2022
July
18
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 18, 2022
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Anastasia Chukovskaya understands the challenges that Ukrainians fleeing Russia’s invasion face. As you may recall from a piece I wrote in April, she and her husband, Russians who live in Budapest, Hungary, leaped into action to help refugees arriving in their city with little idea what to do next. 

I checked in with her over the weekend, and it's clear they’ve stayed busy. Ms. Chukovskaya’s persistence has helped many families find shelter and resulted in the Learning Without Borders school that supports 60 Ukrainian students, 15 Ukrainian teachers, and 10 Hungarian staff members. Now, she’s tackling a new challenge: providing food to struggling refugees.

“It makes me so stunned that there are food-deprived people,” she says. “I can’t believe food can be such an issue in such a time.”

Thus her new effort: hunhelp.com. Refugee applications speak to the need – the family in Mariupol who lived with their baby in a basement for a month after their apartment was burned down, the older couple who fled a town occupied by Russians. One woman wants to work, but can’t leave her adult son, who has a disability, alone.

Ms. Chukovskaya works with whomever she can – small nongovernmental organizations, large aid groups, businesses whose employees run donation drives. Hurdles loom large: minimal state aid, bureaucratic restrictions, overwhelming demand, even public perceptions about favoring foreigners over poor Hungarians. “There is a shop which gives us supplies in several cities, but they are not public about it,” she says.

Yet as of this week, her organization has fed 1,000 people. “I would love it to be 10,000 to 20,000,” she says. 

Indeed, as she looks to the winter, her focus is on scaling up – and she’s persisting in keeping refugees’ needs in the public eye as the war grinds on. So she and her colleagues crowdfund and cajole, tapping any contacts she can think of, anywhere. “I am a network builder,” she says. “My friends say, ‘This is how social capital works.’ I am very fortunate in that sense.”

She worries the war feels like “old news” to many people now. “But I also have had messages asking, ‘Is it too late to help?’ Every day brings a lot of disappointment, but also brings a lot of support.

“I see I should go where the need is urgent.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Evan Vucci/AP
President Joe Biden speaks about abortion access in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, July 8, 2022, in Washington. Vice President Kamala Harris looks on.

President Joe Biden won because he was seen as a unifier. Now, even many Democrats say they want a different kind of leader. But other presidents have had rough starts – and recovered.

Does the term “proxy war” apply to a conflict that is formally between Russia and Ukraine? Whatever you call it, the U.S. and NATO are using ingenuity to affect the outcome while keeping war at arm’s length.

Colette Davidson
The Kiev City Ballet rehearses on June 9, 2022, at the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris. City Hall has helped organize a practice space for the company since the members found themselves exiled in France by the war in Ukraine.

By providing a safe haven for Ukrainian artists, France is offering them a feeling of home while also creating a connection between the French public and some of Ukraine’s prized cultural offerings.

Books

Motivated by a determination to set the record straight, journalist and author Danyel Smith stakes a claim for the pivotal role of Black women in pop music. 

Stephen B. Morton/AP
The Savannah Bananas line up along the first-base line to perform a kick-line dance before a Coastal Plain League baseball game against the Florence Flamingos, June 7, 2022, in Savannah, Georgia.

Even as baseball slips from its mantle as national pastime, the Savannah Bananas are reimagining it. It doesn’t matter if you win or lose, as long as everyone feels as if they belong at the game.


The Monitor's View

AP
Italian Premier Mario Draghi waves to a crowd in Rome as he enters his car, July 15.

Elected leaders face a profusion of mega-pressure points these days – inflation, heat waves, high debt, or the pandemic. Many governments have fallen, as in Bulgaria, Britain, and Israel. Others are faltering, as in Ecuador and the United States with President Joe Biden. In Italy, a country notorious for its rapid turnover of prime ministers, the government of Mario Draghi appears to be on the brink of collapse after 17 months of rare unity. Yet a compelling counterforce could keep him in power.

Last Thursday, the prime minister offered to quit after splits emerged in his cross-party coalition. President Sergio Mattarella wisely refused the resignation. That gave enough time for an upwelling of support for Mr. Draghi and his unusual style of consensus leadership in a nation rife with fractious politics.

Hundreds of mayors signed a petition backing him. Many industrialists and unionists joined the chorus. European leaders also weighed in. Mr. Draghi, a U.S.-trained economist and former head of the European Central Bank, had earned a reputation for saving the euro currency during a crisis a decade ago. In addition, the European Union cannot afford a crisis in the eurozone’s third-largest economy.

Mr. Draghi stands out in Italy because of his humility and tendency to ask questions first. He displays a willingness to listen hard in order to find common ground. Those qualities are especially needed in his drive to pass reforms mandated by the EU to receive pandemic-related subsidies.

Opponents find it difficult to pin down his political views. “My personal destiny matters absolutely not at all,” he said last year. But he is always open and transparent about the range of potential solutions, a quality of leadership that was necessary when he led Europe out of its financial crisis.

His coalition of “national unity” may fall someday or he may decide to simply retire. For now, amid so many crises in world democracies, Mr. Draghi offers a lesson in stability, innovation, and competence. Italy seems to appreciate that for now.


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.

When our efforts to help others are motivated by a desire to bear witness to God’s goodness, they naturally become more joyful and renewing, rather than overwhelming and frustrating.


A message of love

Florion Goga/Reuters
Children cool off during sunset as temperatures rise in Vlora, Albania, July 16, 2022.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Tomorrow, come back for a look at a peanut paste product, long known as “Plumpy’Nut,” that has played a key role in reducing child malnutrition in Africa. Now, its reach is being tested by a disrupted supply chain and spiking ingredient prices due to the war in Ukraine. 

More issues

2022
July
18
Monday

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