2023
September
11
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 11, 2023
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Ken Makin
Cultural commentator

During Coco Gauff’s two-week journey to becoming the United States Open women’s champion, a video of her cheering at the Open more than 10 years ago began to make the rounds. What happened between that moment a decade ago and her victorious match Saturday is the stuff of storybooks.

It’s hard to imagine that Novak Djokovic or his 24th major victory – which placed him two Grand Slams ahead of Rafael Nadal – might be forced to share the spotlight. Yet the sensational Serb, who matched his devastating service returns with words of humility and grace, made room for one of the biggest young stars in tennis.

One year after Serena Williams’ swan song in Flushing Meadows, her proud understudy became the queen of Queens with a thrilling three-set victory over Aryna Sabalenka. Four years prior, she became a household name when she defeated Venus Williams in the first round of Wimbledon and has worked since to turn potential into something more tangible.

The realization of that promise is a story of community – of nature and nurture. Ms. Gauff made sure to celebrate other Black female major champions who influenced and inspired her career. “It's an honor to be in that [group] with Althea Gibson, Serena, Venus, Naomi [Osaka], Sloane [Stephens]. They paved the way for me to be here,” she said in her post-match conference.

In an age when parents in youth sports can be overbearing, Corey and Candi Gauff took a different path. Corey, who was his daughter’s longtime coach, took a step back and made room for both Pere Riba and Brad Gilbert on Team Coco. 

The results have spoken for themselves, and the Gauff family and their tennis team have shown the value of patience. There is no timetable for greatness. Yet this weekend, it arrived.  


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Kenny Holston/Reuters
(From left) Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, U.S. President Joe Biden, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen visit the Raj Ghat memorial with other G20 leaders in New Delhi, Sept. 10, 2023.

Even without the leaders of Russia and China in attendance at the G20 summit in India, their influence created real challenges for President Joe Biden, who drew on creative diplomacy to assert U.S. global leadership.

Carlos Barria/Reuters
A woman dressed in black holds a candle as she walks around La Moneda presidential palace during an event ahead of the 50th anniversary of the 1973 Chilean military coup, in Santiago, Chile, Sept. 10, 2023.

Does it matter how – or whether – history is remembered? In Chile, “desmemoria,” or “forgetting” is spurring some to step up to keep even the toughest parts of Chile’s past alive.

One community in New Orleans, built on a former landfill, symbolizes a key challenge of environmental justice – how the legal “burden of proof” is often stacked against people harmed by toxic pollution.

The auto market is one of the few areas in Russia where Western sanctions had an immediate effect. Today, Russia’s car industry has been transformed, with new players, foreign and domestic, stepping to the fore.

Points of Progress

What's going right

In our progress roundup, the number of Indigenous people in Brazil grew when the national census was improved. And around Kenya’s capital, Africa’s largest school meals program launched to reduce hunger and malnutrition.


The Monitor's View

One global trend in recent years has been the ability and generosity of people to keep pace with frequent mass disasters. This has been evident in Morocco since Friday’s earthquake that destroyed parts of historic Marrakech and surrounding villages in the North African nation. Scores of countries quickly prepared to send assistance as well as made gestures of mourning and solidarity. The Eiffel Tower, for example, went dark on Saturday night.

Like many disasters, this one opened opportunities for aid from countries that Morocco sees as adversaries. Accepting such aid would set a tone of peacemaking as it allows for contact between peoples, enabling trust to grow. Any healing of tense ties between nations starts with the humility to accept such help.

A good example was seen after February’s earthquakes in Turkey and Syria. Greece was one of the first to send aid, even though at the time it was making threats against Turkey over a territorial dispute in the Aegean Sea. The gesture of aid cooled tensions. Turkish leaders restored diplomatic channels. The two countries’ foreign ministers toured affected areas together in a sign of renewed unity.

When another neighbor of Turkey, Armenia, offered to send rescue teams, Turkey opened a border crossing for the first time in 30 years to let them in. “I will always remember the generous aid sent by the people of Armenia,” Serdar Kiliç, Turkey’s envoy to Armenia, wrote on Twitter. Israel offered aid and medical teams to Syria. Although Damascus publicly refused, it quietly accepted the help.

Morocco now has a similar opportunity with Algeria, one of the first countries to reach out with compassion after the quake despite severed diplomatic relations over ethnic and regional disputes. Algiers opened its airspace immediately to Morocco-bound aid flights and offered to send rescue workers and medical teams. Israel and France – two other countries that have complicated histories with Morocco – have made similar offers.

Morocco has yet to accept that help. But Algeria’s gesture reflects the overwhelming support that ordinary Moroccans and Algerians share for warmer ties and open borders. “There is ... a moral duty that our country cannot shirk,” tweeted Algerian journalist Sid Ahmed Semiane, affirming the government’s offer. “No political conflict should silence our humanity.”

Emergencies like fires, floods, and earthquakes are compelling a fresh look at ways to use such events for peacemaking. “Since climate change affects everyone and natural disasters strike indiscriminately, nations can look beyond ideological, ethnic, religious, and other differences – and even prior conflicts – to forge ties in a collective battle against something that threatens them all,” wrote Limor Simhony, an Israeli policy analyst, in Foreign Policy. That work requires generosity as well as the humility to welcome it.


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.

When faced with the loss of a loved one, we can find comfort and strength in a spiritual view of life as forever sustained by God.


Viewfinder

Andrew Kelly/Reuters
A rose highlights the names of 9/11 victims etched on the walls of the reflecting pools at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum in New York. The names of those killed in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing are etched there as well. Around the United States today, ceremonies honored the nearly 3,000 people killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in New York, Washington, and Pennsylvania. President Joe Biden observed the day at a military base in Anchorage, Alaska, while Vice President Kamala Harris attended the ceremony at New York's Memorial Plaza, where the names of those whose lives were lost are read aloud each year. In Virginia, Goochland County Fire-Rescue Chief Eddie Ferguson told ABC News how he recalled that day: “We were one country, one nation, one people, just like it should be. That was the feeling – that everyone came together and did what we could, where we were at, to try to help.”
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when Christa Case Bryant explores the line between fighting misinformation and curbing free speech. Lawsuits and investigations have brought to light how the Biden administration communicated persistently and urgently with social media companies to curb misinformation about COVID-19. But dissenters say they were unfairly silenced – to the detriment of society.

More issues

2023
September
11
Monday

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