George Floyd鈥檚 death changed the conversation on police in America, launching the biggest civil rights movement in 50 years. What will Derek Chauvin鈥檚 trial mean for that movement?
Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we鈥檝e always been transparent about that.
The church publishes the Monitor because it sees good journalism as vital to progress in the world. Since 1908, we鈥檝e aimed 鈥渢o injure no man, but to bless all mankind,鈥 as our founder, Mary Baker Eddy, put it.
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Mark Sappenfield
For the past week, the world has gotten a glimpse of a spring campfire, Iceland-style. When the Fagradalsfjall volcano erupted 17 miles south of the capital city of Reykjav铆k, people did not flee in terror. They came by the thousands to watch the fountains of lava. 鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely breath-taking,鈥澛. 鈥淚t smells pretty bad,鈥 said another. A few cheeky scientists even cooked hot dogs on the lava flow.
Different volcanoes behave differently. Ash from Iceland鈥檚 Eyjafjallaj枚kull famously disrupted European air travel for about a week in 2010. But when your island is basically nothing but volcanoes, you learn to live with them 鈥 and how to predict what they鈥檒l do. A March 12聽聽began with the words: 鈥淏y the time you read this, a volcano may have erupted.鈥 Exactly one week later, it did.聽
With an array of sensors detecting seismic activity and ground deformation, Iceland knew this was coming. What鈥檚 more, data suggests this could be the beginning of a volcanic cycle that happens every 800 years. 鈥淚f this transpires,鈥澛, 鈥渢he Reykjanes Peninsula could be bathed in the glow of a thousand volcanic fires that ignite, disappear, and then reappear intermittently for an entire human lifetime.鈥
That鈥檚 a lot of hot dogs.聽
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And why we wrote them
( 10 min. read )
George Floyd鈥檚 death changed the conversation on police in America, launching the biggest civil rights movement in 50 years. What will Derek Chauvin鈥檚 trial mean for that movement?
( 7 min. read )
The lines of the Cold War were clear. Today, with China, they鈥檙e blurred. Democracies want to challenge China politically but cooperate with it economically. It鈥檚 unclear how that might work.
Clocks do more than give us a way to coordinate with each other. Timepieces are also tools of control and of liberation. This is the latest installment in our series on time.
( 6 min. read )
Germany鈥檚 classrooms are oddly old-school when it comes to technology. But the past year has dramatically shown many teachers how technology can shape education for the better.
( 2 min. read )
In New York鈥檚 new Moynihan Train Hall,聽travelers聽find splendor, whimsy, and even a bit of awe, adding credence to the idea that the journey can be as inspiring as the destination.
( 3 min. read )
Since an inconclusive election March 23 for Israel鈥檚 parliament, a few Jewish politicians have been courting unlikely allies to help them form a majority coalition in the Knesset: two parties that represent Arab Israelis, who make up a fifth of the country鈥檚 citizens. This has raised the hope of an Arab party being part of an Israeli government for the first time, something that nearly half of Jewish Israelis now support.
While far from certain, that prospect shows how peace in the Middle East sometimes comes through deep person-to-person engagement, or when equality outmatches religion and ethnicity.
Israel鈥檚 post-election horse-trading between Arab and Jewish politicians comes as the country is enjoying a new warmth in relations with more Arab states. Under an agreement last fall known as the Abraham Accords, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco, and perhaps Sudan are normalizing ties with Israel. This is leading to a greater exchange of people, ideas, capital, and technology.
That sort of practical interaction is already reflected among Israeli Arabs, who largely vote for leaders who promise better policing to reduce crime and more access to jobs. It is also reflected in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu鈥檚 newfound attempt to win over Arab voters in order to keep his job. During a campaign stop in largely Arab Nazareth, he promised a 鈥渘ew era of Jewish-Arab relations ... an age of honor and equality, an age of opportunities, and an age of power.鈥
The most urgent need for closer ties is between Israelis and Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank. At an official level, the decadeslong peace process between them is stagnant. That may change in coming months as Palestinians hold their first elections in 15 years. Half of the young population has never voted and will be able to finally cast ballots for their leaders, a democratic experience that may help instill a greater notion of equality.
Much of the work to reconcile Israel and the Palestinians has been done by private peacemaking groups. They have set up youth sports clubs, tech training, and other programs that mix the two peoples. These peace builders received a big boost in December when the U.S. Congress passed a bipartisan bill that will provide $250 million over five years to fund such reconciliation initiatives. The measure is similar to a fund set up in the 1980s to promote dialogue between people in Northern Ireland. That effort helped lead to a later peace accord.
Might the new U.S. funding do the same for Israelis and Palestinians?
鈥淗ard-wired ideas about identity or enmity with your neighbors, you can鈥檛 fix them quickly 鈥 it needs to be a sustained, real engagement,鈥 John Lyndon, executive director of the Alliance for Middle East Peace, told The Times of Israel. 鈥淚t requires deep engagement and taking seriously people鈥檚 identity, and their red lines 鈥 and to understand why people are saying what they鈥檙e saying.鈥 His alliance represents some 130 peace-building groups working with Israelis and Palestinians.
The catalysts for peace are not always a result of diplomacy or a military truce. Cultivating trust in daily life between people helps build interdependence and a reservoir of mutual support. If the next Israeli government can reflect that sort of trust, it can happen in the rest of the Middle East.
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.
( 3 min. read )
Sometimes life just doesn鈥檛 seem like a laughing matter. But opening our hearts to God empowers us to feel the God-given hope and joy that uplift and heal.
Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when we explore different ideas for how to address one significant impediment to economic opportunity in the United States 鈥 how to pay for college.