2022
August
11
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 11, 2022
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

We are living in a time of upheaval. From racial equality to climate change, the clashes over how to chart a wiser and more caring path forward are stretching societies worldwide to their breaking points. Studies point to a mental health crisis. Democracies are stumbling. Change, it would seem, does not come without significant turmoil for those living through it. 

But is that inevitable?

J. Brent Bill doesn’t think so. In his new book, “Hope and Witness in Dangerous Times,” Mr. Bill explores what is, to him, something of a paradox: “In the divides of today, it seems we either have to tend to our soul or to social activism,” he tells me in an interview. “But that doesn’t seem right to me. These things feed each other.”

As a Quaker, Mr. Bill has spent his life at this nexus. For many Quakers, the witness of truth comes through the practical demonstration of divine goodness – in justice, peace, and love expressed. The Quaker tendency is to transform institutions, not convert people, Mr. Bill writes in his book. But, in a way, they are the same thing, he adds. 

“When we blend [spiritual health and activism], we bring a different flavor to the work,” he says. “It helps us focus on why we’re doing it. It helps us focus on the long haul.”

Among his insights, love is not inconsistent with rabble-rousing. We can speak difficult words, “but is love my first motive in what I do?” he asks. Or are we falling into the trap of today’s toxic politics – chronically being “against” things? He says “ ‘being for’ is important, so I don’t damage my own spiritual health.” 

Here is where prayer becomes more than “thoughts and prayers” but a way to drive change – starting with oneself, he argues. “Prayer is in many ways about changing ourselves and learning to listen.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Urooba Jamal/AP
Sonya Barlow (right), CEO of Like Minded Females Network, speaks to Rebekah Ingram, her intern, at White Mulberries, a coffee shop in London, Sep. 2, 2021. Many young workers around the world have begun their careers during the pandemic, working entirely remotely.

While Gen Z may have had the technical know-how to kick off careers remotely during the pandemic, it values connection and prioritizes work-life balance.

Graphic

Meg Kinnard/AP
Republican National Committeeman Glenn McCall, U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, first lady Peggy McMaster, and South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster stand during the Pledge of Allegiance during a South Carolina GOP fundraising dinner on July 29, 2022, in Columbia, South Carolina.

The president’s party often has a tough time in midterm elections, and Democrats face many challenges this fall. However, small-dollar donations, where they have outraised Republicans, offer a more nuanced picture.

SOURCE:

OpenSecrets

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

The Explainer

Philippe Lopez/AP
A firefighter sprays water as smoke rises at a forest fire near Louchats, France, July 18, 2022. France is one of several European countries that have seen wildfires this year spread far more broadly than the annual average.

Like the United States, Europe is facing increasingly fierce wildfire seasons, endangering lives, land, and livelihoods. But the European Union is working on new ways to control the flames.

There are signs that public school students have overcome aspects of their pandemic learning loss, but there’s still plenty of progress to be made. For both students and teachers, perseverance will be key to further growth.

Difference-maker

Henry Gass/The Christian Science Monitor
Tony Diaz, a Chicano writer and activist who calls himself “El Librotraficante,” poses at the Casa Ramirez Folkart Gallery in Houston. For over 20 years, he has helped promote and preserve Latino literature and culture in Texas.

Breaking down barriers to the literary world, Tony Diaz has spent two decades building a network that encourages Latino writers and readers to treasure their stories – and themselves.


The Monitor's View

AP
Serena Williams attends a New York City event in 2019.

The announcement this week by tennis great Serena Williams that she will step off the court for the final time after the coming U.S. Open tournament invites commentary about comparison and succession. Who will be the next great player? Will her form measure up? The New Yorker magazine recently described Coco Gauff, a rising American ranked 11th in the world, as having “near Serena-like first serves.”

That is perhaps inevitable. Over the course of a storied professional career that started in 1998, Ms. Williams and her older sister Venus redefined the power, aesthetics, and diversity of the game. The greater measure of her impact, however, may be less in the likeness of a swing than in the mental presence that she modeled: individuality over group identity, forgiveness over resentment, and legitimacy over disadvantage.

“Whatever you become,” Ms. Williams said in her autobiography “On the Line,” recalling what her mother often said, “you become in your head first.”

Only a small club of big-name pro athletes knows the cost of breaking the color barrier. Before the Williams sisters, that club was all-male – Jackie Robinson, Arthur Ashe, Tiger Woods. As young girls from the cracked community courts of Compton, California, they broke through the barriers of club tournaments with their rackets. But a professional tournament in 2001 marked a crucible. The sisters were taunted during the Indian Wells, California, event for their race and physical strength. Serena won, but refused to return for 14 years.

During that long interval, guided by her Christian faith, she wrestled to gain the power of forgiveness. Her return to Indian Wells reflected a recognition of a shared effort at healing. “I have faith that fans at Indian Wells have grown with the game and know me better than they did in 2001,” she said in the biography “Serena Williams: The Inspiring Story of One of Tennis’ Greatest Legends.”

“Indian Wells was a pivotal moment in my story, and I am part of the tournament’s story as well. Together we have a chance to write a different ending.”

There have been more pivotal moments since, like motherhood and the start of a new venture capital firm dedicated to supporting female entrepreneurs of color, that have begun to shift her focus. “I’m evolving away from tennis, toward other things that are important to me,” she wrote in Vogue this week. Yet there remains a continuity in that shift – a fierce determination to grow in the calm confidence that, as her parents taught her, uplifts others.


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.

Not only is right thinking a choice we can make daily, but it happens naturally when we understand God as the only Mind. Doing so guides us rightly and results in blessings that reach beyond ourselves.


A message of love

Martin Meissner/AP
Athletes compete during the women's lead qualification at the European sport climbing championships in Munich, Aug. 11, 2022.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Come back tomorrow when we look at the FBI search of former President Donald Trump’s Florida home. People have strong opinions. But how does the talk match up with what we actually know?

More issues

2022
August
11
Thursday

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