海角大神

2019
October
07
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 07, 2019
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Welcome back. Today we look at competing values in the high court鈥檚 new session, Cory Booker鈥檚 love-forward candidacy, a big moment for separatists in Spain, black women making important inroads as U.S. mayors, and an effort to help both birds and big cities.

First, from to to the U.S., the world seems ablaze in clashing interests.聽

Quieter acts of compassion support a more hopeful view.聽

in the Qatari heat. 鈥淢y thoughts were to help him finish,鈥 said Braima Suncar Dabo of Guinea-Bissau of his Aruban competitor Jonathan Busby. 鈥淭hat is the point of the race.鈥

A Chicago who wanted to read to her child鈥檚 class but couldn鈥檛 read English, 鈥淐ome read in your language.鈥

Refugee women from different cultures in Sicily to grow strength from unity.聽

鈥淲e can change this world right now,鈥 wrote Sharif Abdullah in his book 聽鈥渂y shifting our consciousness and our values from a foundation of exclusivity to one of inclusivity.鈥

How much of a shift would that require in a U.S. culture where it seems to mean a lot to 鈥渨in,鈥 and where winning seems a zero-sum game? Maybe less than we think.聽

A finds that respondents鈥 definitions of 鈥渟uccess鈥 are quite different from what they judge society鈥檚 definitions to be. Learning, human relationships, and character 鈥 all pro-social pursuits 鈥 formed the individuals鈥 top three. Together they edged out what respondents perceived to be the most important marker in society鈥檚 view: 鈥渟tatus鈥 built on acquiring advantages over others.聽


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Michael A. McCoy/Reuters
Activists rally outside Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's house, Oct. 6, 2019, one day before the Supreme Court starts its new term in Washington.

A coming wave of hot-button Supreme Court decisions is set to crash into an especially volatile political environment. We explore how the cultural impact could extend to the court itself.聽

A deeper look

Elise Amendola/AP
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Cory Booker takes a selfie with people at a campaign event Aug. 17, 2019, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.

When Cory Booker talks about love, our writer notes, it鈥檚 not sentimental. Is it enough to lift his candidacy?

The Explainer

Alvaro Barrientos/AP
Pro-independence supporters wave Catalan flags in San Sebastian, northern Spain, Oct. 1, 2019, two years after a banned independence referendum that shook Spanish politics.

Dealing with the legality of one of Europe鈥檚 long-running secessionist movements will come down to how the roots of the divide 鈥 and reactions 鈥 are framed. We look at the perspectives.

Points of Progress

What's going right

Having elected officials who represent a diversity of backgrounds fortifies democracy. Here鈥檚 a cohort that鈥檚 in a special position to make city governance more equitable.

Difference-maker

Nature and human settlements are often (and often fairly) cast as adversaries. This is a case study in making them mutually beneficial.


The Monitor's View

AP
Ethiopians throw grass into a pool of water as a symbol of riches after the rainy season and to thank the land and water as they celebrate the annual Irrecha thanksgiving festival in the capital Addis Ababa Oct. 5.

Ever since post-apartheid South Africa created a Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 1995, nearly 40 nations have tried to account for past wrongs with forgiveness. Only a few have succeeded.

Now it is Ethiopia鈥檚 turn. Its attempt, which began this year, could help answer an open question: How does a nation heal after violent trauma?

Ethiopia knows it faces a steep task: dealing with brutality from recent authoritarian rule. The East African state is home to more than 80 ethnic groups, often at odds. After Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed took office last year, with a welcome release of political prisoners and a revival of democracy, his reforms unleashed long-repressed ethnic frustrations. They even led to a coup attempt. At this year鈥檚 world track championships 鈥 an event that should have unified Ethiopians around a national pastime 鈥 fans spent more time shouting down each other than cheering on their country鈥檚 athletes.

With a national census and an election next year, many fear a return to bloodshed 鈥 thus the importance of unity. This February, Mr. Abiy, who has a Ph.D. in conflict resolution, formed the country鈥檚 first reconciliation commission. It has begun its work of giving voice to victims and placing a long history of human rights abuses in context. The aim is not revenge or retribution. Instead, the commission seeks a narrative for past injustices, to find their root causes and to illuminate them in the hope that understanding will bring forgiveness.

As its mandate says, the commission will promote 鈥渧alues of forgiveness for the past, lasting love, solidarity and mutual understanding by identifying reasons of conflict, animosity that ... occurred due to conflicts, misapprehension, developed disagreement, and revenge.鈥

Or as Archbishop Desmond Tutu explained about South Africa鈥檚 approach: Forgiveness 鈥渋nvolves trying to understand the perpetrators and so have empathy, to try to stand in their shoes and appreciate the sort of pressures and influences that might have conditioned them.鈥

Reconciliation is one thing and identity another, but in Ethiopia, the two may develop together. Unlike many surrounding countries, Ethiopia never had a long struggle with colonialism, meaning that other than a long war with Eritrea, it didn鈥檛 unify in opposition to a foreign conqueror. Human rights abuses have been mainly internecine 鈥 whether it was during a monarchy, a junta, or single-party rule.

Unlike other countries that created similar commissions, Ethiopia鈥檚 attempts at reconciliation come from the inside out. There was no far-reaching regime change when Mr. Abiy took office. The party in power is being reformed, not replaced.

Strengthening national identity may follow a similar path. With so much division, Ethiopia needs uniting values. Love, forgiveness, mercy 鈥 those championed by the reconciliation commission and Mr. Abiy himself 鈥 offer a starting point. The mission is to create a narrative from decades of abuse, and do so with intent to forgive. This can help recast what it means to be Ethiopian. Perhaps the commission will help change concepts of Ethiopian nationhood from division to unity 鈥 unity, that is, around love for fellow citizens.

The commission is not without its challenges. Its mandate comes top-down from the government, rather than bottom-up from the people. For it really to take root, it will need mass acceptance. But the separation between government and people may not be so stark. Mr. Abiy is Africa鈥檚 youngest leader in one of its few real democracies. If ever there was a chance to redefine nationhood, it is now, with new generations unencumbered by a troubling past.

Mr. Abiy has made strategic missteps in his short time in office. Ethnic infighting is up in a country already with one of the world鈥檚 largest number of people displaced by internal conflict. While he increased the country鈥檚 freedom, freedom doesn鈥檛 cure resentment. Reconciliation does.

A sudden leap toward democracy has challenged a divided Ethiopia. The commission鈥檚 job is to help cool the masses. 鈥淟oving each other and casting away the spirit of hatred and revenge鈥 are Mr. Abiy鈥檚 stated goals. If the country can embrace those ideals it can reconcile. Divided in conflict or united in love? Ethiopia may be closer to the first but seems ready for the second. The seeds have been sown 鈥 now reconciliation only need take root.


A 海角大神 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 鈥 in its various forms 鈥 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 鈥 The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston 鈥 whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

When an injured foot raised concerns about her upcoming plans, a woman found powerful reassurance in the Bible鈥檚 promises of God鈥檚 goodness and love. The result was healing 鈥 not only of her foot, but of general trepidation about the future.


A message of love

Willy Kurniawan/Reuters
Students wearing Indonesian traditional costumes talk with Indonesian President Joko Widodo during a welcoming ceremony for Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte at the presidential palace in Bogor, Indonesia, Oct. 7, 2019.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Come back tomorrow. Technology has been a big talking point amid the auto industry鈥檚 ongoing labor dispute. But even as Silicon Valley plays a rising role in car production, Laurent Belsie reports, the industry鈥檚 Michigan roots are deep.

More issues

2019
October
07
Monday

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