2023
August
18
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 18, 2023
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Linda Feldmann
Washington Bureau Chief

David Anable, who died early this week, was more than a former Monitor correspondent and senior editor. He was a mentor to legions of Monitor reporters and editors, by nature a teacher, with a strong sense of principle and a gift for making reporters’ draft copy shine on deadline.

Foremost, the “lede” should be short and the point of the story readily apparent, David drilled into us. As foreign editor, he led morning meetings dubbed “Sunday School,” as we gathered round to discuss events and coverage ideas. To young staffers, it was better than grad school. We were being paid to learn.

I met David in 1980, during a college semester in Moscow. He was visiting the paper’s bureau, where I had befriended correspondent David Willis and his family. One day I dropped by, and there was this tall, charming British gentleman with a ready smile and endless questions.

“Do you like to travel?” David asked. I nodded enthusiastically. “You should think about being a foreign correspondent,” he said. “Come see me when you’re about to graduate.”

I did, and the rest is history. David rose to become managing editor, but resigned in 1988 – along with the editor, deputy managing editor, and many staff – in a dispute over the Monitor’s direction. Still, he remained a dear friend to many of us. He went on to lead the journalism department at Boston University and then the International Center for Journalists in Washington.

Early in his Monitor career, David landed the perfect (for him) reporting assignment: covering the United Nations, where the entire world comes to you. He had studied agricultural economics at Oxford, but his heart was in understanding the globe. It was also with his beloved wife, Isobel, and their three daughters.

As an editor, David was the unseen hand behind many a well-executed Monitor story. Jeff Carmel, a former editor on the international desk, summed it up: “David had an uncommon, uncanny ability to quickly and calmly discern the key elements buried in a correspondent’s copy, and in reworking a story, bring out the best in the writer and benefit our readers.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

When the names of the grand jurors who indicted Donald Trump were made public, it sharpened an urgent question. At a time of heightened threats against the judiciary, how should the United States balance transparency and safety?  

Letter from Lahaina, Hawaii

Sarah Matusek/The Christian Science Monitor
Volunteers with a boat launched by Blue Water Rafting from Kihei, Hawaii, on the island of Maui, drop off donations to people impacted by the Lahaina wildfire, Aug. 15, 2023.

Part of a journalist’s job is gaining access to where news needs are most urgent. Our reporter shares the challenges of getting to Maui’s Lahaina and the humanity she witnessed once there.

Sandra Cuffe
In a symbolic act of protest during an Aug. 10, 2023, demonstration in Guatemala City, women affiliated with the National Movement of Weavers create textiles on looms attached to the fence outside the prosecutor’s office.

Shock waves over a surprise presidential runoff candidate and a blatant attack on electoral independence could shift the future of democracy in Guatemala as citizens go to the polls this weekend.

Dmitry Serebryakov/AP
Russian matryoshka dolls with portraits of Chinese leader Xi Jinping (left) and Russian President Vladimir Putin are displayed for sale in Moscow, March 21, 2023. Amid the war in Ukraine, Russia has found itself tied ever more closely to China, economically, politically, and ideologically.

Is Russia’s future aligned with China? Many in Moscow think so, seeing the two countries’ visions aligning not just geopolitically, but also ideologically – though it may cost Russia considerably.

Podcast

Inside what may be education’s bottom-up revolution

Organic and free-form learning pods thrived during the pandemic and seem to have stuck around. Can microschools change the face of U.S. education? Our writer tells how she set out to size up an emerging trend. 

The Rise of the Microschool?

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The Monitor's View

AP
The Little League team from Cuba rides in an Aug. 14 parade in Williamsport, Pa., at the start of the league's World Series baseball tournament, featuring 20 teams from around the world.

For the first time in a tournament dating back to 1947, Cubans are playing in the Little League World Series in the United States. Their participation marks a triumph of the persistent human desire to forge healing connections across geopolitical divides.

“Sports and the arts can offer an alternative, a better example of relations between two countries,” said Daniel Montero, a Cuban filmmaker and co-director of a short documentary on the young players. After decades of enmity between Washington and Havana and more recent seesaw attempts at reconciliation, he told the journalism website Latino Rebels, “it just feels good to see an alternative to that.”

Like science or music, sports can coax gestures of friendship and trust from hardened foes. Grassroots soccer programs nurtured new bonds of community in war-torn countries like Liberia and the republics of the former Yugoslavia. After apartheid, South Africa found a new basis for racial harmony in a shared national passion for rugby. Cricket offers one of the few consistent avenues for diplomacy between India and Pakistan.

Baseball has a long history of bridge-building dating back to the U.S. Civil War, when Union and Confederate soldiers found warmer ways to work out their differences – sometimes on fields measured out within prisoner-of-war camps. Nearly a century later, the game helped dismantle racial segregation.

Studies of so-called adversarial collaborations show their ability to tap reservoirs of qualities like humility and compassion, hidden by conflict. In 2016, then-President Barack Obama joined his counterpart Raúl Castro for a game in Havana between the Cuban national team and the visiting Tampa Bay Rays. The two leaders had spent the previous three days butting their diplomatic heads.

“If we look at sport and art ... as being about creativity, imagination and personal expression,” wrote Roald Bradstock, a former British Olympic athlete and youth sports ambassador, we discover “an ideal platform for interaction, engagement and discussion of ideas and thoughts ... a stronger foundation for a more peaceful world.”

Washington’s long isolation of Cuba’s authoritarian regimes, from the Castros to current President Miguel Díaz-Canel, kept the country’s youth out of the World Series, which has always been held in the U.S. When the Obama administration began seeking a thaw, Little League Baseball and Softball saw an opening. It has gradually expanded its reach to help grow the baseball programs in 180 municipalities across the island nation. In 2019, it added Cuba to the community of nations that compete for a spot in the tournament. Cuba’s first appearance in the tournament is sowing goodwill in a country where baseball excellence is the noblest of abilities.

The World Series includes 20 teams from around the world. Each international team bunks with a team from the U.S. During two weeks of competition, lasting friendships will undoubtedly grow. In downtown Williamsport, the town of 28,000 in central Pennsylvania hosting the tournament, the divisions of nations are nowhere evident. As the Cuban team, Los Bayamitos, and the 19 other teams rode floats down Susquehanna Street on Monday in an opening parade, townsfolk lining the route tossed rubber balls to the young Cubans to sign.

“In each signature,” wrote Osviel Castro Medel, a traveling reporter for the Cuban newspaper Juventud Rebelde, “there was, surely, a world of simplicity, of love, of joy.”

On the fields of Little League dreams, innocence and affection are rounding the bases.


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.

Things don’t always pan out the way we’d hoped. But turning to God for inspiration – and humbly obeying – equips us to experience God’s goodness in fresh, even unexpected, ways.


Viewfinder

Shuji Kajiyama/AP
A person checks their smartphone as they walk past a wall of outdated mobile phones and mock-ups on display outside an electronics shop in Tokyo, Aug. 18, 2023. The shop owner says he started his collection of more than 7,000 phones some 20 years ago.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us. Please come again Monday, when we examine this extraordinary moment in American political history, as the multiply indicted Donald Trump attempts a comeback.

More issues

2023
August
18
Friday

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