2024
December
20
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 20, 2024
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

As this is our last Daily before Christmas, we thought we would make it something of a Christmas gift. We start with a cover story from the Weekly magazine in which staffers speak of memorable presents. A Huffy BMX bike; the wonders of the Sears Roebuck catalog; a delightful, fuzzy Mesozoic poet named Gronk. 

I might have laughed a few times, even felt a tear. In other words, Merry Christmas.    


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News briefs

• Trump budget rejected: The House rejects President-elect Donald Trump’s new plan to fund federal operations and suspend the debt ceiling, a day before a possible government shutdown.
• Starbucks strike: The union representing more than 10,000 Starbucks baristas says members will strike in Los Angeles, Chicago, and Seattle for five days starting Dec. 20, citing issues over wages, staffing, and schedules.
• Biden cancels student debt: The Biden administration cancels $4.28 billion in student debt for nearly 55,000 public service workers. The action brings the total public-service student loans forgiven to about $78 billion for nearly 1.1 million workers.
• Egg prices skyrocket: Wholesale egg prices in the United States are shattering records as an outbreak of bird flu cuts supplies while shoppers buy more to bake during the holiday season.

Read these news briefs.


Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Karen Norris/Staff

For many children, Christmas morning is all about the presents. But as our writers unwrap their favorite holiday memories from childhood, something else comes into focus: the giver.

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor
Syrians react with emotion as they try to identify relatives among the bodies brought to a hospital morgue from Sednaya prison, notorious for the torture and killing of inmates during the regime of Bashar al-Assad, in Damascus, Syria, Dec. 13, 2024.

Syrians want to learn what happened to those who were jailed or forcibly disappeared as they seek to recover from decades of a brutal dictatorship. For many, the first, difficult stop is a notorious prison.

The Explainer

Confirming a historically diverse slate of judges could be one of President Biden’s strongest legacies, but zero-sum politics continues to dominate judicial selection.

The Explainer

Jacob Turcotte/Staff

As the generations gather for the holidays, communication could be a challenge. We’ve got you covered with glossaries for Generation Z and millennial slang.

The city of Berlin pays half the cost if you repair electronics rather than throw them away. That sounds better than it worked out in practice for our reporter.

Film

Macall Polay/Searchlight Pictures
Pete Seeger (Edward Norton, left) and Bob Dylan (Timothée Chalamet) make music in “A Complete Unknown,” opening Christmas Day.

The filmmakers of “A Complete Unknown” were faced with a daunting task, our critic writes: How do you get behind the mask of a willfully enigmatic artist like Bob Dylan?


The Monitor's View

AP
A woman poses for photos near Christmas decorations at a mall in Beijing, Dec. 15.

Anyone visiting China during Christmas – the world’s most widely celebrated religious holiday – should be prepared to find that the commemoration of Christ’s coming has been imported as a secular, commercialized “festival.”

In public displays, Santa – called Old Christmas Person – usually holds a saxophone. He is single. Instead of elves, he has sisters. Christmas trees, mostly fake and mostly set up by retailers, are known as “trees of light.” Don’t bother looking for a manger scene. If you visit a mall decked out in red-and-green decorations, you may tire of “Jingle Bells” being played again and again.

For the less than 5% of Chinese who are Christians, there is an inkling of the day’s meaning in the Mandarin translation of Christmas: Holy Birth Festival (Shèngdàn jié).

Yet even that bow to God’s gift of divine truth was countered by a command last December from the ruling Communist Party that Christianity in China must be “in line with ... excellent Chinese traditions and culture.” (Some Christmas displays do include dragons.)

Well, party leaders might be glad that the masses over recent decades have devised a very popular Chinese tradition. Young people now use Christmas Eve to give an unusual gift – “peace apples” – to close friends.

Yes, apples. But not any apples. Only the finest kind, wrapped in boxes, adorned with ribbons, and imprinted with Christmas messages, often in gold, on the red skin. The crafted fruit can cost six times more than normal. One box even cost more than an Apple iPhone. And this in a country that produces about half of the world’s apples and consumes the most apples.

While the thought behind these fruity presents is one of charity, humility, and goodwill, the origin of “peace apples” is less lofty. In Mandarin, the first syllable of the word for apple (píngguǒ) is the same as the first syllable in the word for Christmas Eve (píngān yè), which is translated as “peace night.” In other words, a fun play on words has become a solemn and symbolic act of the Christmas spirit.

So, visitors to China at Christmas, please note: A foreign holiday meant to worship the Prince of Peace has become a paean to peace for and by the Chinese people. While their rulers claim China is a global promoter of peace – something people in Taiwan, Tibet, Vietnam, Japan, and the Philippines would dispute – real peace on Earth is being expressed heart to heart. The Chinese are giving the lowly apple its due with their generous adornment, as if it’s a gentle babe lying in a manger wrapped in swaddling clothes.

It’s not exactly apples for apples. But the truth behind Christmas can show up anywhere, even in an excellent new tradition.


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.

Sebastian Condrea_Moment_Getty Images

We can hear and heed God’s uplifting and healing messages on Christmas and every day.


Viewfinder

Raquel Cunha/Reuters
A Christmas tree soars skyward in front of the Metropolitan Cathedral in Mexico City Dec. 17, 2024, evoking the “silent night” that approaches.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. As mentioned in the intro, today will be the last Christian Science Monitor Daily before Christmas. Next week, you will receive a series of special sends highlighting our favorite stories of the past year. Your next Daily will arrive Monday, Dec. 30. Happy holidays! 

More issues

2024
December
20
Friday

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