海角大神

2023
February
27
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 27, 2023
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Amelia Newcomb
Senior editor

War correspondent Scott Peterson was 25 years old when聽he first went to Somalia, so聽his in-depth story today holds special聽meaning for him. It brought him back to聽a nation he had first encountered in the聽early 1990s, when it was collapsing under聽the weight of widespread hunger聽and violence.

Similar threats are聽roiling the country again, but聽conditions had shifted enough to聽support a return trip. Something聽else had changed as well: This聽time, Scott鈥檚 son Guy traveled聽with him.

Father and son had planned聽a trip together to mark Guy鈥檚聽college graduation. The original destination was a bit less聽adventurous, at least by Scott鈥檚聽standards. 鈥淚 had in mind something like聽the World Nomad Games, which take聽place framed by scenic mountains in聽Kyrgyzstan,鈥 Scott says.

But the pandemic delayed travel. Guy, meanwhile, had聽established himself as a photographer in聽West Africa. He recently took a hostile environment training聽course, and Scott joined him to refresh聽his skills. 鈥淭hat made me realize how聽ready he might be if a conflict situation聽arose," Scott says. "And I thought, maybe Somalia.鈥

That idea isn鈥檛 as surprising as it聽might seem. Scott鈥檚 work in Somalia set聽him on a decadeslong course of writing聽about and photographing the聽world鈥檚 conflicts with a powerful聽compassion for those caught up聽in them. Now, Guy was embarking on his own journey. In an聽echo of the 1990s, warning bells聽were sounding about Somalia鈥檚聽hunger crisis. It made sense to聽explore the story together.

Of course, Scott had much to聽offer Guy as an experienced war聽correspondent and student of聽Somalia鈥檚 history. A large chunk聽of his book on Africa, 鈥淢e Against My聽Brother,鈥 is devoted to the country. He鈥檚聽stayed in touch with long-ago sources;聽one he reconnected with recalled how聽Scott, desperate to catch a U.N. plane,聽had once stunned everyone by scaling聽and leaping over a high wall of a compound blockaded by Somali gunmen聽because of a pay dispute. Scott grasps the聽complexities of conflict 鈥 including how聽ordinary people persist amid the most聽daunting challenges.

A generation ago, Scott couldn鈥檛 have聽imagined he鈥檇 come back with a 25-year-old Guy 鈥 who had plenty to offer his dad聽as well, sharing photographic techniques聽and first-visit perspectives. 鈥淚 learned聽from him, and he from me,鈥 Scott says.聽鈥淓very night, we鈥檇 sit down in Baidoa or聽Mogadishu, looking at each other鈥檚 images, sharing comments. This was a live聽situation where we felt we were helping聽to sound an alarm about Somalia鈥檚 famine. That made a difference.鈥

Nor could he have envisioned what聽their partnership would mean to Somalis, who took close note of this rare聽American who returned. 鈥淚t was a talking聽point that I had been there at such an聽incredible period in their history,鈥 Scott聽says. 鈥淎nd then when I say, this is my
son, we鈥檙e going to witness this together聽鈥 they were so pleased. To them, it was a聽total sign of respect.

鈥淎ll those things came together in a聽really beautiful way.鈥


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Our senior economics writer Laurent Belsie has seen a tech revolution before. This new one looks聽similarly transformative, but with difficult questions about ethics and bias.

A deeper look

Patrick Robert/Sygma/Getty Images
Members of the press document the beach landing of U.S. Marines in Mogadishu, Somalia, for Operation Restore Hope in December 1992. Scott Peterson can be seen kneeling on the left in blue, camera in hand.

Decades of drought and famine, amplified by clan warfare and Islamist militants, have made safety elusive in Somalia. Yet progress toward greater stability persists.聽 聽

Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters
Ukrainian refugees hold the Ukrainian national flag in front of the remains of a destroyed Russian tank kept on display near the Russian embassy in Berlin, during an event to mark the one-year anniversary of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Feb. 24, 2023.

For those who fled the war in Ukraine to Europe, it鈥檚 been a long time away from home. For some, it鈥檚 been long enough that it may be time to rethink where their future actually lies.

Billionaire Gautam Adani became a symbol of prosperity and economic opportunity in modern India. As his fortune comes under scrutiny, so does India's economic model and the country鈥檚 relationship with its super-rich.

Books

Stories of daring and tenacity dominate our reviewers鈥 picks for the 10 best books of February. They include tales of fears conquered,聽 truths told, and voices found.聽 聽


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A volunteer moves a local resident in a wheelchair near a building damaged by a Russian military strike in Bakhmut, Ukraine, Feb. 24.

Despite a yearlong war with Russia 鈥 or perhaps because of it 鈥 Ukraine found the resources in February to aid another country in peril. It sent 87 specialists to Turkey to assist survivors of two massive earthquakes. The team, which included two search dogs, returned home this week.

鈥淒espite the fact that Ukraine itself is currently in the flames of war, we are ready to provide support to those in need,鈥 said Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor聽Klymenko. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 because the strong ones are always there to help and rescue.鈥

One of Ukraine鈥檚 strengths against Russia has been an army of civilian volunteers. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy calls them 鈥渢he most powerful part of Ukrainian civil society.鈥 Soon after the war began, more than 1,700 volunteer organizations sprang up, both big and small. They filled gaps left by the government, supplying soldiers with essential goods, feeding and housing the displaced, and aiding those released from Russian captivity.

鈥淚t was all held together by friends, neighbors, and social media,鈥 said Iryna Derevyanko, head of a union in Kherson, about local aid provided during the battle for that city.

Other countries have noticed this 鈥渨hole of society鈥 war effort on behalf of democratic values and territorial integrity.

In Europe, a report in February from a think tank in Belgium, MCC Brussels, made this recommendation to the European Union: 鈥淲hat the war in Ukraine has shown is that real security comes from the people 鈥 from being able to call on, motivate and involve society in matters of collective interest.鈥

In Washington, a few leading Ukrainian charities were invited in December to speak at a hearing before the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, an arm of Congress. 鈥淵our work is the highest manifestation of the values of the republican system and the virtues of a free society,鈥 said Rep. Joe Wilson, co-chairman of the hearing.

In Taiwan, which faces an invasion threat from China, President Tsai Ing-wen told The Atlantic that a country鈥檚 defense depends on the character of its people. 鈥淵ou need to have good leadership,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut more important is the people鈥檚 determination to defend themselves, and the Ukrainian people showed that.鈥

One of the main targets of the Russian military 鈥 much to its surprise 鈥 has been the support networks of Ukrainian volunteers. Ukrainians were even startled by their own cooperation and resilience. Hundreds of thousands of them, writes Mykhailo Dubynyansky in Ukrainska Pravda, have 鈥渄iscovered qualities in themselves that they had no idea about.鈥 In December, President Zelenskyy gave out the government鈥檚 first special awards for volunteers.

鈥淎nd every year we will celebrate volunteer projects,鈥 he said.

Once the war ends in its favor, Ukraine will never be the same. It has become a model of grassroots resilience, built on local people embracing shared ideals of a peace-loving democracy.


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.

Instead of wallowing in regret over past actions, we can move forward with the assurance that ever-present divine Love governs 鈥 then, now, and always.


Viewfinder

Brian Inganga/AP
Maasai children line up to greet Jill Biden, the first lady of the United States, and U.S. Ambassador to Kenya Meg Whitman during their visit to Ngatataek, Kenya, on Feb. 26, 2023. Mrs. Biden's trip includes raising awareness about the toll of devastating drought in the Horn of Africa.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Here鈥檚 a question we鈥檒l be looking at Tuesday:聽Why are children鈥檚 books seen as so dangerous to both sides of the political aisle? I hope you鈥檒l check out our story.聽

More issues

2023
February
27
Monday

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