2023
July
27
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 27, 2023
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

By next week, I will be living in Berlin. 

No, I am not part of some editor exchange program. You should not expect the chief of the Süddeutsche Zeitung to announce a seven-part Monitor series on Oktoberfest. This is about my family – the fact that I am the only member without German citizenship, and yet we have never lived in Germany. It was time to do that before my kids are no longer kids (which will be shockingly soon).

Yet the fact that the editor of The Christian Science Monitor will live in Germany for a year does say something important. 

The trend is for American newspapers to be scaling back international coverage. Generally speaking, international news doesn’t sell in the United States. And it is fantastically expensive. What papers usually do best is cover their own communities.  

But what does the Monitor do best? I would argue that it offers a transformative view of the world itself – that the human story is more interconnected and more hopeful than much media coverage would have us believe. The qualities that drive world events – justice, equality, compassion, trust, honesty – know no borders. To understand the news is to understand how the struggle over these qualities shapes our experience worldwide. That is what news is. 

For a news organization tasked with bringing the world closer in profound ways, new possibilities are always emerging. For my part, I hope to share with you insights gained from broadening a sense of home and identity. For the Monitor’s part, I hope we are strengthening a statement that has always been true. The Monitor has long been touted as “an international daily newspaper.” This year, we’ll take a small step toward further proving that, while it is based in Boston, the Monitor is for the world.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor
Ukrainians salvage barley and peas three days after five Russian missiles struck a grain storage facility in the Odesa-region village of Pavlivka, Ukraine, July 24, 2023. Russian missile and drone strikes have targeted port and grain storage facilities across the region for seven days.

Russia has launched near-nightly attacks on Ukrainian export facilities since it withdrew from the Black Sea Grain Initiative. Tons of grain have burned and prices have surged, reviving concerns for worsening global food security.

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
Hunter Biden (center), son of U.S. President Joe Biden, arrives at federal court to enter a plea on tax and gun-possession charges, in Wilmington, Delaware, July 26, 2023. The deal later fell apart.

A plea deal over tax and gun charges against Hunter Biden fell apart Wednesday. The courtroom drama heightens the political risk for President Joe Biden and his campaign.

Graphic

In charts: A shift in global trade

For years, the United States and China were growing increasingly intertwined as giants of the world economy. Now, the word “decoupling” may be an exaggeration, but our graphic, by Jacob Turcotte, shows a significant adjustment in trade.

SOURCE:

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Governments are facing dueling pressures on climate policies: addressing searing new climate challenges responsibly amid a rising “greenlash” against pushing too far, too fast. 

Books

Across Africa, English is touted as the language of modernity while African tongues are treated as historical relics. By translating a literary classic into Shona, a group of Zimbabwean authors seeks to change such perceptions.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A child displaced due to the fighting between the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) forces and Ethiopian National Defence Force (ENDF) allied with Amhara Special Forces, is seen at the Abi Adi camp for the Internally Displaced Persons in Abi Adi, Tigray Region, Ethiopia, June 24,

For more than a year, warring factions in Yemen and their foreign backers have sought how to end nearly a decade of conflict. The civilians aren’t waiting. Yesterday 42 community groups and professional associations issued their own road map for a society built on inclusivity, equality, and rule of law. “Sustainable and lasting peace can only be achieved by welcoming reconciliation through justice,” they declared.

The moral strength of that appeal rests in the examples set by the coalition, which includes women and youth, educators and health care providers, lawyers and journalists. Through scores of small-scale projects to rebuild communities and livelihoods, the coalition is showing that empathy and compassion nurture peace and dissolve division.

“Women and civil society organizations working at the grassroots level are accepted by local communities and enjoy their trust because they are responsive to their needs,” wrote Kawkab al-Thaibani, founder of the Yemen-based She4Society Initiative, in the online journal Democracy in Exile. 

Many of the projects are simple. Most arise from needs compounded by war. Ethar Farea, a young woman in Aden, developed a plan to turn organic waste into fertilizer for farming. “Having such programmes is a glimmer of hope and an opportunity for youth for the desired change,” she told the United Nations Development Program.

Projects like that are gaining new momentum. The war, which erupted between government forces and Iran-backed Houthi rebels in 2014, severely restricted the ability of civil society groups to work. A truce brokered by the U.N. last year has gradually reopened that space. While the two sides attempt to resolve their political and economic disagreements, international development agencies have begun to empower local organizations.

Something similar is starting to happen in Ethiopia, a country that is currently caught between a stalled peace agreement and formal processes of rebuilding. In that country, several smaller factions and a neighboring army were drawn into a two-year conflict between the government and a dissident faction in the northern state of Tigray. The peace agreement called for a national process of reconciliation.

While that has yet to begin, a group called the Tigray Youth Association has begun countering conflict through dialogue with youth from other ethnic groups. With help from the U.N., it held a reconciliation and trust-building workshop in April. The African Union hosted a similar exercise last October. A youth festival in April sponsored by the United States brought 20,000 young people together from around the country.

In Yemen, a potent unifying moment came last month when the country’s under-17 boys’ soccer club made it to the quarterfinals in the AFC U17 Asian Cup. The team’s players came from across the country – and so did the nation’s response. One Yemen coach’s post-tournament reflections carried a larger message. “We are all working hard and hoping that things remain stable,” Miroslav Soukup told Deutsche Welle. “If there can be a more normal football situation, then there is potential. There is a long way to go, but we are taking small steps.”

Societies emerging from conflict often need models of courage in forming a lasting peace. In Yemen and Ethiopia, those models have already started.


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.

Digging deeply into the textbook of Christian Science helps us see more of what we really are as children of God and experience healing.


Viewfinder

Lisi Niesner/Reuters
Mountaineers climb Bøverbreen glacier, an inland glacier in Jotunheimen National Park near Lom, Norway, July 27, 2023. A study from the University of Cambridge and the University Centre in Svalbard, Norway, released this month, found that melting glaciers are causing methane gas to be released from previously frozen ground, or permafrost. Scientists are concerned this could be a significant new source of methane, which contributes to global warming.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow for our “Why We Wrote This” podcast, where we dive deeper into how a Monitor story changed the lives of young girls in Malawi. 

More issues

2023
July
27
Thursday

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