海角大神

2023
November
27
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 27, 2023
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

As an assistant professor at Carnegie Mellon University, Nevine Abraham has loved holding 鈥渃ook-alongs鈥 for students. The goal is to teach Arab culture and hospitality. Last week, however, her cook-along became a Friendsgiving.

Dr. Abraham teamed up with Dareen Basma, an associate dean, to help ease tensions and聽foster聽communal聽bonding聽on campus. Jewish Israeli dishes were added, and everyone cooked together. 鈥淚t鈥檚 unrealistic to say that cooking together is the key to peace,鈥 Dr. Abraham tells me in an email. But 鈥渢here is an act of giving and caring when cooking for others and sharing a meal.鈥

What is needed, adds Dr. Basma, is openness and a desire to engage. 鈥淏eing connected to a strong sense of community is what can help foster healing and resilience.鈥澛


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Ghada Abdulfattah
Six-year-old Rita Idwan (far right) tries out her bike, after finally getting its tire repaired and inflated, on the first day of a four-day ceasefire in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, Nov. 24, 2023.

What do you do during a weekend respite from war? For some, it鈥檚 as simple as walking on the beach or fixing a child鈥檚 bike tire. But for many, it鈥檚 finding family. The reunions are sweet and somber, with sharp reminders of what has been lost. Over everything looms a war threatening to march onward.聽

A deeper look

Thom Bridge/Independent Record/AP
Youth plaintiffs in the landmark climate change lawsuit, Held v. Montana, pose outside the Lewis and Clark County Courthouse in Helena, Montana, as their case went to trial last June. In August, the judge ruled in their favor 鈥 specifically, that Montana policymakers had violated young people鈥檚 constitutional rights by ignoring the climate impacts of government energy decisions.

Is a safe environment a human right? A Montana lawsuit raises that question and breaks new legal ground. The fourth part of our Climate Generation series聽looks deeper into the lawsuit, which critics call 鈥減olitical theater.鈥 Yet many young people are increasingly worried that adults are leaving them a broken planet.聽

Aakash Hassan
Fahad Shah, founder and editor of the now-blocked news portal The Kashmir Walla, checks a mobile phone outside his residence in Srinagar, India, Nov. 25, 2023. Mr. Shah was released on bail after spending 21 months in jail on charges of "publishing anti-national content" and "glorifying terrorism."

Fahad Shah is free. The Monitor contributor from Kashmir left jail last week, as we mentioned last Monday. For years, we鈥檝e been writing about the Indian government鈥檚 crackdown on journalists. Fahad鈥檚 story is what it looks like: a cell too small to stretch out, a voice silenced, and a life changed.聽

Howard LaFranchi/海角大神
Kobi Oron (left), a bioengineer, helps farmer Idan Alon load the day's tomato harvest for delivery to Israeli markets.

What happens next in the Middle East will be significantly decided by the people of Israel. In tomato fields not far from the Gaza border, Israelis rally to help farmers disrupted by the war 鈥 and find themselves thinking about how that future might take shape.聽聽

Books

It takes humility to admit one鈥檚 shortcomings. The desire to right past wrongs animates many of the characters in our 10 picks for this month. For everyone from a U.S. Civil War general to a 20-something Londoner, self-reflection offers insight.聽


The Monitor's View

REUTERS
People displaced by fighting in Ethiopia find shelter in Abi Adi, Tigray Region, Ethiopia, June 24.

In recent years, Africa seems to have reverted to a tattered script of military coups, corruption, and civil wars. Yet that troubled surface masks a deeper ferment. From one society to another, Africans are charting pathways out of intractable conflict through the gradual, granular work of rebuilding trust through the practice of transitional justice.

鈥淭ransitional justice requires people coming together to address the legacies of cycles of violence, putting victims at the center and their dignity first,鈥 notes Anna Myriam Roccatello, deputy executive director of the International Center for Transitional Justice.

Broadly put, transitional justice seeks to rebuild post-conflict societies through a restoration of the rule of law, reconciliation based on disclosure and forgiveness, and restitution for victims. The idea itself, of course, isn鈥檛 new. South Africa, Sierra Leone, and Rwanda launched healing models of truth-telling and forgiveness nearly three decades ago. The continent鈥檚 more recent examples, however, show how determined ordinary Africans are to create a more peaceful and inclusive future. In 2020, the African Union adopted a formal transitional justice framework for its member states. Last month, it launched a new three-year project with the European Union to support African states seeking to implement the idea.

鈥淲e have no other choice than to push and promote transitional justice,鈥 stated Ambassador Bankole Adeoye, AU commissioner for political affairs, peace, and security. He placed a special emphasis on the role of women and youth in post-conflict healing.

Some countries have been at it for years. Gambia, in West Africa, launched a truth commission in 2017 to investigate human rights abuses during two decades of brutal dictatorship following a military coup in 1994. That panel was just a starting point. Earlier this month, legislators passed two bills 鈥 one establishing a reparations fund for victims, another banning individuals found to have committed atrocities from holding public office.

Other countries are just setting out. In Ethiopia, the federal government is locked in a debate with various ethnic groups over how to create a common narrative of past conflicts 鈥 including the two-year war it ended a year ago with rebellious Tigrayan militias. That dispute hasn鈥檛 stopped civil society groups from holding local reconciliation workshops across the country.

A comprehensive poll published in Foreign Affairs this month captured how Ethiopians seek to break cycles of violence reaching back decades. It showed a strong preference for local solutions. Of more than 6,000 people questioned, 41% favored seeking justice through local courts rather than through international tribunals, and 80% backed traditional forms of dialogue and reconciliation to address legacies of violence.

鈥淩egardless of the Ethiopian government鈥檚 policy choices,鈥 the survey鈥檚 authors wrote, 鈥渋t will be critical to identify possible fault lines and anticipate unintended consequences so that transitional justice can be survivor-centered, credible, impartial, and effective. Accomplishing this will be no small challenge. But it can be done.鈥

Three decades of democratization has nourished the democracy aspirations of a younger generation of Africans. In like manner, the continent鈥檚 laboratories of transitional justice are deepening a mindset of peace based on justice and reconciliation.


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.

Recognizing that everyone has a place in the kingdom of God, good, brings about a deeper understanding and experience of home.


Viewfinder

Chalinee Thirasupa/Reuters
Playful primates climb onto tourists during the annual Monkey Festival in Lopburi province, Thailand, Nov. 26, 2023.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for spending time with the Monitor today. Tomorrow, we鈥檒l consider a question of the season: What makes a good holiday film? On the 20th anniversary of 鈥淟ove Actually,鈥 staff writer Stephen Humphries unravels the mystery.

We鈥檒l also explore what the Israel-Hamas hostage swap suggests about where things go from here, and check in on a decline in electric car sales. How might that affect climate goals?

More issues

2023
November
27
Monday

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