2022
May
20
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

May 20, 2022
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Ali Martin
California Bureau Writer

I have a tween who thinks deeply about justice and compassion, and the world’s uneven distribution of both.

She’s also an ice skater. 

When her skating coach filled me in recently on the costume we needed to buy for her spring performance, my heart stopped. My daughter would be skating to a rousing song from the film “Harriet,” which tells the story of Harriet Tubman’s heroic work to free enslaved people through the Underground Railroad. She would be skating as Harriet Tubman, that is.

We are not Black. 

I gently but immediately ixnayed the idea. Instead of skating as Tubman, my daughter skated in tribute to her. But for a moment, I panicked. She finds solace and encouragement in stories about oppressed people not only surviving but also changing the world. I didn’t want to quash her interest in social justice or the inspiration she takes from lessons about civil rights. 

Lessons that society is still learning, as we see in today’s Monitor. Patrik Jonsson and Noah Robertson examine the fear behind “replacement theory,” which evidently fueled last weekend’s racism-driven shooting in Buffalo, New York.  

And Ken Makin shows us how that community is coming together to fill a void left by the shuttered grocery store where the shooting happened – coming together to feed and mend shattered hearts. 

The stakes in those stories are certainly higher than a 12-year-old’s ice skating performance. But they’re all connected by a need to counter fear with understanding, to value the differentness that makes humanity beautiful, and to take a leap toward hope.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Kim Min-Hee/Reuters
President Joe Biden speaks with South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol during a press conference after visiting a Samsung facility in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, May 20, 2022.

Whatever President Joe Biden’s foreign policy missteps, he consistently has extolled the value of alliances. His rallying of European allies in the Ukraine crisis suggests his trip to Asia sends a timely signal.

Gina M Randazzo/ZUMA Press Wire/Newscom
A protester holds a sign outside Fox News headquarters on May 17, 2022, in New York. After 10 Black people were killed and more people injured in a racist hate crime May 14, the activist organization Rise & Resist held a protest against Fox News and host Tucker Carlson, alleging the network has fueled white supremacy.

The mass shooting in Buffalo last weekend has focused attention on ideas termed the “great replacement theory” – that there’s a conspiracy to disempower white Americans. To historians, the spread of nativism today is not surprising.

Miguel Martinez/Atlanta Journal Constitution/Reuters
Gov. Brian Kemp (left) had to defend himself from constant attacks from former Sen. David Perdue during the first debate of the Republican primary for governor on April 24, 2022. For months, however, Mr. Kemp has been comfortably ahead in the polls.

Primaries are by nature forward-facing, a time to select candidates for upcoming elections. But this year, some primaries seem stuck in 2020. That may be nowhere more true than in Georgia.

Q&A

Courtesy of Denzel Kirkland
Dakarai Singletary, founder of Candles in the S.U.N., distributes food and supplies donated by local farms and a market in Buffalo, New York, on May 18, 2022. "Supplies are completely depleted, so we’re ensuring that people have everything accessible to them, with no hesitation or quantity limits," he says.

For Dakarai Singletary, being a hero means meeting the needs of his Buffalo, New York, community. This week, that involved responding to the aftermath of a mass shooting. 

Film

Ben Blackall/Focus Features/AP
Actors Hugh Bonneville (left) and Elizabeth McGovern star in “Downton Abbey: A New Era.”

The stories of “Downton Abbey” have been told for more than a decade on TV and film. With the release of a second movie, how is the popular franchise about aristocrats and the people who serve them staying relevant?


The Monitor's View

AP
Russian Sgt. Vadim Shishimarin stands in court during a hearing in Kyiv, Ukraine, May 19.

Cheek by jowl as neighbors, Russia and Ukraine will someday need to live peacefully with each other again, perhaps even reconcile. In a courtroom this week, during the first war crimes trial held by Ukraine of a Russian soldier, the world caught a glimpse of how the two peoples might get to that point.

At the trial, a young Russian tank commander, Sgt. Vadim Shishimarin, pleaded guilty to killing an unarmed older civilian during the early days of the invasion. He then asked Kateryna Shelipova, the widow of the man killed, for forgiveness.

“But I understand you won’t be able to forgive me,” he added.

His apparent repentance was enough to encourage the widow to engage the perpetrator. She asked about his motives but held off forgiving him. She later said she was sorry for him and endorsed the prosecutor’s request for a life sentence.

The dialogue was almost as if the two planned to live side by side – eventually. Ukrainian officials have lined up dozens of other captured Russian service members for trial. So far, they have tallied more than 11,000 war crimes by Russian forces. If all the trials go like this first one – with its intimacy of justice and personal graspings for reconciliation – the ground may be laid for possible healing between the two countries.

Justice that assigns guilt, bestows accountability, and restores social harmony is best served up individual by individual and in local settings for the public to witness. Few Russians may read or see images of these trials. But since the war began, enough Russians who oppose the invasion have come forward to offer a collective confession of responsibility – even if they were not sent to Ukraine to kill civilians.

“We Russians must openly and courageously acknowledge our guilt and ask for forgiveness,” wrote novelist Mikhail Shishkin in The Guardian.

Harvard University Professor Martha Minow describes forgiveness as the “human efforts to follow divine example.” That helps explain a statement from nearly 300 priests within the Russian Orthodox Church who oppose the church’s official endorsement of the war. The priests wondered how future generations in each country will again “be friends with each other, respect and love each other.”

“There is no other way but forgiveness and mutual reconciliation,” according to the statement.

Sergeant Shishimarin had asked for forgiveness but didn’t expect it. Yet the widow did say she wouldn’t mind if he were exchanged for Ukrainian fighters who surrendered in Mariupol at the Azovstal steel plant. At some level, the two connected. Perhaps Russia and Ukraine will do the same someday.


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.

Konstantin Gebser_EyeEm_Getty Images

Even in the face of difficulties, God’s love is a constant – here to heal, protect, and save – as this hymn highlights.


A message of love

Manish Swarup/AP
A squirrel drinks water from an earthen pot on a hot day in New Delhi, May 20, 2022. The Indian capital and surrounding areas are facing an extreme heat wave.

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us, and come back Monday. We’ll visit some Southern communities that are paying people to move there. And we go to New York to examine whether citizenship should be required for voting. Have a great weekend.   

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