2022
July
27
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 27, 2022
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At one point, while my family and I were living overseas, there were no team sports for girls at the school my daughters were attending. Only boys were given the opportunity to learn teamwork, perseverance, and confidence through athletics. When I volunteered to start a girls basketball team, I was told no – unless I started a boys team, too.

Perhaps that’s why the return of a Tour de France for women caught my eye. The premier cycling event is holding the first official women’s race in 33 years. The weeklong, 642-mile race began Sunday with 144 cyclists competing in 24 teams. The race has about $250,000 in total prize money, including $51,000 for the overall winner.

Yes, it’s shorter and less lucrative than the men’s race. But it’s still progress. Female cyclists have been campaigning for equality on two wheels for decades, sporadically holding official and unofficial races. For example, since 2015, a group of French women known as Donnons des Elles au Vélo (Give the Girls a Bike) has ridden every stage of the Tour – the day before the men’s race. 

Explanations for the inequality in cycling have sounded very similar to arguments made about U.S. women’s pro soccer and basketball – too few sponsors, not a big enough audience, etc. But as in soccer, a shift is underway. American Lily Williams started riding professionally in 2020. Two years later, she tells Sports Illustrated, “I’m making a full salary from the sport. And ... I can finish my race and go into our own personal team camper and take a shower. The whole sport has just grown leaps and bounds.”

Kate Veronneau at Zwift (the Tour de France Femmes sponsor) tells The Washington Post, “Women’s sports is trending hard because the companies that have invested in sports are seeing fabulous returns.” Equally important, she adds: “For little girls growing up and seeing themselves in a variety of sports ... that’s powerful.”

As a granddad, I agree. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor
Zhanna Palahniuk and her 6-year-old daughter, Yulianna, choose flowers to place on the grave of 1st Lt. Oleksandr Palahniuk in his rural home village of Pokutyne, south of Vinnytsia, Ukraine, as the family mourns the loss in late April of this Ukrainian paratrooper, June 21, 2022.

When a warrior falls, he or she often leaves loved ones behind. Our reporter takes an empathetic look at one Ukrainian family’s efforts to make sense of the sacrifice of a father and son. 

Gleb Garanich/Reuters
A father says goodbye to his daughter as she boards a train to Dnipro and Lviv during an evacuation effort from war-affected areas of eastern Ukraine, amid Russia's invasion of the country, in Pokrovsk, Donetsk region, Ukraine, July 20, 2022.

Here’s another story from Ukraine, where train conductors are often greeted with hugs from strangers. Our reporter rides the rails and finds a portrait of perseverance and adaptability in a time of war. 

In any business deal or agreement, there’s a bond of trust – that each party will live up to its word. In China, our reporter looks at why trust in banks, homebuilders, and public health may be unraveling.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Better communication means better understanding, more transparency, and less risk of mishaps. Our London columnist suggests Washington and Beijing need the kind of crisis management tools used during the Cold War.

Points of Progress

What's going right

A key ingredient of progress is cooperation. In our latest Points of Progress roundup, we see groups working together to create the world’s biggest urban garden, skies free of light pollution, and a deeper understanding of our oceans.


The Monitor's View

AP
A woman holds up a banner during a protest in Tunis, the capital of Tunisia. The country voted Monday for a new constitution expanding presidential powers.

In Tunisia, where the Arab uprising against autocracy began a decade ago, democracy has suffered an apparent setback. Voters approved a new constitution on Monday that gives the president unchecked powers. That marks an about-face for a country that just eight years ago adopted a progressive legal canon based on “freedom, dignity, justice, and order” after 24 years of dictatorship.

Tunisia’s turn may reflect a regional trend. A new survey of Arab public opinion found instability and weak economies are eroding trust in democracy across the Middle East and North Africa. More than 50% of Arabs express a lack of confidence in elected government, as do 7 in 10 Tunisians. Yet in one important way, the annual Arab Barometer noted, Tunisia remains a pacesetter: It saw the greatest increase in the percentage of citizens – from 40% in 2018 to 56% now – who support female leaders.

Most of that gain has come since the rise last September of Najla Bouden, a geology professor, as the Arab world’s first female prime minister. “We didn’t see a drastic shift in public opinion on women’s rights prior to this appointment,” Amaney Jamal, Arab Barometer co-founder and dean of Princeton’s School of Public and International Affairs, told the BBC. Ms. Bouden’s prominence has “allowed people to say, ‘Guess what, women can be just as effective as political leaders as their male counterparts.’”

By one metric, the number of seats held by women in Arab parliaments, their gains appear modest. Since 2010, prior to the uprisings, female legislators in the region have increased from 10% to about 16%. In some countries, quotas have made a difference. The United Arab Emirates, for example, now requires gender parity in its parliament.

But representation alone may offer too narrow a view. Female civil rights activists fill prominent leadership roles in pro-democracy movements in countries like Iran and Sudan. Female filmmakers from Morocco to Kuwait are transforming narratives of the region. Their works are reaching a wider audience. Earlier this month, Netflix released 21 movies by Arab female directors.

“Women filmmakers have beautiful, complex, and nuanced stories to tell – stories which have the power to resonate with people not just in the Arab world, but across the globe,” the streaming company said. One depicts a young girl yearning for a normal childhood in the shadow of her father’s fanatical beliefs.

Not all the Arab Barometer’s conclusions are hopeful. It found that 61% of Tunisians, for example, think violence against women has risen. But two of its main findings – declining confidence in democracy and growing support for female leaders – may be two sides of the same coin. They show that the popular aspirations for equality and good governance that poured into the streets a decade ago remain.


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.

Getting to know God as more than an abstraction makes His healing power, presence, and love a more tangible part of our daily lives.


A message of love

J. Scott Applewhite/AP
Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly (center) is joined by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (center left), Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (far left), and former Kansas Sen. Jerry Moran (center right) for the dedication and unveiling ceremony of a statue in honor of Amelia Earhart, one of the world's most celebrated aviators and the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, in Statuary Hall, at the Capitol in Washington, July 27, 2022. The statue of Amelia Earhart will represent the State of Kansas in the National Statuary Hall Collection.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow for a review of a new Ron Howard film about the perseverance and problem-solving that resulted in the rescue of a Thai student soccer team trapped in a flooded cave in 2018.

More issues

2022
July
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