Tunisians are showing that when a society is freed from fear and embraces democratic ideals, reversing that progress is difficult. The spark of the Arab Spring has not lost its brilliance.


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.

Artem Hvozdkov/Moment/Getty Images

Wherever we are, whatever we face, God’s goodness is supreme. This spiritual reality offers a powerful basis for our prayers for peace and justice in the world.


A message of love

Radovan Stoklasa/Reuters
A man holding a child reacts as they arrive in Ubla, Slovakia, from Ukraine, after Russia launched a massive military operation against Ukraine, Feb. 25, 2022.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for reading. Come back next week. We’re working on a raft of stories about the invasion of Ukraine, including on the West’s search for leverage against Russia, the role of China, and efforts to keep the conflict from spreading into NATO countries. You can find more of our coverage pulled together here

More issues

2022
February
25
Friday

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