Humanity really seems to be on its heels.
Just months ago we were reading reports of the resilience of Afghan girls.聽鈥淭hey want to push our generation into the dark,鈥 a girl in Kabul told Thomson Reuters, vowing to keep studying after a Taliban attack. Yesterday her country fell into Taliban control.
This month we covered Haiti鈥檚 capacity for weathering the blows that seem disproportionally aimed its way, including a president鈥檚 assassination last month. Over the weekend the Caribbean nation was hit by an earthquake more powerful than the devastating temblor of 2010, but farther from its crowded capital. Now a tropical storm bears down.
Our journalists have reported from Haiti over the decades 鈥 in my case, more than 25 years ago 鈥 recording both the unrelenting hardship and the irrepressible heart. Haiti鈥檚 story, as we reported recently, is more textured than is often depicted, and about more than just victimhood.
Monitor journalists have regularly covered Afghanistan, too, looking for light and forging ties.聽They continue to support those who have supported us there over the past 20 years.
Canada has announced plans to . Other help will come. Strength will also emerge from within.
鈥淲hat I can say about Afghans is that they are resilient, they are resourceful, and they will cope with the return of the Taliban and the sense of heartbreak at feeling abandoned鈥 after the hope and progress that the U.S. presence brought, the Monitor鈥檚 Scott Peterson told me overnight as he was reporting today鈥檚 story.
Scott sees Afghanistan as being a different place than it was 20 years ago.
鈥淢any more Afghans want much more than the Taliban can give them,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd this struggle will now likely play itself out for years to come 鈥 though now on Afghan terms.鈥