2022
September
26
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 26, 2022
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

Sometimes you just have to get away from daily life. You’re desperate to be somewhere new and exciting.

Even if you’re a seal, and your exotic getaway is a pond next to a parking lot in suburban Boston.

Enter Shoebert. The 4-year-old gray seal apparently crawled up a drainage pipe from the ocean, into a restful resort in Beverly, Massachusetts, named Shoe Pond.

Entranced locals loved him. They quickly dubbed him Shoebert. That’s better than the scientific name for his species, which translates from the Latin as “hooked-nose pig of the sea.”

A T-shirt store started selling Shoebert merchandise. An ice cream shop concocted a special dish in his honor. City Council Chair Julie Flowers announced at a meeting that Shoebert had “brought Beverly together in an exciting way.”

But vacations don’t last forever. Particularly when your natural habitat is rocky saltwater shores. Animal control officials began trying to corral Shoebert late last week. They wanted him out of the pond before it freezes. 

They couldn’t catch him. Perhaps he wasn’t ready for the party to end.

Then Friday he crawled out and slithered about 300 yards over a lawn and an asphalt lot to the Beverly police station.

“Thank you Shoebert for having faith in the BPD,” said the Beverly Police Department in a Facebook post.

The gray seal was corralled in an animal carrier without incident and transported to Mystic Aquarium in Connecticut. Researchers there discovered he had been rescued and tagged once before, for facial injuries. 

His future plans are unknown. Likely he’ll be returned to the cold waters of the North Atlantic. Then perhaps he’ll work on a memoir. Doesn’t he sound like a children’s book?


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
A party official, who helped organize a Republican election event in her city, wears a bedazzled elephant and patriotic shirt, on Aug. 20, 2022, in Surprise, Arizona. A battle for control of the Republican Party has been playing out across the nation – but perhaps nowhere as intensely as in Arizona.

Once a GOP stronghold, Arizona is now purple – and a battleground between traditional and MAGA Republicans. This conservative divide could shape the future of the Republican Party and the coming elections.

By colliding into a distant asteroid that poses no threat, NASA’s DART mission is tapping scientific ingenuity to test the idea of deflecting space rocks for planetary defense.

Dominique Soguel
Models sporting outfits designed by Joy Meribe participate in a photo shoot in Milan on Sept. 10, 2022, ahead of the 2022 Afro Fashion Week. Ms. Meribe's designs are a tribute to Western fashion with references to Afro culture and style.

It’s not easy for Black Italians to grow up feeling Italian when significant portions of Italy treat them as outsiders. But legally, artistically, and socially, Black Italians are staking their claim to Italy.

India's Press Information Bureau/Reuters
A cheetah explores Kuno National Park in Madhya Pradesh, India, Sept. 17, 2022, after it was released by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. It's one of eight cheetahs flown in from Namibia that will be monitored 24/7 via tracking collars.

Advocates of India’s cheetah reintroduction project say they’re driven by a sense of national responsibility. But others argue the single-minded push to bring back the big cat is more reckless than responsible.

Book review

AP/File
Civil rights protesters march along Constitution Avenue carrying placards, from the Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial, during the March on Washington on Aug. 28, 1963.

Understanding the patterns of history gives us insights into the present day. A historian ties together three distinct eras in which Black  progress was disrupted by white opposition.   


The Monitor's View

AP
Protesters in downtown Tehran chant slogans during a Sept. 21 protest over the death of a woman who was detained by Iran's morality police.

Mass protests in Iran over the past 10 days have started to shift their focus from public anger over strict rules on female dress – rules that resulted in the Sept. 16 death of a woman in police custody. Instead, many protesters now hold up signs challenging a theology that justifies the regime’s enforcement of such social rules, namely that one man, known as the supreme leader, has a divine mandate to control Iranian society.

“Mullah’s Days Are Over,” reads one protest sign. Another states, “Down with the Velayat-e Faqih regime,” referring to a peculiar doctrine of the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini that Islam requires a “guardian jurist,” or a religious scholar, to rule the nation.

Iranians have many grievances, from high inflation to bans on certain women’s attire, but they seem increasingly united in seeking a democratic alternative to Iran’s theocracy. A poll last February by a Netherlands-based research foundation showed 72% of Iranians oppose the head of state being a Shiite religious authority. More than half prefer some sort of secular rule, such as a democratic republic or constitutional monarchy.

Direct criticism of the regime’s governing pillar comes at a sensitive time. Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was born in 1939, appears to be maneuvering to assure his successor. Possibilities range from his son, Mojtaba Khamenei, to the current president, Ebrahim Raisi, whose win in an election last year was arranged by the supreme leader. If the public now sees no legitimacy for clerical rule, a new leader – and the regime itself – might not survive. 

“Never has the system been so much in question,” wrote Tara Kangarlou, author of “The Heartbeat of Iran,” in a column published in several European newspapers. Even in Iran’s centers for Islamic study, such as the city of Qom, some scholars have questioned the Velayat-e Faqih doctrine. In 2019, one regime official, Ahmad Vaez, said, “The separation of religion from politics, or indifference [of the clergy] to social and political issues ... is a danger.”

As the protests continue, the role of clerics in Iran is now front and center. In neighboring Iraq, the most respected Shiite clerics play a quiet role, influencing society at a spiritual level rather than dictating moral behavior. They also back democracy. With that model next door, more Iranians can easily challenge their own clerics’ claims to divine rule.


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 quest for happiness starts from a selfless, spiritual basis, we – and others – are inevitably blessed.


A message of love

AP
A police officer guards an entrance of School No. 88 as a man lays flowers in memory of victims after a shooting there in Izhevsk, Russia, Sept. 26, 2022. Authorities say a gunman killed 15 people, including 11 children, wounded 24 others at the school, and killed himself. The school is about 600 miles east of Moscow.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Come back tomorrow, when we’ll have a story about how Minneapolis is trying to address a problem many cities are facing: a housing shortage. 

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2022
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