2023
June
12
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 12, 2023
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If you didn’t know where to look, you might miss it. Tucked away from a busy street in Boston’s Mattapan neighborhood, ringed by houses and apartments, is a secret garden of sorts. Here grow a fig tree, black walnut trees, a sour cherry tree, and even a pawpaw tree, an indigenous North American fruit tree. There are also blueberry and blackberry bushes and perennial flowers. Squirrels chatter from the wood fence, and the branches above are alive with birdsong. A gravel path curves around an outdoor stage, two chess tables, and benches. This is the Edgewater Food Forest, a tiny urban oasis that offers food for foraging and a community space to gather.

It’s one of 10 similar urban plots across Boston that have been transformed from vacant lots to spaces teeming with life. All of them have been built and are tended to by neighborhood stewards. 

Hope Kelley, the communications manager for the Boston Food Forest Coalition, describes them as public edible parks. “[They are] designed to mimic the layers and ecological relationships of a healthy young forest while producing food,” says Ms. Kelley. 

But they also support the interconnectedness of the people who live near them. “If we can start with neighbors having a sense of pride for what’s going on in their neighborhoods, that’s a really important first step in bringing neighbors together to create climate and community resilience,” she says.

Edgewater Food Forest had its grand opening in May, so it’s still a baby food forest. But it has already helped introduce neighbors who have lived side by side for decades without ever meeting. As the young plants and trees grow in the years ahead, they shelter a promise: Coming together to build something beautiful and peaceful can be a natural part of any neighborhood.

Editor's note: A quote has been updated to better reflect the mission of the Boston Food Forest Coalition.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

AP
The flooded town of Oleshky, Ukraine, June 10, 2023. The destruction of the Kakhovka Dam in southern Ukraine is threatening to evolve into a long-term environmental catastrophe, affecting drinking water and ecosystems reaching into the Black Sea.

Cities, and people, recover from floods, and Kherson’s wartime experiences have steeled it to face challenges. But in the Ukrainian city, along banks of the Dnipro, and around the Black Sea, concerns mount for the flood’s environmental impact.

Thom Bridge/Indpendent Record/AP
Young plaintiffs in a climate lawsuit challenging Montana's government for not doing enough to combat climate change are seen outside the Lewis and Clark County courthouse, June 12, 2023, in Helena, Montana.

A lawsuit in Montana marks the first time that young people in the United States have gotten a chance in court to demand the right to a stable climate – part of a larger global effort by children to demand government action.

Many conservative voters share former President Donald Trump’s claim that the justice system has been “weaponized.” That makes it hard for Trump rivals to capitalize on his indictment.

Essay

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY MELANIE STETSON FREEMAN/STAFF

Sometimes you discover you have a true superpower. And sometimes things are not exactly what they seem.

Points of Progress

What's going right

In our progress roundup, two countries made changes that could make struggling communities feel more valued. In Greece, special ramps for wheelchair users are increasing access to beaches. And in Morocco, a new annual holiday recognizes the 40% of the population with Berber roots. 


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Colombia's President Gustavo Petro and Antonio Garcia, commander of the National Liberation Army (ELN), shake hands in Havana as Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel claps during the June 9 announcement of a ceasefire for 6 months.

One of the world’s oldest violent conflicts could be near an end because of a novel idea in peacemaking: Let civilians participate. Last Friday, the Colombian government and the National Liberation Army (ELN) guerrillas signed procedural agreements that not only plan for a 180-day cease-fire but also open a way for civil society to track and verify the deal.

“Let this be the people’s agreement,” said ELN chief negotiator Pablo Beltrán during the signing ceremony in Cuba. 

Allowing civilians to monitor the cease-fire would set the stage for them to participate in the details of a final peace agreement, which Colombian President Gustavo Petro expects by 2025. The guerrillas might end their violent tactics if the deal begins to fulfill the social and economic goals that inspired them to take up arms in the 1960s.

Colombia already has experience in bringing civilians into a negotiated peace agreement. During talks that cemented a 2016 pact with a larger guerrilla group known as Farc, tens of thousands of victims of that war were at the table. Organized into a political force, they played a key role in shaping the deal and softening the stances of the two sides. Many former Farc members have since become politicians.

This new agreement would include more than civilian groups in the verification of the cease-fire. They would be joined by the United Nations and the Catholic Church, helping to broaden peace efforts beyond a few leaders on either side.

The purpose of the deal, explained a joint statement by the government and ELN, “is to generate the necessary conditions for the civilian population – social leaders, ethnic peoples, women, human rights defenders – to exercise their rights freely in their own territories.”

The agreement was perhaps easier to reach because Mr. Petro is a former guerrilla who became Colombia’s first left-wing president. The number of ELN members is estimated at between 2,000 and 4,000.

The cease-fire is set to start Aug. 3, allowing only a few weeks for both sides to select the civilians who will monitor the pact’s implementation. They, more than others, probably know that peace is not merely the absence of conflict. It also requires inclusion and respect of the interests of a wide section of society. And right now, the main interest of Colombians is a silencing of guns.


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.

There’s a God-illumined path to freedom from the mental baggage of traumatic events – as a woman experienced after years of feeling dominated by effects of trauma from incidents that occurred during her early childhood.


Viewfinder

Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters
An umbrella offers a bit of relief for a woman as she navigates a flooded street during monsoon rains in Dhaka, Bangladesh, June 12, 2023.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us. Please come back tomorrow, when we consider how humans should regulate the rapid evolution of artificial intelligence. It will be a look at the debate and practical options, as some experts call for a “pause” to avoid unintended harm to society.

More issues

2023
June
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Monday

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