2023
April
06
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 06, 2023
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

In 1968, humanity stood on the cusp of a new age. Within a year, two men would walk on the moon. But as Apollo 8 wheeled around the moon – the first crewed flight to orbit our cosmic neighbor – the United States was in disarray. The Vietnam War raged. Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy were assassinated. Riots swept the nation. 

The U.S. Information Agency concluded that many worldwide questioned “whether the vaunted American system might be on the verge of decay and disintegration.”  

This week, NASA announced the astronauts who will in some ways reprise Apollo 8. Next year, the crew of Artemis II will go to the moon but not land on it, preparing for further exploration in years to come – an orbiting space station and a base camp near the south pole.

This, too, is the cusp of a new age – a first practical step to living on other worlds. All amid the context of a nation in turmoil. But on Christmas Eve in 1968, the crew of Apollo 8 beamed back a message of goodwill heard by a billion people – a quarter of everyone on the planet. Even communist Cuba listened in. Then the astronauts returned with the first photo of Earth from a distance – the iconic blue marble of “Earthrise,” which kindled a deeper appreciation of our miraculous home and inspired a nascent environmental movement.

One of the new Artemis II astronauts, Victor Glover, served on the International Space Station in 2020 and 2021. Often, the crew would sit in the window and talk. “All of us wanted fellowship in the evening [after] being alone and working hard all day long,” he said at a talk at a church in Wharton, Texas, last year. “And that human desire to be together, to be with our brothers and sisters, is a thing that I think about all the time.”

Now, as in 1968, the marvels of space – of ingenuity and childlike awe – can help us out of ourselves somewhat, to hold home and humanity just a little bit dearer.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor
Ukrainian farmer Serhii Khoroschak stands on his farm, which surrounds the village where he mustered a 280-man civil defense militia to defend against an expected Russian military advance.

Ukraine’s corruption record is lamentable. But many Ukrainians say the courage and hope they have shown in the face of Russia has inspired them to combat official dishonesty too.

While everyone hoped getting students back in class would help, there was no automatic return to normalcy. What can school systems learn from students nearing the end of high school experiences defined by the pandemic?

While human connection alone can’t prevent conflict, an enduring peace is unlikely without it. As Chinese citizens begin to venture abroad again, can what some dub “revenge travel” play a mitigating role and foster compassion?

Patterns

Tracing global connections

In his global campaign to strengthen democracy, President Joe Biden finds he needs to enlist some allies with dubious democratic credentials.

Difference-maker

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Fred Wright was 7 years old when he started riding with Ebony Horsewomen Inc. He went on to Cornell University and now travels the country as a professional farrier.

Racial disparities can feel like insurmountable hurdles. Patricia Kelly uses her own love of horses to inspire underserved children to blaze their own trail.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A women stops to take a photo of the first Ramadan lights installation at Piccadilly Circus on the eve of Ramadan, in London, Britain, March 21.

To the world’s nearly 2 billion Muslims, the holy month of Ramadan – celebrated this year from March 22 to April 22 – is a time for spiritual reflection, daily fasts, and acts of kindness. That’s hardly the impression given to the world by news every year of violent clashes during Ramadan between Israeli police and Muslim Palestinians worshiping at Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque. Two years ago, the clashes led to an 11-day conflict with hundreds killed. This year, the violence has been less, yet it still taints the holiday’s reputation.

That may be changing – although not because Israelis and Palestinians are resolving their differences. Rather, non-Muslims in many parts of the world are honoring the celebration of Ramadan in different ways, reflecting back the spirit of inclusivity and generosity that Ramadan means to Muslims.

The clearest sign of this shift is commercial. Target, for example, now offers decoration kits for Ramadan and Eid al-Fitr, the holiday that follows Ramadan. In 2021, Mattel’s American Girl brand began to sell celebration outfits for Eid al-Fitr. The Asda supermarket sells special foods for Ramadan’s get-togethers.

In the United States, more schools are making accommodations for Muslim students to maintain their studies while practicing their faith during Ramadan. Soccer leagues in England have new rules to allow Muslim players to take time at sunset to break their daytime fast. Similar breaks are being offered in the U.S. leagues. “Thank you for having this respect for our religion,” tweeted Steven Moreira, a French player for the Columbus Crew team in Ohio.

For the first time, Coventry Street near London’s Piccadilly Square was lit up with holiday lights last month to celebrate Ramadan. Hundreds of people came to the lighting event. The area has been known for its Christmas displays every December.

“It’s really beautiful to see our non-Muslim neighbors taking an interest in the light,” Aisha Desai, founder of the event, told CBC. “There’s just so many things happening now coming from the younger generation. And it’s really causing, creating, this shift. ... It’s a beautiful moment.”

The trend seems to be global. “This year’s Ramadan is notable for the number of traditionally non-Muslim communities, institutions and companies going above and beyond to understand the cultural nuance of the event and support their friends, colleagues, customers and citizens during the period of observance,” states a new report from marketing giant Wunderman Thompson.

Within Israel, Muslims celebrating Ramadan often receive the support of people of other faiths. In the city of Acre, one Christian man, Michel Ayoub, is famous for walking the streets after 2 a.m. during Ramadan to remind his Muslim neighbors to prepare a meal before their daytime fasting.

“We are of the same people and ultimately pray to the same God,” he told Haaretz. “They should see that there’s no need to butcher one another. It’s possible to live together.”

With good judgment and composure, the people of Israel can show respect for each other, wrote Haaretz journalist Nir Hasson. “Ramadan can be what it is intended to be according to Muslim tradition, a month of kindness and serenity.”


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.

As we strive to understand that Life is God, as Christ Jesus proved, we will be uplifted from old habits and materialistic thinking into blessings and healing.


Viewfinder

Mark Mitchell/New Zealand Herald/AP
Jacinda Ardern is hugged by Finance Minister Grant Robertson after her final speech to New Zealand’s Parliament in Wellington, on April 5, 2023. Ms. Ardern stepped down as prime minister in January after serving five years but formally leaves Parliament next week. In her address, she underscored the values that gave her global influence: “I am, after all, a conviction-based politician. And I’ve always believed this to be a place where you can make a difference. I leave knowing that to be true. ... Politics has never been a tick list for me. It’s all about progress.”
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow, when our Harry Bruinius looks at the cherished notion that humanity thrives amid a marketplace of ideas – and why it has been losing ground.

More issues

2023
April
06
Thursday

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