As extreme cold grips the Midwest, communities are rallying around their unsheltered residents. But will this acute outpouring translate into long-term support for efforts to curb homelessness?
College acceptance letters are generally cause for celebration. But one young woman鈥檚 has prompted rejoicing on both sides of the Atlantic.
For more than a decade, the Monitor has followed the story of Olga Thimbela, a South African woman who, at the height of the country鈥檚 AIDS epidemic, took in six orphaned children and raised them as her own.
A housekeeper with no formal education, Olga fought to make sure those six children 鈥 as well as her own 鈥 stayed in school. Last year, Olga鈥檚 oldest daughter, Naledi, passed her high school exit exams with flying colors, qualifying to attend university.
There was one problem. She owed her high school $208 in fees. Until that was paid, the school wouldn鈥檛 release her transcript and she could not apply to college, her mother鈥檚 dearest wish. After the Monitor wrote about Naledi鈥檚, and her mom鈥檚, achievement and the new barrier they faced, emails came flooding in.
The message: 鈥淐an I help?鈥
Thanks to people鈥檚 generosity, Naledi not only paid her debt but was able to buy a laptop, apply to college, and pay the registration at the University of the Free State.
鈥淭oday, as I write this message, she is settling into her dorm, hanging posters, and choosing classes.... In February, she鈥檒l start her degree in agricultural sciences,鈥 writes Ryan Lenora Brown, our South Africa bureau chief.
The Monitor tries to, as Ryan puts it, draw the world in close. 鈥淢y job reminds me constantly of how mean the world is, but also how much kindness it contains, stubborn and resilient, kindness that reaches across oceans and borders to ask, How can I help? What can I do?鈥
From all of us, thank you.
Now, here are our five stories of the day.