As he campaigns for reelection, President Trump is relying on some of the same themes that worked in 2016. But for an incumbent presiding over historic challenges, it鈥檚 a complicated message.
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Yvonne Zipp
In our family, the books get packed first.
And so, when our son got ready to go away to college, the first crate was filled with thrift store paperbacks, beloved science fiction, and as many of his parents鈥 college books as would fit 鈥 weathered pages of home comfort to take a thousand miles away.
As parents, the temptation has been to measure the pandemic through the milestones he didn鈥檛 get 鈥 the canceled prom, the lack of pomp, the beloved job cut short. But somewhere between Zoom piano recitals and the third kind of bread I taught him to bake, our uncomplaining kid taught me resiliency.
I learned to appreciate unexpected joys, from the hilarity of a headmaster passing a diploma through a car window with a grabber, to the sandwiches and stacks of freshly folded laundry the teen handed us during busy workdays. And there was time. So much of it to read together and play old games and plant tomatoes and watch old sitcoms, and learn to repair old bikes and then go riding.
The will they or won鈥檛 they of college landed on will. The books were carefully chosen and lovingly packed. The clothes were pulled from the dryer and jammed in a duffel on the last day.
There will be many courses and professors over the next four years. But this class of incoming freshmen has already learned an awful lot about grit and persistence in the face of anxiety.
And to pack the important things first.
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And why we wrote them
( 5 min. read )
As he campaigns for reelection, President Trump is relying on some of the same themes that worked in 2016. But for an incumbent presiding over historic challenges, it鈥檚 a complicated message.
( 7 min. read )
Many Americans have seen images of a near-empty Times Square amid the pandemic. Yet the shutdown鈥檚 ripple effects are harshest in places outside New York City鈥檚 core 鈥 mostly communities of color. Part 2 of a series.
( 6 min. read )
For countries that seemed to have beaten back COVID-19 but are experiencing new hot spots, contact tracing is proving key to keeping the disease in check.
( 6 min. read )
Brazil鈥檚 prison system is known for overcrowding and heightened levels of gang violence. But COVID-19 is serving as a wake-up call for the inequalities and discriminatory practices written into law.
( 3 min. read )
Ahead of the release of the live-action 鈥淢ulan,鈥 starring Liu Yifei, film critic Peter Rainer shares the work of the actors who have contributed directly or indirectly to this moment of progress for Asian women in Hollywood.
( 3 min. read )
History is often shaped by singular events, the kind that touch human thought and then move both empires and concrete. The fall of the Soviet empire, for example, was sparked in 1989 by a modest relaxing of travel restrictions in East Germany. A mental wall was breached and, with it, the Berlin Wall.
This week in two different countries, New Zealand and the United States, similar events happened to amplify a yearning in Western societies to change the models of justice from a focus on punishment toward one that brings individual and social healing.
For the first time in its history, New Zealand handed down its most severe criminal sentence Thursday 鈥 life in prison without the possibility of parole 鈥 to Brenton Harrison Tarrant. In March 2019, the white supremacist attacked two mosques, killing 51 worshippers. During his sentencing, 91 survivors and relatives of victims addressed him directly 鈥 by turns angry, sorrowful, pitying, and empathetic. Many of their comments reflected a desire for something beyond the salve of seeing him locked away for life. As Janna Ezat, whose son was slain in the attacks, told the gunman, 鈥淚 have only one choice: to forgive you.鈥
At nearly the same moment in the U.S., professional athletes put down their basketballs, baseballs, and tennis balls in protest over the Aug. 23 police shooting of Jacob Blake. Mr. Blake, a Black man, was shot seven times by a white officer in Kenosha, Wisconsin, under circumstances still under investigation. Like Ms. Ezat, Julia Jackson, Mr. Blake鈥檚 mother, reached for something higher than mere retribution: 鈥淕od did not make one type of tree, or flower, or fish, or horse, or grass, or rock. Please let鈥檚 begin to pray for healing our nation.鈥
Such thoughts often get overlooked in the media鈥檚 fixation on justice as solely punishment. One alternative, known as restorative justice, is based on opening a dialogue between wrongdoers and those they have harmed, with the hope of moral elevation and perhaps reconciliation. Through apology, forgiveness, and inward reform, its purpose is to restore the wholeness of wounded individuals and communities. The use of restorative justice is now a common tool from juvenile courts to bankruptcy proceedings. It has been vital for healing in entire countries after violent conflict, such as in Rwanda, Sierra Leone, and South Africa.
It is also providing a framework for ongoing attempts to reconcile former colonies and their colonizers. Germany and Namibia, for example, are negotiating ways to redress gross violations of human rights during the colonial era. It may be the recipe for ultimately resolving the debate over reparations for slavery.
As difficult as restorative justice may be, its reasons are clear. 鈥淲e must break the spiral of reprisal and counter-reprisal,鈥 South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu observed in the final report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. 鈥淐onfession, forgiveness and reconciliation in the lives of nations are not just airy-fairy religious and spiritual things, nebulous and unrealistic. They are the stuff of practical politics.鈥
In the months since the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, many Black Americans have believed nothing would change in American society, especially police departments. That skepticism endures. Yet a key idea is taking root. Polly Sheppard, who survived the attack on the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2015, has expressed it this way: 鈥淭here is no healing with hatred. You have to love each other.鈥澛
A door was opened this week in both the U.S. and New Zealand to rebalance the purpose of justice. As the South African commission noted, 鈥淩econciliation is not an event.鈥 Yet acts of forgiveness, as agents of justice, rest on an acknowledgment that love is more true to human nature than revenge 鈥 and more resilient. It takes down walls.
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.
( 1 min. read )
Even when fear, doubt, or darkness seems overwhelming, we can trust in God, good, to lead us forward and bring peace, as this hymn verse highlights.
Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow鈥檚 Daily will examine several facets of the Kenosha protests and the aftermath of the shooting of Jacob Blake.