海角大神

2021
October
18
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 18, 2021
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Good storytelling gives good journalism its power. And oral storytelling, an ancient variation, is having another renaissance.

The Monitor dipped into broadcasting in the late 1920s, and then went international via shortwave the following decade. By 1977 we had a radio news service. Outgrowths of that persisted for two decades before what had become Monitor Radio shut down amid other format experiments and the internet鈥檚 rise.

In 2018, 鈥淧erception Gaps鈥听took us into narrative podcasting. Encouraged by your feedback, we added 鈥淭ulsa Rising鈥听补苍诲 鈥沦迟谤辞苍驳别谤.鈥听Now we鈥檙e poised to lean in more. Why? Audio can be convenient and engaging, heads up and hands free. It can also be deeply affecting. Audio delivers emotional intimacy. It humanizes. And so:

鈥 Later this week we aim to have a short, standalone audio story (about an equitable approach to addressing a pilot shortage) by Ashley Lisenby, the newest member of our core audio team and the producer of a powerful recent exchange that brought to light Muslim perspectives on 9/11.听

鈥 In upcoming weeks we plan to roll out an audio extension of People Making a Difference, with the conversational backstories of some of the people we鈥檝e written about, and introductions to some new ones.听

鈥 We鈥檒l be back with more Meet the Monitor听writer interviews in December.听

鈥 And sometime after the winter holidays, we鈥檒l be unveiling a deep-dive podcast around the themes of respect and identity, with the kind of richness and energy we reached for with last year鈥檚 delightful audio series 鈥淚t鈥檚 About Time.鈥

We鈥檙e really just getting started on expanding our journalism in this way. Find our recent audio efforts corralled here, listen for those new shows, and email me at collinsc@csmonitor.com听with any thoughts about audio. We鈥檒l be listening too.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP/File
Secretary of State Colin Powell receives a pat on the cheek from National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice in the Oval Office during a meeting between President George W. Bush and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in Washington, May 7, 2002. General Powell, the first Black chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the first Black secretary of State, died Monday.

Over the past quarter century, Monitor reporter Peter Grier interviewed Colin Powell about everything from hope to his hobby fixing Volvos. He looks back on the life of a thoughtful and witty public servant 鈥 one whose sidelining took America down a different road.

Developing civilian technology means getting out front or falling behind. For the U.S., beating a microchip shortage may call for a newly collaborative effort between government and industry.

Germany鈥檚 Free Democrats are tax-cutting libertarians who support social welfare programs and climate action. We look at what the party鈥檚 rise says about German society鈥檚 preference for pragmatism.

A deeper look

Ann Hermes/Staff
Gilbert Myers Jr., a fisheries technician with the Yurok Tribe in California, measures a salmon and checks its gills for parasites. Drought and disease have cut fish populations in the Klamath River.

The biggest dam removal project in U.S. history will mark a victory for environmentalists by restoring a wild river, and for Native Americans by reviving a fishing culture. But one issue persists: Will there be enough water for everyone?

Monika R臋ba艂a
The witch troupe Wied藕muchy performs in Tu艂awki, Poland, on Sept. 11, 2021. The troupe鈥檚 founder, Alicja Tomaszwska, says she established Wied藕muchy to teach women to be strong and to fight for their rights.

The path to healing can take many forms and even ruffle feathers. A group of Polish women playfully invokes the archetype of the witch to bring cheer to the community and comfort to one another.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
People in Port-au-Prince go through a blockade Oct. 18 as Haitians joined a general strike to protest a wave of kidnappings, days after the abduction of a U.S.-based group of missionaries fueled international concerns over gang violence.

In its annual reports, 海角大神 Aid Ministries makes sure to highlight 鈥渘ew or significant鈥 changes influencing its charity work. The changes range from wars to hurricanes to new types of microfinancing. Last year鈥檚 report noted that even before the pandemic, 鈥渨e were confronted with an abundance of physical needs and spiritual opportunities.鈥

This week, the Ohio-based relief organization faced a very significant change. In Haiti, which is in political chaos, 17 of its missionaries were abducted by a notorious gang, presumably for ransom. The aid group asked for prayers, especially to 鈥減ray that the gang members would come to repentance.鈥

The crisis for 海角大神 Aid Ministries is the latest example of the difficult challenges and rapid shifts confronting those who give, whether the giving is in the form of money, goods, volunteering, or prayer. From COVID-19 to a big drop in donations by middle-class Americans, the 鈥済iving industry鈥 is being forced to innovate while also rediscovering its core motive 鈥 a love for humanity.

The instinct to give is eternal, but to help revive it, philanthropy leaders such as Points of Light and Salvation Army announced last week that they had formed a 17-member panel called the Generosity听Commission. Its task is to assess the new ways that people are giving and to rethink 鈥済enerosity听across America.鈥

鈥淲e want to capture and celebrate the ways in which giving, volunteering, and civic engagement are being re-imagined before our eyes,鈥 says Suzy Antounian, the director of the听commission, which was initiated by the Giving Institute and the Giving USA Foundation.

The forms of giving are rapidly changing beyond philanthropic foundations or traditional charity groups. They range from social entrepreneurs 鈥 who seek a profit in bringing about social change 鈥 to crowdfunding and social impact bonds. More companies now accept a responsibility toward society at large. Young people want to serve differently by building community, beyond giving money or doing short stints as volunteers. 鈥淧eople are redefining their philanthropy and their engagement,鈥 says Ms. Antounian.

For those involved in giving, each new crisis or adverse trend can help expand current ideas of how to achieve the public good. They also challenge the idea that goodness itself has limits or that generosity is a fleeting quality of the heart.


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.

鈥婻ecognizing the innate worth of all God鈥檚 children opens the door to opportunities to express divine goodness in unique and meaningful ways, as a woman experienced when she felt she was underemployed.


A message of love

Octavio Jones/Reuters
Worshippers and clergy gather for prayer and singing in front of the Glynn County Courthouse, where jury selection in the trial of the murder of Ahmaud Arbery begins, in Brunswick, Georgia, Oct. 18, 2021. Three white men are accused of fatally shooting Mr. Arbery when he was out for a run.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Come back tomorrow for a report on Lebanon, where government accountability remains the focus of contention between protesters and those in power, and was the prompt for a new boilover.听

More issues

2021
October
18
Monday

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