To the reporter, there was a jarring irony. The man accused of killing 11 Jews at a Pittsburgh synagogue was given critical care by Jewish doctors. But to Jeff Cohen, the Jewish president of the hospital, there was only a duty to care. 鈥淧eople say he鈥檚 evil,鈥 Dr. Cohen told the reporter in . 鈥淗e鈥檚 some mother鈥檚 son.鈥
In looking through the eyes of a mother, Cohen touched on something powerful.聽I鈥檓 reminded of a recent conversation with our Canada reporter, Sara Miller Llana. Speaking about how she approached reporting in areas gripped by violence and fear, she said 鈥淚 always tried to connect with mothers (and fathers).鈥 So often, she said, reporters go into these areas and report just on the bullets and the gangs. 鈥淏ut there are also mothers behind every closed door, raising kids, and for the most part doing the best job they can to keep those kids safe.鈥
Looking at the world that way changed the way she saw the world, she said. 鈥淚t is so telling to me that every place I've been has always, without fail, been better, safer, more hopeful than what I imagined based on what I read in the media.鈥
That spirit, as Cohen said, is a duty to care for all, and it is not naive to recognize that the power it showed on a tragic day in Pittsburgh is always available.
Now, here are our five stories for today, with a look at a problem-solving insurgency in Congress, a humanitarian dilemma for Syrian refugees, and the message behind the world鈥檚 largest statue.