2023
March
23
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 23, 2023
Loading the player...
Husna Haq
Staff editor

My childhood memories of Ramadan don’t revolve around presents, decorations, or even elaborate feasts. For the most part, there were none. As my siblings and I grew up as first-generation Muslims in the United States, far from the decorated streets and festive atmosphere overseas, we didn’t have much of a “Ramadan culture” yet. What I do recall was my dad’s sunny cheer in the dead of night. 

Ramadan, which begins today, is the month in which Muslims fast from dawn to sunset. We believe the first verses of the Quran were revealed in this month – a time of spiritual discipline, deep contemplation of the Quran, and increased worship and charity. 

During this month, our day is bookended by two meals: suhoor, the pre-dawn meal, and iftar, the fast-breaking feast. In our house, suhoor meant four cranky and sleepy teens stumbling down the stairs to slurp a bowl of cereal at 4 in the morning. Blinking, we’d come down to find my dad fresh-faced, frying eggs and cracking jokes – often, he had been awake for hours, praying. Incredulous, we’d scowl; undeterred, he’d smile. That’s how it went, every night, for the entire month. 

Some two decades later, life looks very different. My dad is gone, and I will have my own brood to rouse and feed before the crack of dawn. And the busier life gets, the more I understand his cheer. 

Life today is so saturated that decluttering closets, detoxing diets, and disconnecting from devices fuel entire industries. Ramadan, for many of us, comes as a relief. It’s a reset of sorts, an opportunity to disconnect from the distractions of life and reorient ourselves toward the spiritual. Sure, long hours without food and drink during the day, and waking early and worshipping at night, can be exhausting. But the physical hunger fuels spiritual fulfillment, a closer connection to the Divine. It’s something Muslims often refer to as the “sweetness of faith.” 

Was I smiling today as I sleepily ate my cereal and toast in the wee hours? No. But even through the sleepless hours of night and the hunger of long fasts, I see now what lighted the serene smile on my dad’s face.


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

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The question over whether to ban TikTok sits at the nexus of two broader debates: how to regulate increasingly influential social media platforms, and how to foster U.S. interests as China’s economic and military power grows. 

Oren Alon/Reuters
An aerial view shows Israelis protesting as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's religious-nationalist coalition presses on with its contentious judicial overhaul, in Tel Aviv, Israel, March 18, 2023.

Can the United States afford to treat the battle over proposed judicial reforms in Israel as just an internal matter? Not, according to the latest White House thinking, if it undercuts a pillar of the two democracies’ relationship.

A letter from

Istanbul
Susana Vera/Reuters
In early March, a woman used her phone to record the effects of the deadly February earthquake in Antakya, Turkey.

Anti-immigrant sentiment in Turkey, amplified by February's earthquake, has left the country on edge. But in a tearful conversation, our Afghan correspondent glimpsed new respect from her Turkish cabdriver. 

Q&A

When Uyghur journalist Gulchehra Hoja left a Chinese state media job to become an outspoken activist, she became an outcast overnight. Her story speaks to the courage, bravery, and hope of her people.

On Film

COURTESY OF IFC FILMS
In “The Lost King,” Sally Hawkins is perfectly cast as Philippa Langley, the amateur sleuth who rescued the reputation of Richard III (Harry Lloyd).

Persisting with your convictions, especially when the scholarly world is against you, is not always easy. But the hero of “The Lost King,” based on a true story, finds a way to amplify her subject’s voice – and her own. 


The Monitor's View

AP
Kemal Kilicdaroglu, presidential candidate of the six-party main opposition alliance, visits earthquake survivors in Nurhak, Turkey, March 11.

Turkey has never seen anything like it. In a country where political parties proliferate like pomegranate seeds, six parties have formed an alliance and agreed on a joint presidential candidate for the May 14 elections. Just as remarkable is what unites them.

Despite issues like high inflation and a weak government response to recent earthquakes, the opposition bloc – which includes Islamists, secularists, nationalists, and leftists – has rallied around the restoration of rule of law and constitutional liberties. This is a result of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s steady erosion of democracy through controls on the media, the judiciary, and the electoral process. 

The new bloc – dubbed the “Table of Six” is leading in almost every poll. “This is the first time that an alliance has been formed that unites almost all political currents in Turkey,” wrote political scientist Vedat Demir at the Free University of Berlin for Turkish Minute.

In a global context, the newly woven Turkish carpet of disparate parties may not be so unusual. Elevating the issue of democracy itself – above bread-and-butter issues, social policy, or national security – has become more common in countries where elected leaders have altered the mechanics of democracy to keep themselves or their parties in power. Nearly half of the world’s population lives in a democracy of some sort.

In Israel, for example, hundreds of thousands have protested for weeks to prevent the clipping of judicial independence by the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Mexicans were out on the streets in February against government attempts to undermine the electoral authorities. In Brazil’s recent election, the winner, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, made clear to voters that democracy itself was at stake.

Democratic backsliding has evoked protests or new political alignments in countries from Tunisia to Thailand. In Turkey, the odd-bedfellows coalition shows just how much people can put aside disputes over everyday policy when the best way to resolve those disputes – democracy – is in jeopardy.


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 we’re willing to yield to what God knows about His children, the pull to gossip falls away and opportunities for healing unfold.


Viewfinder

Vincent Thian/AP
A woman looks out from an observation deck as members of the Malaysian Islamic authority perform “Rukyah Hilal Ramadan,” the sighting of the new moon to determine the start of the holy fasting month of Ramadan in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, March 22, 2023. Muslims worldwide observe Ramadan by abstaining from foods, sex, and smoking from dawn to dusk.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow we’ll be back with a story on the rise of parental rights legislation, and what it says about U.S. parents’ desire for more say in their children’s schooling.

More issues

2023
March
23
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.