2023
August
15
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 15, 2023
Loading the player...
Sarah Matusek
Staff writer

In recent days, loss has led the news in Lahaina, Hawaii. Wildfire tore through the historic West Maui town a week ago today.

The deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than a century has claimed at least 99 lives. As stunned locals grieve, search and rescue continues. As do donations and hope.

Once the capital of the Kingdom of Hawaii, Lahaina has been home to culturally significant sites for Native Hawaiians. Those include the Na ‘Aikane o Maui Cultural Center that burned.

Six museums run by the Lahaina Restoration Foundation also fell to the flames. But though their artifacts are gone, not all is lost.

“The beauty is, COVID actually gave us time to digitize a large amount of our archives,” says Kimberly Flook, deputy executive director of the foundation.

The pandemic “allowed us to take better care of our collections,” she adds. “If this fire had happened three years ago, we would’ve lost the information as well as the object.”

Once finished, the digitized collection, spanning the 1820s through 1980s, will include missionary family letters, photos, and records from the sugar plantation era. That includes the names of millworkers, whose diversity shaped the island’s identity: Native Hawaiian, Asian, European, and beyond.

“If someone puts in their grandfather’s name, it will pull up any document that he’s referenced in,” says Ms. Flook.

The work should eventually appear in the extensive, free Papakilo Database from the Office of Hawaiian Affairs. (A preexisting app, Lāhainā Historic Trail, offers another chance to explore from afar.)

Online archives can’t bring back Lahaina, of course. But they can help ensure its history survives as more than memory. 


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

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The sweeping racketeering case against former President Donald Trump and 18 associates underscores the central role of states in running elections – and places Georgia at the center of an alleged national conspiracy.

SOURCE:

New York Times

|
Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Thom Bridge/Independent Record/AP
Youth plaintiffs in Held v. Montana, shown outside the courthouse in Helena, June 12, 2023, won their climate change lawsuit Aug. 14.

The first climate case tried in the United States brought a landmark win for its young plaintiffs. Will this provide a model for other states that enshrine protecting the environment in their constitutions?

Henry Romero/Reuters
Christian Zurita and Andrea González leave a press conference at a hotel wearing police vests after the political party of slain Ecuadorian presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio picked Ms. González to replace him as the party standard-bearer, in Quito, Ecuador, Aug.13, 2023.

Assassinations of politicians in Latin America may sound poignantly familiar after years of cartel violence. But in relatively peaceful Ecuador, presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio’s murder has served as a wake-up call about organized crime’s reach.

Niger and France have been mutually dependent on each other for decades. But the coup in Niger has shaken their relationship, as well as French ties with the broader Sahel region.

Essay

Artur Widak/Nurphoto/Reuters/File
Chicken buses wait at the terminal in Huehuetenango, Guatemala, March 2022.

Sometimes our anxieties about a culture are simply preconceived notions and borrowed fears. The key to enriching our understanding? Human connection. 


The Monitor's View

AP
Iraqis raise the Muslim holy book outside the Swedish Embassy in Baghdad during a June 30 protest against the burning of a Quran in Sweden.

To save its democracy, Sweden is trying to prove truth can fly faster than a lie.

In recent weeks, officials have repeatedly said Sweden does not condone the burning of holy books, such as the Quran, even if it has granted permits for such public acts as a constitutional right. They have, for the first time, named Russia as the source of false narratives online about Sweden being hostile against Islam. And since last year – when Sweden experienced its largest disinformation campaign ever – officials have pointed out that someone with links to the Islamic State group was behind false reports that Swedish social services were taking children from Muslim families to Christianize them.

Sweden has lately become a role model for such quick fact-telling. After Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, it set up a lie-squashing body last year – the Psychological Defense Agency – just in time to counter a campaign aimed at preventing its entry into NATO and turning the Islamic world, especially Turkey, against Sweden.

“I believe truth will win in the long run when you have free debate,” the agency’s spokesperson, Mikael Östlund, told Deutsche Welle last week. The issue, he added, is to ensure an open debate.

The task of the new agency is to counter foreign sources of disinformation, not information generated inside Sweden. “We try to take action against malicious disinformation and propaganda coming from abroad that tries to change our view of reality, our voting behavior, our everyday decisions,” Magnus Hjort, the agency’s acting director general, told the German news outlet Süddeutsche Zeitung.

“Nothing and nobody prevents people from telling lies,” he said. “But we will do everything to expose these lies as lies.”

The agency does try to educate Swedes on ways to discern facts from fake news. But it also presents “correct and verified information ... in a way that makes it possible for people to think through their choices and make informed decisions,” according to the agency website. By laying a groundwork of truth, Sweden hopes that lies find no place to grow.


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.

Seeing ourselves and others as children of God, divine Love, opens the door to greater harmony with one another.


Viewfinder

Gene J. Puskar/AP
Members of the Little League team from Nolensville, Tennessee – the Southeast Region champions – ride in the Little League Grand Slam Parade in downtown Williamsport, Pennsylvania, Aug. 14, 2023. The Little League World Series tournament starts in the city this week. Twenty teams are competing from around the world – from Cuba, Mexico, Curaçao, Venezuela, Panama, Czech Republic, United States, Canada, Australia, Taiwan, and Japan.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow, when Scott Peterson takes an on-the-ground look at the aftermath and impact of the Zaporizhzhia dam explosion in Ukraine.

More issues

2023
August
15
Tuesday

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.