海角大神

This article appeared in the March 06, 2019 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 03/06 edition

Between Alabama and Hiroshima, a thread of renewal

Shannon Stapleton/Reuters
Members of the Auburn (Ala.) Fire Department rest near a destroyed home March 5 after back-to-back tornadoes tore through Beauregard, Ala.
Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Where do you begin when your world seems to have fallen apart?

In Alabama, the tornado that swept through rural Lee County last weekend left Makitha Griffin wondering how to pick up the pieces of a shattered life. Five of the 23 people who died were her relatives 鈥 two aunts, two uncles, and a cousin. Yet her first instinct was to think of others. 鈥淎t the end of the day, it was so many other people that needed to be healed,鈥 .

So she began to feed the first responders helping survivors. Growing up in Lee County, she said, 鈥渆verybody was still family whether they were related or not.鈥

The experience of Arata Isozaki yesterday could not have seemed more remote from those scenes. The architect won the Pritzker Prize, the most prestigious award in architecture, for his ingenious blending of Eastern and Western styles and use of empty spaces, known in Japanese as 鈥渕a.鈥

But those lessons were learned in childhood, he says, living near ground zero of the atomic attack on Hiroshima. It impressed on him the power of emptiness and its potential as a canvas for rebirth. 鈥淭he only possible choice I had was to start from the ruins,鈥 , 鈥渢he degree zero where nothing remained.鈥

His award was recognition for what he has built from those ruins.

Now on to our five stories, which look at the changing calculus of apologies in Washington, a Monitor reporter鈥檚 run-in with authoritarianism in Istanbul, and humanity鈥檚 long and winding path to collaboration.


This article appeared in the March 06, 2019 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 03/06 edition
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