2023
March
02
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 02, 2023
Loading the player...

The first anniversary of the war in Ukraine has passed, but the commitment of Ukrainians to freedom has not. It continues, and in a very small way, so it does with a retired schoolteacher-turned-painter in St. Louis.

For more than a year, Marjorie Theodore has been posting daily art prayers for Ukraine on her Facebook page. They are mostly watercolors of sunflowers, and they reflect the ups and downs in the war.

Sometimes, petals fall like tears. Sometimes the face of a flower turns hopefully toward the sun. A group of sunflowers may bend low under a mighty wind. Or a white stork, which is Ukraine’s national bird, may spread its black-tipped wings and soar over the flowers.

Ms. Theodore is a friend of a friend on Facebook, and I’ve seen her images through repostings. I don’t know her personally, but over the months, I’ve marveled at the many ways she depicts these symbols of Ukraine. Every day brings a new painting, or drawing, or acrylic swirl.

Each posting is accompanied by a prayer of just a few words. They can plead for peace or cry in despair, and they embrace other troubled regions in the world. There’s also a lot of gratitude in her prayers, especially for the persistence of Ukrainians and all those who are helping them.

Last week, as the war’s anniversary approached, I called Ms. Theodore to learn more about her project and to see whether she planned to continue. How could she not? she answered. “I hope that my commitment will last as their commitment does,” she told me.

It’s so easy for people to forget wars and crises in faraway places. By posting every day, even if only 25 or 35 people give a thumbs-up or make a comment, she knows that Ukraine is in their thoughts, however briefly, and that’s just what she is hoping for.

She explained it this way:

“I do think art is prayer. I think that song is prayer. When you are thinking of someone that you love, that is prayer. So when I think of Ukraine and I express my feelings through these daily pictures, it is a prayer.”


You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Yuki Iwamura/AP
A police officer stands among demonstrators marching Jan. 28, 2023, in New York, to protest the death of Tyre Nichols, who died after being beaten by Memphis police during a traffic stop.

The NYPD has been the nation’s foremost laboratory of police reform. So as the country wrestles with how best to find ways forward on policing, New York stands out as a crucial case study.

The Explainer

Dominion Voting Systems says Fox News hurt its business by airing election falsehoods. The lawsuit is revealing how much the network was focused on its bottom line – and telling its viewers what they wanted to hear.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Among the many unintended consequences of the Russian invasion of Ukraine is one silver lining: new impetus for the use of green energy sources.

With disease threatening their crops, orange growers in Florida aim to meet adversity with ingenuity – even if that may mean leaving a storied tradition behind.

Taylor Luck
Ayed al-Ayadeh unfurls one of several large platters of dates to feed his guests at his family's guest hall in Jubbah, northern Saudi Arabia, Feb. 11, 2023.

How generous is too generous? In the Saudi oasis village of Jubbah, where doors are never closed, hospitality that once served as a lifeline for desert travelers pushes politeness, and guests’ capacities, to the limits.


The Monitor's View

AP
A construction worker pauses at a building site in Boston, Massachusetts.

A year after becoming the first woman and person of color to be elected to lead the city of Boston, Mayor Michelle Wu stood on the steps of a vacated church in February to fulfill a promise to reinvent how the city cares for its residents.

The building is part of a $67 million project to lift up low-income neighborhoods. Seventeen unused buildings and empty lots will be remade into more than 800 income-restricted units for rent or ownership, combined with artist studios, shop fronts, health clinics, and after-school centers.

The project is one of the more innovative ideas playing out across the United States as municipal planners and private developers grapple with how to ensure cities provide adequate housing for both existing and new residents. In many cities, that requires redressing historical harms caused by eminent domain or anti-blight laws that allowed city officials to appropriate homes or overrun whole neighborhoods.

It also means adjusting to economic changes, such as a boom in tech industries, that can leave cities like Boston too expensive for people in service jobs or low-salaried professions like teaching. “We can’t grow sustainably unless our residents are secure in their homes,” Ms. Wu said in her first State of the City address in January.

In some cities, like Washington, minimum-wage workers must clock 80 hours per week to afford a one-bedroom unit. The 2022 Greater Boston Housing Report Card found that Boston’s rental and homeowner vacancies were among the lowest in the country.

Ms. Wu’s strategy centers on replacing the city’s planning and development board and banning the use of anti-blight laws that enabled city officials to seize buildings they decided were dilapidated or otherwise undesirable. In its place, the mayor has proposed a new board under her office to create, as she said at city council meeting, “climate resilience and healthy, connected communities.”

Developers, citizens, and city officials are struggling to agree on what her goals will require. That may be more unifying than it sounds. Removing obstacles to adequate housing will require broad and democratic discussion, one marked by humility and openness. Mayor Wu’s project to renovate and renew 17 sites across Boston’s diverse neighborhoods is a start toward refashioning a city with compassion for all.


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 taken from a divine standpoint, the saying “knowledge is power” gains new meaning, as a man found after he became stuck under a car’s transmission.


Viewfinder

Ignacio Munoz/AP
A Chilean soldier helps a migrant cross a canal near Colchane, Chile, close to the border with Bolivia, on March 1, 2023. The migrants will be taken to a shelter where police register them. The government has boosted the military's presence along international borders amid a rise in illegal immigration and a resulting backlash.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow, when we’ll have a video from our multimedia team that focuses on deconstruction – a progressive industry emerging as an alternative to the demolition of buildings.

Note: Our friends over at the Common Ground Committee, a bridge-building organization, have produced a new podcast episode that looks at the search for solutions to gun violence, and at differences in regional attitudes on guns. The Monitor’s Patrik Jonsson is one of the two main guests. Here’s where to find this episode of “Let’s Find Common Ground.”

More issues

2023
March
02
Thursday

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.