2020
September
11
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 11, 2020
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Noelle Swan
Weekly Editor

When unthinkable terror struck New York City 19 years ago, Fire Chief Peter Ganci Jr. grabbed a hard hat and headed straight for ground zero. Nearly 3,000 people lost their lives in terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, including hundreds of firefighters. Chief Ganci was among them. But his name will forever live on as a symbol of valor and sacrifice.

This week, the commissioner of the New York City Fire Department announced that the James Gordon Bennett Medal, the department’s highest award for bravery, will be renamed after Chief Ganci. 

The move is a tribute to “a legendary Chief who is still revered by all of us so many years after his death,” Commissioner Daniel Nigro wrote in a social media post announcing the change. But it is also meant as an act of racial justice.

The medal was first awarded in 1869 by publisher James Gordon Bennett to honor the firefighters who saved his home from a blaze. The medal has borne his name ever since. But in life, Bennett espoused many racist views, and used his paper The New York Herald to spread anti-abolitionist rhetoric.

“This award for bravery should not be tied to someone who never served the FDNY, risked his life to save others, and who advocated for hate and slavery,” Commissioner Nigro wrote. “That award should be named for the Chief who was leading our troops on our darkest day, a great man who gave his life overseeing the greatest rescue operation in FDNY history.” 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Robert F. Bukaty/AP
A woman wears a mask to protect against the spread of the coronavirus while looking at drying racks outside a hardware store in Sanford, Maine, on Sept. 9, 2020. While parts of the economy have recovered from the initial pandemic slowdown this spring, other small businesses such as restaurants remain struggling.
AP
Women, one of them with her child, speak to police officers during a rally in support of Maria Kolesnikova and other opposition leaders in Minsk, Belarus, Sept. 9, 2020.
Raad Adayleh/AP/File
Mohammed Nabouti, a Jordanian technician, fixes the air conditioner of a shop in Amman, Jordan, on March 4, 2013.

On Film

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Tilda Cobham-Hervey stars as 1970s singer Helen Reddy in "I Am Woman" by director Unjoo Moon. The new film is the latest in a long line of movies about singer-performers including Renée Zellweger as Judy Garland in “Judy” and Rami Malek as Freddie Mercury in “Bohemian Rhapsody.”

The Monitor's View

Photo by Ann Hermes/The Christian Science Monitor
A sign at the entrance of Paradise, California, on March 13, 2020.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Ahmer Khan
In the eastern part of the disputed Jammu and Kashmir region, a small bastion of Tibetan culture rises from the rocky landscape. After fleeing Chinese occupiers in Tibet, dozens of families call the Choglamsar refugee settlement home. And they are not alone. The Indian-administered territory of Ladakh – sometimes also known as “Little Tibet” – hosts thousands of Tibetan refugees. Many have been living here since the 1950s, when China annexed Tibet and caused several mass emigrations. Some refugees in Ladakh still follow nomadic ways of life on the Changtang plateau, which stretches from Jammu and Kashmir into Tibet. Others live near cities in fixed settlements like Choglamsar. While the region’s cultural roots originate in centuries-old Tibetan Buddhist traditions, diaspora members worry that contemporary popular culture and tourism are eroding authentic Tibetan lifestyles. In Choglamsar, a small part of the Tibetan diaspora negotiates that tug of war each day. – Anna Tarnow, Staff writer
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us this week. Come back Monday when Simon Montlake will explore the toll that the pandemic has taken on nursing homes, and what lessons might be gleaned from those losses.

More issues

2020
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Friday
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