2022
May
06
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 06, 2022
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In high school, I had what I considered a fairly good sense of the big problems facing society. 

But if you had asked me how I might solve some of them, I would likely have stared at you blankly. I had been trained to critique the status quo, but rarely asked to think deeply about where to go from there. 

So my ears perked up when I heard about a new essay contest for teenagers. The prompt: What would you most like to improve about your own society, and how would you do it?

The competition is sponsored by Heart of a Nation, a nonprofit that connects Israelis, Palestinians, and Americans with the aim of “bettering, not battering, these societies we love.” 

Submissions, due June 1, can take the form of essays, poems, or songs. Three winners from each society will earn $500, and their pieces will be published in The Jerusalem Post, Al-Quds, and The Christian Science Monitor. Interested in entering, or know someone who might be? Get the details here

“We’re bridging the gap between what needs to be done and what can be done,” says Adina Siff, who suggested the contest as a Heart of a Nation intern last summer. Now, she is its youngest board member (and a recent Monitor contributor). 

Importantly, the contest will be judged by 12 teens, four from each society. These include Mohammed Abuzahra, a computer engineering student in the West Bank who believes in the “butterfly effect.” “Every word you say is meant for someone who will make something of it,” he says. Then there’s Nurit Eskar, who grew up on a kibbutz in southern Israel but says Arabic is one of her favorite classes, and Naomi Meyer, a high school senior and history lover from Maryland, who sees the contest as a chance to build bridges of empathy.

The judges are united by the conviction that progress takes place not in a silo, but shoulder to shoulder with people from “the other side.” 

To those considering submitting, Nurit offers this encouragement: “You’re just you, and you can only speak for yourself. It’s okay to just come as you are and write whatever you feel.”

Looking back (OK, not that long ago), I might have been nudged out of my moderate disillusionment by that message. Maybe it’ll propel today’s teens forward, too.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor
Ukrainian schoolboy Maksym Lunin, 8, and his brother Ruslan, 5, in the Stalin-era vegetable storage cellar behind their house, on the western outskirts of Kramatorsk, Ukraine, April 27, 2022. With Russia stepping up its offensive in the Donbas region, the cellar doubles as the family shelter.

For Ukrainian civilians left in the Donbas region, intensified Russian war pressures have eroded a sense of security. To manage their fears, many focus on their faith – and the work of surviving.

Both sides of the abortion debate say the end of Roe would be just “the beginning.” As California and others try to create havens for reproductive rights, the states may face legal warfare with one another.

Ann Scott Tyson/The Christian Science Monitor
Song Huidi (upper right) and her friend Jiang Xiaoxin (upper left) and their second grade daughters relax in a park in Beijing's Chaoyang District, the center of the city's current COVID-19 outbreak, on May 5, 2022.

China’s zero-COVID-19 regime combines elements that are at once Orwellian and paternalistic. People’s responses to them reveal a lot about Beijingers’ attitudes toward authority. 

Monitor Breakfast

During a Monitor coffee with reporters Thursday, Ambassador Oksana Markarova addressed how Ukraine would define victory in the war.

Film

Marvel Studios/AP
Benedict Cumberbatch as Dr. Stephen Strange in a scene from "Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness."

For Benedict Cumberbatch, acting is all about versatility. The Marvel Cinematic Universe is the most recent beneficiary.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Members of Ukraine's Territorial Defense Forces honor fallen soldiers near Kyiv May 1.

On May 9, Moscow will again celebrate Victory Day, marking the 1945 defeat of Nazi Germany, but this year’s military display in Red Square will be more subdued than in past years. One reason is that the invasion of Ukraine has not gone well. Ten weeks into the war, the Kremlin may be wondering why some 200,000 Russian soldiers and better armaments have not defeated a much smaller enemy.

A big reason is that Russia’s superior numbers are no match for the superior motives of Ukrainian fighters. Not only are Ukrainians defending their country’s sovereignty and know their terrain well; they are more certain than Russian soldiers that they reflect the qualities of their society, such as equality-based rule of law.

While both nations have compulsory military service, far more of Russia’s troops are drafted, many of them unwilling conscripts in a war they barely understand. Bribery to evade the draft is common in Russia. In Ukraine’s army, forced conscription has been rare during the war because of a rush of volunteer fighters. The country’s democratic reforms have reduced corruption in the military and allowed commanders to grant more freedom for officers to act on their own. Valeriy Zaluzhnyy, the commander in chief of the Ukrainian armed forces, tells officers to “turn your face to the people, to your subordinates.”

The ability of Ukraine’s soldiers to collaborate and improvise comes out of the country’s young democracy. As President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told The Economist last month, It’s not about who has more weapons or more money or gas or oil, et cetera. And that’s why we have to have agency. That’s what I understood, the first thing that I understood, that we the people have [agency]. People are leaders.”

If history is any guide, Ukraine will win this war. In their 2002 book, scholars Dan Reiter and Allan C. Stam looked at wars since 1815 and found that democracies won more than three-quarters of them. One reason: An emphasis on individual liberties and rights results in better leadership in warfare. So far, Ukraine’s battlefield victories fit the book.


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.

Whether or not our human mom plays a role in our everyday life, God’s tender, limitless, mothering love is here for all of us to know and feel.


A message of love

Fabio Ferrari/LaPresse/AP
A woman on horseback follows the pack of cyclists during the opening stage of the Giro d'Italia cycling race, from Budapest to Visegrad, Hungary, May 6, 2022.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for ending the week with us. Come back Monday when our Henry Gass explores whether same-sex marriage will be the next right previously granted by the Supreme Court to come back under its scrutiny.

More issues

2022
May
06
Friday

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